| Word class | Sub-class | Description | Example |
| Nouns | Proper | Refer to names of people or places | James, England |
| Abstract | Refer to states, feelings and concepts that do not have a physical existence | love, anger | |
| Concrete | Refer to objects that have a physical existence | countable (can be pluralised, e.g., cup) | |
| non-countable (do not take a plural form, e.g., furniture) | |||
| Verbs | Material | Show actions or events | hit, jump, wash, build |
| Relational | Identify properties or show states of being | be, appear, seem, become | |
| Mental | Show internal processes such as thinking | think, believe, wish | |
| Verbal | Show external processes of communicating through speech | say, shout, scream, whisper | |
| Adjectives and adverbs | Base | The basic form of an adjective or adverb, modifying another word | big, interesting, carefully |
| Comparative | A form used to compare two instances either adding ‘-er’ or using ‘more’ | The parcel was bigger. That was a more interesting game. He read more carefully. | |
| Superlative | A form used to compare more than two instances, identifying a best example | That was the biggest parcel. The most interesting game. It was the most carefully he had ever read. | |
| Pronouns | Personal | Refer to people and are differentiated in terms of person (1st, 2nd, 3rd), number (singular or plural) and gender (male or female) | I (first person singular), you (second person singular/plural), she (third person, singular, feminine), they (third person, plural) |
| Demonstrative | Orientate the reader or listener towards a person, object, or idea either nearby or further away | this, these, that, those | |
| Indefinite | Refer to a person, object or idea that is non-specific | someone, anybody, everything | |
| Determiners | Articles | Show that something is definite or indefinite | the (definite), a/an (indefinite) |
| Possessives | Show ownership | my, your, her, our | |
| Quantifiers | Show either specific or non-specific quantities of a noun | one, two (specific), some, any, a few (non-specific) | |
| Conjunctions | Co-ordinating | Link words or larger structures such as phrases and clauses together where they are equal | and, but, or, yet |
| Sub-ordinating | Link clauses together to show one is dependent on another | because, although, while, for |
Remember:
- When making comments make sure you support it by paying close attention to language features
- Make sure you relate to the context of the article - make comments on the significance to the text as a whole