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R&W 5758 - Writing skills

ParaPathways Parts of Speech Practice: Quick Lesson and Sample Questions

Parts of speech questions test whether you can name word types, spot errors, and choose correct forms. This page reviews all 8 parts of speech and gives you 6 sample questions with answers.

Grammar items fall under writing skills on the Reading and Writing module (test code 5758). That module has 51 questions and an 85 minute limit, or about 100 seconds per question. Items ask you to spot errors, pick the correct word form, or help a student fix a sentence.

Parts of speech on the ParaPathways: what you need to know

English has 8 parts of speech. Learn each one as a short working definition with an example.

The test leans hardest on 4 skill areas. First is verb tense and subject-verb agreement. A singular subject takes a singular verb, even when a phrase sits between them. In "The box of markers was heavy," the subject is *box*, not *markers*.

Second is pronoun case and agreement. Subject pronouns such as *I*, *he*, and *they* perform the action. Object pronouns such as *me*, *him*, and *them* receive it. A pronoun must also match its antecedent in number, so *each student* pairs with a singular pronoun.

Third is adjective versus adverb. Adjectives describe nouns, and adverbs describe verbs. Write "She sings well," not "She sings good," because *well* modifies the verb *sings*.

Fourth is preposition choice. Some verbs and nouns pair with specific prepositions, such as *different from* and *listen to*. Read the full sentence and trust the pairing that sounds standard in formal writing.

Homophone traps appear often because they hide inside otherwise clean sentences. Know *their* (possession), *there* (place), and *they’re* (they are). Know *its* (possession) versus *it’s* (it is), and *your* versus *you’re*. Expand every contraction in your head, and the wrong choice usually reveals itself.

For error questions, apply the simplest correct fix rule. The right answer repairs the error without changing the meaning or adding new problems. Distractors often fix one error while introducing another, or they rewrite the sentence more than needed. When 2 choices both seem grammatical, pick the shorter and more direct one.

Expect a classroom angle as well. Some items describe a student’s written error and ask for the clearest explanation of it. The best answer names the rule in plain words a child can follow. Answers that only say "it sounds wrong" or cite jargon without explanation are traps.

Sample questions

Work through these 6 items, then check the rule behind each answer.

Question 1

A student writes, "The stack of library books were due on Friday." Which correction should you suggest?

Show answer

C. The subject is *stack*, which is singular, so the verb must be *was*. Choice A invents a verb form, and the plural *books* inside the prepositional phrase tempts you toward *were*.

Question 2

Neither of the players remembered to bring ___ water bottle.

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B. *Neither* is a singular pronoun, so it pairs with the singular *her*. Choice A is tempting in casual speech, but formal test grammar treats *their* as plural.

Question 3

Choose the word that correctly completes the sentence: "The class behaved ___ during the fire drill."

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D. The word modifies the verb *behaved*, so it must be an adverb. Choice B fails because *good* is an adjective and cannot describe a verb.

Question 4

Which sentence uses the correct word?

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A. *They’re* means "they are," which fits the sentence. Choices B, C, and D confuse homophones: *there* is a place, *it’s* means "it is," and *your* shows possession.

Question 5

In the sentence "The children played quietly during the lesson," the word "quietly" is which part of speech?

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B. *Quietly* tells how the children played, so it modifies the verb and is an adverb. Choice A tempts test takers because *quiet* is an adjective, but the *-ly* form modifies verbs.

Question 6

A student writes, "Me and Jordan finished the worksheet first." What is the clearest way to explain the error?

Show answer

C. The error is pronoun case, and the explanation names the rule in plain words. Choice D tempts because the sentence sounds casual, but it never identifies the actual grammar mistake.

Keep the rules fresh with the full study guide, then apply them under time pressure with a Reading and Writing practice test.

Apply the rules on the timed Reading and Writing module.

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Written by Lee Trieu - Founder, ParaPathways Practice - About
Facts verified against ETS and state education agency listings - Last updated July 10, 2026

ParaPathways Practice provides free practice tests for the ETS ParaPathways Assessment (5757). This site is not affiliated with ETS.