In grammar, a particle is a range of words that fall outside the traditional eight parts of speech – noun, verb, pronoun, adjective, preposition, adverb, interjection, conjunction, yet there is no doubt about its value in language.
So, what is a particle in English? The best way to look at it is as a function word, or word that must be associated with another to give meaning. An example would be the ‘to’ in the verb ‘to run’. Although to can be used as a preposition, with verbs like to run, to love, or to talk, it acts as something called an infinitive marker, and it doesn’t really have any meaning on its own. The broad term for words like this is particle.
What is a Particle in a Sentence?
In most cases, particles are prepositions used in conjunction with another word to form phrasal (multi-word) verbs. Words like in, off, up, by, along, down, forward, under (all prepositions) can be particles, as can the previously discussed word, to, when used as the infinitive marker. An example of a particle in a sentence:- He ate up all his dinner.
Particle Examples
Let’s look at some examples of particles in sentences, beginning first with the adverb particles that form phrasal verbs:- Sassy went away on a long trip.
- We will talk over the problem.
- Jimmy started out with sixty dollars.
- I wanted to go to the movies.
- Helen hopes to decide on her future soon.
- We are not going to go along with this any longer.
- Now, who would like some dinner?
- I was told I would be fired. Well, I will not accept that without a fight!
- We will not travel to Paris this summer.
- The president does not have that authority.
Adverb Particle
The most common particles you will come across are those words that are mainly used as prepositions, but which become adverb particles when combined with a verb. For example:- The project was moving along at a steady rate.
- He ate up all his dinner.
- He ate all his dinner.
- The airplane took off at 3am precisely.
How Many Particles Are in English?
Because many prepositions can be used as adverb particles, we can say that there are dozens of English particles. However, we can break them down into these categories:- Grammatical particles – the infinitive marker to.
- Adverb particles – prepositions that combine with verbs to form phrasal verbs.
- Discourse particles – words like now and well that are used like interjections.
- Negative particle – the word not.