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Nelson The Noun
Meet Nelson The Noun.
"I name a specific person, place, thing, or idea. It's a big responsibility: a responsibility that requires a certain attention to detail."
Meet the Parts of Speech · Bundle · Ages 7-11

Meet the Parts of Speech: The Complete Series.

All eight storybooks in one box. The original Grammaropolis IP.

A Grammaropolis bundle, shipped kitted from the publisher.
$39.99
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What's in this bundle
  • 8 books, kitted into one box
  • Shipped direct from the publisher (Houston, TX)
  • Standard turnaround: three to five business days
  • Save $15.93 vs. buying individually
  • ISBN 9781644421000

About the series.

With a book for every part of speech, the complete Meet the Parts of Speech series includes story-based adventures combined with traditional instruction and usage examples for nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, conjunctions, prepositions, and interjections. The complete series includes: Nelson the Noun (Nelson takes a break from his stressful day job, leaving the Noun Office in the hands of Roger the pronoun. After discovering that vacation isn't what he'd hoped it would be, Nelson returns just in time to fix the confusion Roger has caused in his absence); Vinny the Action Verb & Lucy the Linking Verb (Vinny and Lucy approach life differently. He's all action, while she's content to sit back and be. With their friend Jake the adjective in trouble, however, the two verbs must put aside their differences and work together to save the day); Jake the Adjective (When Jake's nemesis pulls a prank and turns Grammaropolis into a grey, misshapen, tasteless town, Jake is forced to run around restoring everything (the colors, shapes, sizes, tastes, and more) to the way it was all meant to be); Benny the Adverb (When his prized rock collection is stolen from the bank, Benny opens an investigation into how and when the theft took place and where the thief might have gone); Roger the Pronoun (Feeling that he's destined for more than just renaming nouns, Roger opens up his own store next to Nelson's Nouns. But when Nelson goes missing, Roger realizes that for life to mean anything at all, every pronoun has to have an antecedent); Connie the Conjunction (Nobody in all of Grammaropolis has more style than Connie; she simply knows how to put things together. After a bump on the head makes her give bad advice, she uses all the conjunctions at her disposal to set everything right again); Lil' Pete the Preposition (When launching his model rocket in the park, Lil' Pete gets excited and forgets to add objects to his prepositional phrases. Without objects, the prepositions become adverbs, and chaos ensues as the rockets fly up, by, and around with no direction at all); and Izzy the Interjection (No matter whether the emotion is strong or mild, positive, negative, or somewhere in between, Izzy lives to express it. Loneliness can be a problem sometimes because she's not grammatically connected to the other words in the sentence, but when the time comes, she leaps at the chance to express her strongest emotion yet).

Standards covered.

The Standards Coverage Explorer maps every standard this book cites to a specific page number. Search by your state, your grade, and the department; download a branded one-pager for your school board.

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Standards in this book (illustrative):

CCSS L.5.1.ACCSS L.5.1.BCCSS L.5.1.CCCSS L.5.1.DCCSS L.5.1.EL.5.2.DL.5.3.AL.5.3.BL.5.4.AL.5.5.A-CL.5.6TEKS 5.11.D.iFL ELA.5.C.3.1NY 5L1a-e