English grammar is the body of rules that describe the structure of expressions in the English language.
Detailed Conjunctions List in English Comparision Evidently Eqaully As with Likewise In the same way Similarly Like Of contrast Conclusion To conclude In conclusion Finally On the whole Summarizing Overall To sum up Despite this In comparison In contrast Even though illustration For example Such as For instance Such as In other words An instance As revealed by To show that In the case of As an example For one thing Conclusion To conclude In conclusion Finally On the whole Summarising Overall To sum up Evidently Cause & Effect Because Since For So Consequently Therefore Thus Hence Owing to
100+ Spelling Rules in Grammar with Examples. in this blog, You will Learn Common English Spelling Rules with PDF
12 Tenses and Example Sentences; Tenses Positive Negative Question Present Simple I prefer my coffee black. I don’t prefer my coffee black. Do I prefer my coffee black? Present Continuous She is listening the music now. She is not listening the music now. Is she listening the music now? Present Perfect It has rained a lot lately. It has not rained a lot lately. Has it rained a lot lately? Present PerfectContinuous She has been singing a song. She has not been singinga song. Has she been singing a song? Past Simple We watched the news last night. We did not watch the news last night. Did we watch the news last night? Past Continuous I was learning German last year. I was not learning German last year. Was I learning German last year? Past perfect He had left when I went to the club. He had not left when I went to the club. Had he left when I went to the club? Past Perfect Continuous They had been
Explore the essential guide to English conditionals! Understand how to correctly use zero, first, second, and third conditionals with clear examples. Perfect for learners aiming to master complex sentence structures.
Using A little – Little – A few – Few and Example Sentences Using A little in English A little is used with positive quantity and non-countable nouns. It means “a small amount” or “some”. Examples; There is a little milk in the refrigerator Would you like a little water? Mary got a little bit of pie. Can’t you discount it a little? I need a little sugar. I will have tea. Using Little in English Little expresses a diminutive size or a negative quantity. Little means “almost nothing” or “not much”. Examples; I’m sorry, I speak little French.
Collocations with GET in English get dressed get upset get divorced get changed get ready for get the impression get into trouble get wet get good get worried get a chance get lost get permission get stuck get a degree get fired get cool get pregnant get to sleep get home get married get nowhere get hungry get one’s hair cut get together get a right get a call get a joke get a ticket get a letter get a cold get a shock get a dark get a clue get a tan get a job get out of breath
This is a great writing exercise to practice writing a narrative. Keywords and drawings are given.
Usually, used to, be used to, get used to. Present and past habits and states, and repeated situations. English intermediate grammar exercises.
Common Grammar Mistakes in English, Grammatical Errors Confusing the Infinitive, Gerund or Base Form of the Verb Examples; I must to buy a new cartoon book. I must buy a new cartoon book. You use the infinitive with modals like should, must when you should use the base form of the verb but You can also use gerunds when you should use infinitives: Examples; I decided going to the cinema with my mother. I decided to go to the cinema with my mother. Wrong Word Usage This happens mostly because in your native language, the verb can come at the
Question words in German, for your pleasure. #German #deutschlernen #learngerman #mfl #mflire #LeavingCert
Here we've compiled 18 grammar rules on sentence structure and their exercises which build up from definitions of grammatical terms to practical rules and
Exercises PDF Grammar Worksheets, In this section of tenses exercises PDF.com here you find pages and topics related to English grammar. Many of our resources..
Fun and engaging grammar games for your secondary ELA classroom! These grammar games will get your students collaborating, moving, and discussing those critical sentence structure and grammar skills! Bring fun to grammar instruction!
Learn to speak German with these basic and advanced grammar and vocabulary lessons, quizzes, study tips, and articles about German culture.
Verb Tenses are different forms of verbs describing something happened in the past, happening at present or wi
Second Conditional In English Grammar with Examples, In this blog, You will learn about Second Conditional with Examples in English
This will be quite a short post. But sometimes easy does it. So, I hope it will be the case. I would love to explain the usage and form of Used to here. To achieve this I have created the following mind map: Used to – mind map In this mind map I try to […]
English Contractions List Are not – Aren’t Can not – Can’t Could not – Could’t Did not – Didn’t Does not – Doesn’t Do not – Don’t Had not – Hadn’t Has not – Hasn’t Have not – Haven’t He had – He’d He would – He’d He will – He’ll He shall – He’ll He is – He’s He has – He’s I had – I’d I would – I’d I will – I’II I shall – I’ll I am – I’m I have – I’ve Is not – Isn’t Let us – Let’s Might not – Mightn’t Must
Verb tenses tell us how an action relates to the flow of time.
Subjunctive in English! Learn what is subjunctive, when to use the subjunctive and how to form it in English with examples and ESL infographic.
English Quantifiers, Using Countable and Uncountable Nouns Quantifier Meaning Countable Noun Uncountable Noun Little Small, minor No Yes Few Small, slight Yes No A lot of a large number or amount Yes Yes Many Very, numerous Yes No Much Very, too, a lot No Yes Any Never, at all Yes
Prepositions of movement. To, from, into, out of, towards, up, down, round, through, across, etc. A2. Pre-intermediate English grammar and exercises.
Phrasal Verbs – LOOK, Definitions and Example Sentences Look ahead to think about future The past is past. Let us look ahead. Look back to think about past When I look back I can see where we went wrong. Look after to take care of sb/sth He’s not competent to look after young children. Look round to visit a place and look at the things in it I will spend all day looking round the city. Look on to watch sth happen without taking part in it Look on the bright side –no one was badly hurt. Look
Apostrophe S - Possessive Nouns - Grammar Charts ESOL / ELA Grammar reference charts about the correct use of the apostrophe S. The grammar rules everyone needs to know. We look at when to use the apostrophe S and when to only use and apostrophe. One chart is about the three meanings of Apostrophe S at the end of a word. We focus on the possessive noun. We look at the following grammar rules: - Singular nouns NOT ending in S - Plural nouns ending in S - Plural nouns that do not in S - Singular nouns ending in S - Names of people that end in S - Apostrophes with two or more people - No noun after apostrophe S - Apostrophe S with periods of time - Decades / Years - No apostrophe - Plural forms of Acronyms CONTENT: This resource contains 30 Pages: Apostrophe S summary chart - (1 page) Singular nouns - add 's rules - (1 page) Plural nouns ending in S rules - (1 page) Singular nouns ending in S rules - (1 page) Plural nouns NOT ending in S rules - (1 page) Names ending in S rules - (1 page) Classical / Religious names ending in S rules - (1 page) Apostrophe S with two or more people rules - (1 page) No noun after Apostrophe S rules - (1 page) Meaning of Apostrophe S - Three Uses - (1 page) Possessive nouns - (1 page) Singular nouns ending in S examples - (1 page) Plural nouns ending in S examples - (1 page) dog's vs. dogs' - (1 page) friend's vs. friends' - (1 page) Plural nouns NOT ending in S - (1 page) child's vs. children's - (1 page) Singular nouns ending in S examples - (1 page) class's vs. classes' - (1 page) Names ending in S examples - (1 page) Classical / Religious names ending in S examples - (1 page) Apostrophe S with two or more people examples - (1 page) Avoiding repetition examples - (2 pages) Apostrophe S with time periods - (1 page) No apostrophe with decades and years - (1 page) No apostrophe with acronyms - (1 page) Apostrophe S summary chart - Version 2 - (1 page) Apostrophe S summary chart - Two per page - (1 page) Guide to video lesson and exercises - (1 page) English Video I have created a video lesson on YouTube about the grammar rules of Apostrophe S. You can watch this free video to have a better idea of the contents of these charts and you can even use it in the classroom if you wish. Please download the preview so you can have a better idea of the quality of this resource and what it contains. Click Follow Me to receive a message whenever we post any new items (and also whenever we have sales). Have a great day! - Rob W.