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Grammar
Grammar
This section focuses on English grammar explained in a simple and practical way. You will find clear rules, step-by-step examples, and common mistakes to avoid, helping you build a strong foundation for speaking and writing confidently.
Adverb Placement in Passive Structures
Here we how to form passive sentences, where to position adverbs in passive clauses, and the distinction between mid- and end-position. It also discusses placement in complex passives, offers real examples, and includes practice exercises.
End-position Adverbs: clarity and constraints
This article explains which adverbs typically go at the end of sentences, with rules for time, manner, and degree adverbs. It covers exceptions such as frequency adverbs, shows when end-position is awkward, and gives practical examples and fixes.
Fronted Adverbs for Emphasis: How to Highlight Key Information
The article defines fronting and its purpose, lists commonly fronted adverbs, and explains comma usage. It also discusses how fronting affects focus and tone, gives examples from various genres, and offers practice with rewriting sentences.
Mid-position Adverbs: always, often, never
This article explains mid-position adverbs, their placement in simple and continuous tenses, and with modal or auxiliary verbs. It highlights common mistakes, contrasts natural and unnatural examples, and provides short exercises for practice.
Stance Adverbs for Opinion and Attitude (extended list)
This article explains how stance adverbs express opinion, evaluation, and reaction in English. It details their types, correct placement, and provides an extended list with examples, plus practice for using them to build coherent opinion paragraphs.
Sentence Adverbs: honestly, fortunately, surprisingly
This article explains what sentence adverbs express, how they comment on whole statements, and where to place them in sentences. It covers formality in spoken versus written English, common sentence adverbs, examples, and practice exercises.
Conjunctive Adverbs: however, therefore, moreover
Here we what conjunctive adverbs do in sentences, how they differ from other linking words, punctuation rules for however, therefore, and moreover, connecting ideas in academic writing, common placement mistakes, and includes practical examples and a quiz.
Adjectives Ending in -ed vs -ing: Meaning Differences
Here we the rule for using -ed and -ing adjective endings, common adjective pairs like bored/boring, how wrong endings change meaning, frequent beginner mistakes, and provides short practice sentences to choose the correct form.
Limiting Adjectives: Definition and Usage
Here we how limiting adjectives such as main, only, first, and last define nouns and differ from descriptive adjectives. It explains where they are placed in noun phrases, how they change meaning, and provides practice using them in short descriptions.
Comparative and Superlative Adjectives: Full Theory
The article defines comparatives and superlatives, explains how to form them with -er, -est, more, and most, details spelling changes for short adjectives, shows how to use than and the, and gives practice rewriting sentences.
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