Search the site
Search
Grammar ▾
▸ Articles
▸ Advanced Grammar
▸ Adjectives & Adverbs
▸ Conjunctions
▸ Conditionals
▸ Determiners
▸ Gerunds & Infinitives
▸ Grammar Practice
▸ Modal Verbs
▸ Nouns
▸ Parts of Speech
▸ Prepositions
▸ Pronouns
▸ Quantifiers
▸ Question Formation
▸ Reported Speech
▸ Verbs
Writing ▾
▸ Punctuation
▸ Sentence Structure
▸ Writing Mistakes
Vocabulary ▾
▸ Visual Vocabulary
▸ Food Vocabulary
▸ People Vocabulary
▸ Places Vocabulary
▸ Hobbies Vocabulary
▸ Home Vocabulary
▸ School Vocabulary
▸ Weather Vocabulary
▸ Basic Vocabulary
▸ General Vocabulary
Speaking ▾
▸ Conversational English
Calculators
Contacts
Home
» B1–B2 Intermediate
Using Determiners with Comparatives: more, fewer, less
Here we comparative forms for quantity, how to use more, fewer, and less with countable and uncountable nouns, exceptions and trends, combining determiners with comparatives, common mistakes, and provides sentence rewriting practice.
Determiners in Formal vs Informal English: stylistic differences
The article explains how determiner choice in English reveals style and tone. It covers formal patterns with the, each, every, and any, informal uses like this or those, and includes practice changing informal sentences to formal ones.
Determiners in Business and Professional Writing
Here we why clear determiners are essential in business writing, including how to reference documents, specify quantities and deadlines, avoid vague terms in contracts, and use precise language in reports, proposals, meeting notes, and requests.
Using Determiners for Precision in Arguments and Debates
Here we how determiners clarify arguments by framing claims, describing groups accurately, and signaling exceptions. It includes real examples and practice to help you avoid vague language and overgeneralizations when presenting opinions.
Determiners in Sets and Classifications
Here we how determiners like a, an, one, the, each, every, and all show group membership or refer to whole classes. It includes examples from science, education, and daily language, and provides practice with classification sentences.
Determiners in Storytelling: perspective and focus
Here we how determiners help guide readers in stories by introducing new characters or objects, referring back to known elements, shifting focus or distance, and building mood. It includes examples and practice editing a short story for determiner use.
Ambiguity Caused by Determiner Choice: how to avoid it
Here we how determiners can create ambiguity, with examples of unclear meaning from missing or incorrect determiners.
Determiners Derived from Adverbs: such, certain, particular
This article explains how determiners like such, certain, and particular develop from other word classes, how to use them with different nouns, their tone, how they show politeness or distance, and where they appear in writing. Practice is included.
Using Determiners in Negative Statements: no vs any
Here we how to use negative verbs and determiners, explains when to use any or no in negative sentences and questions, highlights tone differences, warns against double negatives, introduces common fixed expressions, and offers practice exercises.
Using “the other,” “others,” and “the others”: complete guide
This article reviews how to use the other, another, others, and the others, explains their differences, shows typical contexts, points out common mistakes, and provides practice with mini-dialogues to help learners master these words.
Previous
1
...
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
...
41
Next