English Grammar
Complete grammar guide from beginner to intermediate
Master English grammar from beginner to intermediate level. Our comprehensive guide covers A1, A2, and B1 grammar topics with clear explanations, conjugation tables, and practical examples to help you speak and write English correctly.
Beginner
Basic grammar rules, simple sentence structures, and essential verb forms.
Personal Pronouns
Learn the English personal pronouns used as subjects and objects. Master I, you, he, she, it, we, and they in different contexts.
Present Simple Tense
Master the present simple tense for habits, routines, facts, and general truths. Learn when to add -s/-es to verbs and how to form questions and negatives.
Articles: A, An, The
Learn when to use the definite article 'the' and indefinite articles 'a' and 'an'. Understand the rules for choosing the right article and when to use no article.
Basic Word Order (SVO)
Learn the fundamental English sentence structure: Subject-Verb-Object. Understand how to build correct simple sentences and where to place adverbs and other elements.
Numbers 1-100
Learn to count from 1 to 100 in English. Master cardinal numbers for everyday situations like shopping, telling time, and giving your phone number.
Basic Questions
Learn to form yes/no questions and use question words (who, what, where, when, why, how). Master the word order for asking questions in English.
Elementary
Past tenses, comparatives, and more complex sentence structures.
Past Simple Tense
Describe completed actions in the past. Learn regular verb endings (-ed) and common irregular verb forms for everyday communication.
Present Perfect Tense
Connect past actions to the present using have/has + past participle. Use for experiences, recent events, and unfinished time periods.
Possessive Pronouns
Replace nouns with possessive pronouns (mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs) to avoid repetition and speak more naturally.
Prepositions: Location & Direction
Master prepositions for describing where things are and how they move. Learn the differences between similar prepositions like in/on/at and to/into/onto.
Comparatives & Superlatives
Compare things using -er/-est or more/most. Express bigger, smaller, the best, the worst. Learn irregular forms and comparison structures.
Modal Verbs
Express ability, permission, obligation, and possibility with can, could, must, should, may, might, and would. Essential for polite English.
Intermediate
Subjunctive mood, passive voice, and advanced grammar concepts.
Future Tense
Express future plans, predictions, and intentions using will, going to, and present continuous. Know which form to use in different situations.
Relative Clauses
Connect ideas and add information using relative clauses with who, which, that, whose, where, and when. Master defining and non-defining relative clauses.
Reported Speech
Report what others said using indirect speech. Learn the tense shifts, pronoun changes, and time expression adjustments needed for accurate reported speech.
Passive Voice
Shift focus from the doer to the action using be + past participle. Essential for formal writing, news, and when the actor is unknown or unimportant.
Conditionals (If Clauses)
Express conditions and their results using zero, first, second, and third conditionals. Understand when to use each type for real and unreal situations.
Past Perfect Tense
Describe actions that were completed before another past action. Essential for storytelling and explaining sequences of past events.