English Grammar for Intermediate LearnersCEFR B1 Level
Master advanced concepts like subjunctive mood and passive voice.
Advance your English skills with B1 intermediate grammar. Learn subjunctive mood, passive voice, conditional sentences, and nuanced grammar rules. Designed for confident learners aiming for fluency in English.
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.
Infinitive vs Gerund
Know when to use 'to do' (infinitive) vs 'doing' (gerund) after different verbs. Master verb patterns and avoid common mistakes.
Adverbs and Adverb Position
Use adverbs to modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs. Learn the different types of adverbs and where to place them in sentences.
Possessive Forms (Saxon Genitive)
Express possession in English using apostrophe-s ('s), 'of', and possessive pronouns. Know when to use each form correctly.
Participial Adjectives (-ing vs -ed)
Use present and past participles as adjectives. Master the difference between -ing adjectives (boring) and -ed adjectives (bored) to describe feelings and things.
Complex Sentence Structure
Combine multiple clauses fluently using advanced connectors like although, despite, whereas, unless, as long as, and provided that.