
Explains the verb object to infinitive pattern and when to use the infinitive or gerund, with examples like advised staying home and enabled to participate.
Explore how verbs take gerunds, idiomatic expressions, and the contrasts with infinitives, including object structures and phrases like look forward to doing.
Learn when to use each versus every, master subject-verb agreement with singular forms, and navigate two-object vs more-than-two-object rules and common usage pitfalls.
Master the usage of other, another, and the other in English grammar, including singular and plural forms, the definite article, and pronoun and determiner uses, with one another.
Master the use of both, either, and neither for two things, with noun usage and singular verbs; know when to use none for multiple options.
Learn how to use the definite and indefinite articles correctly with countable and uncountable nouns, specific vs non-specific references, and names of places, objects, and people.
Learn how nouns and noun phrases function as subjects, objects, and complements, and how determiners, adjectives, adverbs, and prepositional phrases add detail.
Explore pronouns and their antecedents, covering personal, demonstrative, reflexive, indefinite, interrogative, and relative forms, with focus on subject/object, possessives, and who/whom/whose usage.
Learn how antecedent and pronoun agreement works, covering singular vs plural nouns, indefinite pronouns, compound subjects, and collective nouns with practical examples.
Explore the simple present tense to describe habitual actions and factual statements, using base verbs, third-person -s, and forming negatives and questions with do/does.
Master the simple past tense and its use for actions at a definite time. Learn verb forms: simple, past, past participle; plus irregular verbs, negatives with did, and questions.
Master the present perfect tense to describe actions begun in the past with present effects, using have/has plus past participle, and express duration with since, for, yet, just, and already.
Learn how the past perfect marks the first of two past actions, with the second in simple past, and when to use present or future perfect.
Master the simple future tense by using will with the base form and the negative won't, as in I will go, I will travel, and they will migrate.
Learn how to form future with going to for predictions and planned actions, using am/is/are plus the base verb, with examples of weather, pregnancy, marriage, and planned holidays.
explains the future continuous tense, showing actions in progress at a definite future time with examples like 'I will be doing my homework' and 'This time tomorrow'.
Understand how might signals conditional and future possibility, including second and third conditionals, and its uses in requests and permission with might have past participle forms.
Use can to express ability, possibility, and permission, including requests. Explain be able to and could to show shifts across past, future, and one-time or repeating events.
Use had better to convey warnings, threats, or desperate hope, with examples about taking an umbrella and getting here soon, plus should have or ought to have.
Explore how must, mustn't, and be supposed to express obligation, necessity, prohibition, and expectations, while illustrating logical conclusions and verb tenses.
Explain how would rather functions as a modal requiring the base form, covering present, past, and subjunctive forms, negatives, parallel structures, and counterfactuals, with contrasts to would prefer.
Explains how to express preferences with would prefer, including would prefer to infinitive, would prefer it if past simple, using rather than, and not to in correct forms.
Master expressing ability with be able to and get able to, compare with can and could, and use was, were, and will be able to across tenses.
Master passive voice and its focus on the action’s receiver, with forms of be and past participles across present, past, and future tenses, plus clear examples.
Explore forming passive questions and negative sentences from active statements, identify the object and agent, convert tenses, reduce participle clauses, and practice subjunctive and relative clauses in English grammar.
Learn how passive forms of gerunds use the be auxiliary plus past participle, with examples like being called and having been offered, to show tense, timing, and sequence.
Explore passive verbs with two objects, turning sentences with a direct and an indirect object into passives. Understand subject placement, tense, and examples like it is believed.
Explore passive voice in reduced clauses by using past and present participles to shorten relative constructions, with examples like the child involved in theft.
Explore how the get construction expresses change or becoming, using adjectives and past participles with present continuous forms like I am getting hungry and examples such as hacked or broken.
Study causative constructions with make, let, help, force, allow, permit, and cause. Discover their active forms, when to use bare or to-infinitives, and how passive and indirect structures differ.
This course will teach you English grammar. You will learn the structure of English. This comprehensive course will provide you with all grammar rules and structure, which will help you boost your exam score as well as writing, speaking, listening skills. After completing this course, you will be able to master important English exams such as IELTS, TOEFL and other important English exams.
Providing loads of examples, this course will make sure and help you boost the understanding the gist of the sentences. You will also learn conjunctions, puntuations as well as the main structures of the grammar.
With this course, you will learn the topics below comprehensively:
The Parts Of a Sentence
Linking Verbs + Adjective
Transive and Intransive Verbs
Verb + Object + Infinity or Gerund
Verb + Infinitive
Verb + Gerund
Verb + Direct Object + Indirect Object
Model + Simple Verb
There Verb and Special Notes
Determiners
Determiners - Examples
Each - Every
Other - Another - The Other
Both - Either - Neither
Both - Either - Neither
Cardinal and Ordinal Numbers
Articles
Articles
Nouns and Noun Phrases
Uncountable and Countable Nouns
Uncountable and Countable Nouns
Collective Nouns
Subject Verb Agreement
Pronouns
Pronouns - Antecedent Agreement
Pronoun Reference Errors
Tenses
Tenses
Simple Present Tense
Present Continous Tense
Present Continous Tense
Simple Past Tense
Past Continous Tense
Present Perfect Tense
Present Perfect Continous Tense
Past Perfect Tense
Past Perfect Continous Tense
Simple Future Tense
Going to Future
Future Continous Tense
Future Perfect Tense
Future Perfect Continous Tense
Comparison Of Tenses
Sequence Of Tenses
Sequence Of Tenses
Summary Of Tenses
Modal Auxilaries
Might
May
Can
Could
Should
Ought To
Had Better
Will
Shall
Must
Have To
Would
Would Rather/Sooner/Just As Soon
Would Rather
Prefer
Would Prefer
Used to Infinitive
Be / Get Used to
Be / Get Able to
Be due to
Be likely to
Be meant to
Be supposed to
Modals Refering Past Time - Perfect Infinitive
Modals Refering Past Time - Perfect Infinitive
Passive Voice
The Passive Agent
Passive Question and Negative Form
Passive Question and Negative Form
Passive Of Gerunds
Passive Of Infinitives
Passive Participles
Passive Verbs with Simple Verbs
Passive Verbs with Two Objects
Passive Verbs with Two Objects
Passive Of Subjunctive
To be to Simple Verb Structure
Passive Voice in Reduced Clauses
Passive Construction with Get
Passive Voice - Special Notes
Causative Construction - Have / Get
Causative Construction - Make / Let/ Help / Force / Allow / Permit / Cause
Causative Construction - Make / Let/ Help / Force / Allow / Permit / Cause
Gerunds Used as Subject
Gerunds Used as Object
Gerunds Used as Appositive
Gerunds after Prepositions
Gerunds after Possessives
Gerunds Used as Adjective
Gerunds - Time Reference
Verbs Followed by Gerunds
Idiomatic Expressions Followed by Gerunds
Infinitives
Infinitives Used as Noun
Infinitives Used as Adjective
Infinitives Used as Adverb
Structures That are Followed by Infinitive
Structures That are Followed by Infinitive
Idiomatic Expressions Followed by Infinitives
Infinitives in Passive Construction
Infinitives Used to Replace Nouns
Infinitive - Time Reference with Active Voice
Infinitive - Time Reference with Passive Voice
Verbs Object to Infinitives Structure
Verb Object Simple Verb Sturcture
Verbs That Need Special Attention
Verbs That Need Special Attention
Adjectives
Adjective Patterns 1 - To infinitve + Object
Adjective Patterns 2 - To infinitve
Adjective Patterns 3 - Subjunctive
Adjective Patterns 4 - Superlative
Adjective Patterns 5 - Linking Verbs
Types of Adjectives 1 - Used as Attributively
Types of Adjectives 2 - Used as Predicatively
Types of Adjectives 3 - Emphasizing Adj.
Types of Adjectives 4 - After Nouns
Types of Adjectives 5 - Used as Noun Phrase
Comparative and Superlative Forms Of Adjectives
Adjectives - Comparisons with Equal Degree - As adj as
Adjectives - Comparisons with Comparative Degree
Adjectives - Modification - Of Comparatives and Superlatives
Compound Adjectives
Types of Adverbs - Intensifiers
The Use Of Rather
The Use Of Rather
TheUse Of Quite
The Use Of Fairly
The Use Of Enough
The Use Of Too
The Use Of Very
The Positions Of Adverbs
The Frequency Adverbs
TheUse Of Quite
The Use Of Fairly
The Use Of Enough
The Use Of Too
The Use Of Very
The Positions Of Adverbs
The Frequency Adverbs
Relative Clauses
Formation of Relative Clauses
Defining- Restricted Relative Clauses
Non Defining- Non Restricted Relative Clauses
Non Defining- Non Restricted Relative Clauses
Reduction Of Relative Clauses
Additional Information On Relative Clauses
Typical Errors on Relative Clauses
Noun Clauses
Formation Of Noun Clauses
That Noun Clauses
Whether / If Noun Clauses
Question Word Noun Clauses
Function Of Noun Clauses - Subject of Sentence
Function Of Noun Clauses - Object of Sentence
Function Of Noun Clauses - Object of Sentence
Function Of Noun Clauses - Subject Complement of Sentence
Function Of Noun Clauses - Appositive Phrases of Sentence
Function Of Noun Clauses - Appositive Phrases of Sentence
Function Of Noun Clauses - Appositive Phrases of Sentence
Function Of Noun Clauses - Object of a Preposition
Function Of Noun Clauses - Indirect Object of Sentence
Subordinators
Position and Function of Noun Clauses - Summary
...Ever Words in Noun Clauses
The Subjunctive Form in Noun Clauses
Reduction of Noun Clauses
Ever Words
Ever Words versus Relative Clauses
Ever Words used as Noun Clauses and Adverbial Clauses
Whatever - However
Correlative Conjunctions
Correlative Conjunctions
Using Correlative Conjunctions
Conditions
Imagined Conditions
Imagined Conditions
Real Conditions
Mix Conditions
Special Usage Of If Clause
Wish Clauses - Wish + that Clause
Wish Clauses - Wish + to infinitive
Wish Clauses - If Only
Hypotheses
Adverbial Clauses - Time
Adverbial Clauses - Place
Adverbial Clauses - Reason
Adverbial Clauses - Contrast
Adverbial Clauses - Result
Adverbial Clauses - Purpose
Adverbial Clauses - Manner
Adverbial Clauses - Degree
Adverbial Clauses - Condition
Adverbial Clauses - Comparison
Adverbial Clauses - Additional Notes
Participles
Participles - Actions that take place at the same time
Participles - Actions that take place at the same time
Participles - Actions that take place at the different time
Participle Phrases with Its Own Subject
Inversion with Preposition
Inversion with Negative Adverb
Inversion with "Only" or "Not Only"
Inversion with Other Structures
Inversion When Optional
And...Too / And....So
And...Either / And...Neither
And...Either / And...Neither
Tag Questions
Single Words Parallelism
Phrases Parallelism
Clauses Parallelism
Comparesion and Degree Parallelism
Linking Verbs Parallelism
Elements in List Parallelism
Examples for Parallel Construction
Subjuntives
Reduction Of Clauses
Reduction For Passive Construction
Reduction For Passive Construction
Reduction For Active Construction
Reduction For Infinitives
Summary
Coordinating Conjunctions(and, but, or, nor, so, yet, for)
Subordinating Conjunctions
Conjuctives For Contrast, Result, Listing, Times
Conjuctives For Emphasis, Refutation, Reformation
Conjuctives For Correction, Transition, Alternation
Conjuctives For Negative Condition, Conclusion
Other Conjunctives (Sentence Connectors)
Structures For Addition
Structures For Cause and Effect
Structures For Concessive Contrast - Denial
Structures For Contrast
Structures For Similarity
Structures For Purpose
Structures For Result
Structures For Time
Structures For Condition
Adverbial Clauses Versus Adverbial Phrases