English Grammar

Active and Passive Voice

Time and Tense

Degrees of Comparison

Subject Verb Agreement

Transformation of Sentence

Types of Sentences

Joining Sentences

Splitting Sentences

Sentence Patterns

Wh Questions

Wh Words

Parts of Speech

Figures of Speech

Auxiliary Verbs

Causative Verbs

Helping Verbs

Main and Helping Verbs

Adverbs

Conjunctions

Preposition

Punctuation

Determiners

Gerund

Infinitives

Modifiers

Nominal Compound

Prefixes and Suffixes

Homophones and Homonyms

Primary Auxiliaries

Primary Auxiliaries

Auxiliaries or Auxiliary Verbs are the verbs that merely help principal verbs in the formation of various verb forms. They are important as structural verbs. Auxiliaries are of two types: Primary Auxiliaries and Modal Auxiliaries Primary Auxiliaries List Be Verb: is, am, are, was, were, been, beingHave Verb: have, has, had, havingDo Verb: do, does, […]

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Modal Auxiliaries

Modal Auxiliaries

The Modal Auxiliaries are can, may, shall, will, must, ought to, used to, need, and dare.  Can, may, shall, and will have special past forms could, might, should, and would respectively, but ‘must‘ do not. Use of Modal Auxiliaries Modal Auxiliaries Functions as Examples Will 1. asking2. possibility3. suggestion 1. Will you go to college?2. It will probably rain tomorrow.3. You

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Types of Auxiliary Verbs

Auxiliary Verbs

Auxiliary Verbs are verbs that merely help principal verbs in the formation of various verb forms. Auxiliary verbs are important as structural verbs. Types of Auxiliary Verbs Auxiliary Verbs are of two types: Primary Auxiliary Verbs Be Verb: is, am, are, was, were, been, beingHave Verb: have, has, had, havingDo Verb: do, does, did Modal

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Time and Tense

Time and Tense

The tense tells us when an action occurs: “yesterday” for the past, “today” for the present, and “tomorrow” for the future. There are three main tenses: present tense, past tense, and future tense. Each of these three tenses can be subdivided into four parts: Indefinite, Continuous, Perfect, and Perfect Continuous. Present Indefinite Tense The Present

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Subject Verb Agreement

Subject Verb Agreement

Subject Verb Agreement means that the verb in a sentence must agree with the subject in terms of number and person. In this post, you will find 30 golden rules, 120+ Examples, and important exercises. Important Subject Verb Agreement Rules Subject Verb Agreement Rule #1 Uncountable nouns take singular verbs, even if their meaning suggests

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Adverbs

Adverbs

An adverb is a word that usually modifies or adds more information about a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. But sometimes, it can also give details about any part of speech, phrase, or even an entire sentence. Adverbs describe aspects like when, where, why, how, and how much. Read the following sentences: In sentence

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Punctuation

Punctuation

Punctuation denotes the implementation of standardized marks and symbols within written language to signify pauses, separate ideas, clarify meaning, and aid in the appropriate enunciation and comprehension of textual content. Therefore, the process of using marks of pause is called Punctuation. Different Punctuation Marks PUNCTUATION MARK SYMBOLS USAGE FULL STOP (Period) . Indicates the end

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Splitting Sentences

Splitting Sentences

Splitting sentences involves breaking down longer ones into shorter forms, which is the reverse of ‘Joining Sentences.’ The splitting sentences technique improves readability by making complex ideas easier to understand through concise, distinct segments. Examples of Splitting Sentences Splitting Sentences into simple ones. Original Sentence Split Sentences She painted a beautiful landscape and framed it.

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Joining Sentences

Joining Sentences

Joining sentences involves the combination of two or more short sentences into a single sentence. We can join two or more sentences into a single sentence by making it: Ways Of Joining Sentences #1 Joining Sentences into a Simple Sentence Rule 1: By using an Infinitive Sentences Joining She loves to read. The novel is

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Participle

Participle

A participle is a form of a verb that is created by adding -ing, -ed, -en, or other endings to the base form of the verb. It serves as both a verb and an adjective simultaneously, thus embodying a dual grammatical function. In the above sentences, Setting, Meandering, Having Raised, Accomplished, Fascinated, and Having Finished

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