ESL PDF Books

Download Free Grammar PDF Book to Improve Your English

Grammar is the backbone of any language, and mastering it is key to effective communication. This grammar PDF book provides a clear, structured, and easy-to-understand guide to the essential rules of English grammar. Covering everything from basic sentence structure to complex grammatical concepts, this book is a valuable resource for learners at all levels.

Download Grammar PDF Book

A Grammar PDF book is an electronic guide written specifically to teach you English grammar clearly and simply.

Download here:

Grammar PDF BookPin

Download 7ESL Grammar PDF Book

Kindly use the password: 7ESL@789 to access.

Content You Will Discover in this Grammar PDF Book

🔹 Parts of Speech

A breakdown of the fundamental components of English, including nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, and interjections.

🔹 Nouns

  • Types of Nouns – Common, proper, abstract, collective, countable, and uncountable nouns.
  • Plural Forms – Regular (cat → cats) and irregular (child → children).
  • Possessive Forms – Singular and plural possession (John’s book, the teachers’ lounge).

🔹 Adjectives

  • Types of Adjectives – Descriptive (blue sky), comparative (bigger), superlative (biggest).
  • Order of Adjectives – Correct placement of multiple adjectives (a small red bag, not a red small bag).

🔹 Adverbs

  • Types of Adverbs – Manner (slowly), place (here), time (yesterday), frequency (often), degree (completely).
  • Adverb Placement – How adverbs change meaning depending on position (She only eats vegetables vs. She eats only vegetables).

🔹 Verbs & Verb Tenses

  • Main & Auxiliary Verbs – Helping verbs (be, do, have).
  • Regular vs. Irregular VerbsWork → worked vs. go → went.
  • 12 English Tenses – Present, past, future, and perfect tenses with examples.

🔹 Pronouns

  • Personal Pronouns – (I, you, he, she, we, they).
  • Possessive Pronouns – (mine, yours, theirs).
  • Relative Pronouns – (who, which, that).
  • Reflexive & Demonstrative Pronouns – (myself, himself, this, those).

🔹 Prepositions

  • Prepositions of Place – (on the table, under the chair).
  • Prepositions of Time – (on Monday, in December, at night).
  • Common Prepositional Phrases – (at the moment, in a hurry).

🔹 Articles (A, An, The)

  • Indefinite ArticlesA dog, an apple (used for general nouns).
  • Definite ArticleThe sun, the Eiffel Tower (used for specific nouns).
  • Omission of Articles – When to skip articles (I love coffee vs. I love the coffee you made).

🔹 Conjunctions

  • Coordinating Conjunctions – (and, but, or, so).
  • Subordinating Conjunctions – (because, although, while).
  • Correlative Conjunctions – (either…or, neither…nor).

🔹 Conditionals (If-Clauses)

  • Zero Conditional – (If you heat water, it boils.)
  • First Conditional – (If it rains, I will stay home.)
  • Second Conditional – (If I were rich, I would travel the world.)
  • Third Conditional – (If I had studied, I would have passed the exam.)
  • Mixed Conditionals – Combining different time frames in conditionals.

🔹 Interjections

  • Expressing emotions – (Wow! Ouch! Alas!)
  • Using interjections in conversation and writing.

🔹 Reported Speech (Indirect Speech)

  • Changes in Verb Tenses – (She said, “I am happy” → She said she was happy).
  • Shifting Pronouns & Time Expressions – (today → that day, here → there).

🔹 Determiners

  • Defining words before nouns – (this, that, some, any, few, many).
  • How determiners clarify meaning in sentences.

🔹 Grammatical Errors & Common Mistakes

  • Subject-Verb Agreement Errors – (She go → She goes).
  • Misplaced Modifiers – (She saw a man walking with a telescope.).
  • Run-On Sentences & Sentence Fragments – (I like coffee I drink it every morning vs. I like coffee. I drink it every morning.).

🔹 Sentences

A sentence is a group of words that expresses a complete thought. This section covers:

Types of Sentences:

  • Declarative sentences – State facts or opinions (She loves reading.)
  • Interrogative sentences – Ask questions (Do you like coffee?)
  • Imperative sentences – Give commands or requests (Please sit down.)
  • Exclamatory sentences – Express strong emotions (What a beautiful day!)

Sentence Structures:

  • Simple Sentences – Contain one independent clause (She reads books.)
  • Compound Sentences – Join two independent clauses with a conjunction (She reads books, and she writes stories.)
  • Complex Sentences – Contain one independent clause and one or more dependent clauses (She reads books because she loves stories.)
  • Compound-Complex Sentences – Combine elements of both compound and complex sentences (She reads books because she loves stories, and she writes her own stories too.)

Sentence Fragments & Run-On Sentences:

  • How to avoid incomplete sentences (Although she reads a lot… ❌)
  • Fixing run-on sentences (She reads a lot. She loves books. ✅)

🔹 Phrases

A phrase is a group of words that work together but do not contain both a subject and a verb. This section explains:

  • Noun Phrase – Functions as a noun (The tall building is new.)
  • Verb Phrase – Includes the main verb and auxiliary verbs (She is reading a book.)
  • Adjective Phrase – Describes a noun (The house with the red roof is mine.)
  • Adverbial Phrase – Describes a verb (She speaks in a soft voice.)
  • Prepositional Phrase – Begins with a preposition and acts as an adjective or adverb (The book on the table is mine.)

🔹 Clauses
A clause is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb. This section explains:

Types of Clauses:

  • Independent Clause – Can stand alone as a sentence (She studies English.)
  • Dependent (Subordinate) Clause – Cannot stand alone (Because she wants to improve her skills.)

Different Types of Dependent Clauses:

  • Noun Clauses – Function as a noun (I believe that she is right.)
  • Adjective Clauses – Modify a noun (The book that I borrowed is interesting.)
  • Adverbial Clauses – Modify a verb, adjective, or adverb (She left because she was tired.)

Relative Clauses:

  • Defining vs. Non-Defining Clauses (The man who lives next door is a doctor. vs. My brother, who lives in Canada, is a doctor.)
  • Using Relative Pronouns (who, whom, whose, which, that)

🔹 Active vs. Passive Voice

  • Active Voice – (The manager completed the report.).
  • Passive Voice – (The report was completed by the manager.).
  • When to use active vs. passive voice in writing.

Other Grammar Resources

Sub-Pages of English Grammar

B1 Knowledge Check · 5 questions

Download Free Grammar PDF Book to Improve Your English — Practice Quiz

1 / 5
Q1

Question 1: According to the grammar book's section on adjective order, which phrase uses the correct placement of multiple adjectives?

Question 1 options
The article states that the correct order is 'a small red bag,' not 'a red small bag.' Size adjectives come before colour adjectives in English.
Q2

Question 2: According to the grammar book, the second conditional uses the structure: 'If + past simple, would + base verb,' as in 'If I were rich, I would travel the world.'

Question 2 options
This is true. The article lists the second conditional with exactly this example: 'If I were rich, I would travel the world,' which follows the pattern of past simple in the if-clause and 'would + base verb' in the main clause.
Q3

Question 3: The grammar book explains that adverb placement can change meaning. What is the difference between 'She only eats vegetables' and 'She eats only vegetables'?

Question 3 options
'She only eats vegetables' can imply that eating is the only thing she does with vegetables, while 'She eats only vegetables' clearly means vegetables are the only food she eats. The position of 'only' shifts what it modifies.
Q4

Question 4: Match each conditional type to its correct example from the grammar book.

Question 4 options
Zero Conditional
First Conditional
Second Conditional
Third Conditional
If I had studied, I would have passed.
If you heat water, it boils.
If it rains, I will stay home.
If I were rich, I would travel the world.

Select an item on the left, then tap its match on the right.

Zero conditional describes general truths (water boils). First conditional describes real future possibilities (rain/stay home). Second conditional describes unreal present situations (were rich/would travel). Third conditional describes unreal past situations (had studied/would have passed).
Q5

Question 5: In reported speech, the sentence 'She said, "I am happy"' becomes ___.

Question 5 options
In reported speech, the present simple 'am' shifts to past simple 'was,' and the pronoun 'I' changes to 'she.' The correct transformation is 'She said she was happy.'

Quick Feedback

Is this article helpful?