Contents
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.
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Content You Will Discover in this Grammar PDF Book
πΉ Parts of Speech
A breakdown of the fundamental components of English, including nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, and interjections.
πΉ Nouns
- Types of Nouns β Common, proper, abstract, collective, countable, and uncountable nouns.
- Plural Forms β Regular (cat β cats) and irregular (child β children).
- Possessive Forms β Singular and plural possession (Johnβs book, the teachersβ lounge).
πΉ Adjectives
- Types of Adjectives β Descriptive (blue sky), comparative (bigger), superlative (biggest).
- Order of Adjectives β Correct placement of multiple adjectives (a small red bag, not a red small bag).
πΉ Adverbs
- Types of Adverbs β Manner (slowly), place (here), time (yesterday), frequency (often), degree (completely).
- Adverb Placement β How adverbs change meaning depending on position (She only eats vegetables vs. She eats only vegetables).
πΉ Verbs & Verb Tenses
- Main & Auxiliary Verbs β Helping verbs (be, do, have).
- Regular vs. Irregular Verbs β Work β worked vs. go β went.
- 12 English Tenses β Present, past, future, and perfect tenses with examples.
πΉ Pronouns
- Personal Pronouns β (I, you, he, she, we, they).
- Possessive Pronouns β (mine, yours, theirs).
- Relative Pronouns β (who, which, that).
- Reflexive & Demonstrative Pronouns β (myself, himself, this, those).
πΉ Prepositions
- Prepositions of Place β (on the table, under the chair).
- Prepositions of Time β (on Monday, in December, at night).
- Common Prepositional Phrases β (at the moment, in a hurry).
πΉ Articles (A, An, The)
- Indefinite Articles β A dog, an apple (used for general nouns).
- Definite Article β The sun, the Eiffel Tower (used for specific nouns).
- Omission of Articles β When to skip articles (I love coffee vs. I love the coffee you made).
πΉ Conjunctions
- Coordinating Conjunctions β (and, but, or, so).
- Subordinating Conjunctions β (because, although, while).
- Correlative Conjunctions β (eitherβ¦or, neitherβ¦nor).
πΉ Conditionals (If-Clauses)
- Zero Conditional β (If you heat water, it boils.)
- First Conditional β (If it rains, I will stay home.)
- Second Conditional β (If I were rich, I would travel the world.)
- Third Conditional β (If I had studied, I would have passed the exam.)
- Mixed Conditionals β Combining different time frames in conditionals.
πΉ Interjections
- Expressing emotions β (Wow! Ouch! Alas!)
- Using interjections in conversation and writing.
πΉ Reported Speech (Indirect Speech)
- Changes in Verb Tenses β (She said, βI am happyβ β She said she was happy).
- Shifting Pronouns & Time Expressions β (today β that day, here β there).
πΉ Determiners
- Defining words before nouns β (this, that, some, any, few, many).
- How determiners clarify meaning in sentences.
πΉ Grammatical Errors & Common Mistakes
- Subject-Verb Agreement Errors β (She go β She goes).
- Misplaced Modifiers β (She saw a man walking with a telescope.).
- Run-On Sentences & Sentence Fragments β (I like coffee I drink it every morning vs. I like coffee. I drink it every morning.).
πΉ Sentences
A sentence is a group of words that expresses a complete thought. This section covers:
β Types of Sentences:
- Declarative sentences β State facts or opinions (She loves reading.)
- Interrogative sentences β Ask questions (Do you like coffee?)
- Imperative sentences β Give commands or requests (Please sit down.)
- Exclamatory sentences β Express strong emotions (What a beautiful day!)
β Sentence Structures:
- Simple Sentences β Contain one independent clause (She reads books.)
- Compound Sentences β Join two independent clauses with a conjunction (She reads books, and she writes stories.)
- Complex Sentences β Contain one independent clause and one or more dependent clauses (She reads books because she loves stories.)
- Compound-Complex Sentences β Combine elements of both compound and complex sentences (She reads books because she loves stories, and she writes her own stories too.)
β Sentence Fragments & Run-On Sentences:
- How to avoid incomplete sentences (Although she reads a lot… β)
- Fixing run-on sentences (She reads a lot. She loves books. β )
πΉ 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 β Functions as a noun (The tall building is new.)
- Verb Phrase β Includes the main verb and auxiliary verbs (She is reading a book.)
- Adjective Phrase β Describes a noun (The house with the red roof is mine.)
- Adverbial Phrase β Describes a verb (She speaks in a soft voice.)
- Prepositional Phrase β Begins with a preposition and acts as an adjective or adverb (The book on the table is mine.)
πΉ Clauses
A clause is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb. This section explains:
β Types of Clauses:
- Independent Clause β Can stand alone as a sentence (She studies English.)
- Dependent (Subordinate) Clause β Cannot stand alone (Because she wants to improve her skills.)
β Different Types of Dependent Clauses:
- Noun Clauses β Function as a noun (I believe that she is right.)
- Adjective Clauses β Modify a noun (The book that I borrowed is interesting.)
- Adverbial Clauses β Modify a verb, adjective, or adverb (She left because she was tired.)
β 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)
πΉ Active vs. Passive Voice
- Active Voice β (The manager completed the report.).
- Passive Voice β (The report was completed by the manager.).
- When to use active vs. passive voice in writing.
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