Welcome to Your Ultimate English Grammar Guide : Rules, Tips & Common Mistakes
Mastering English grammar is essential for speaking and writing accurately and confidently. Whether you’re a beginner looking to understand basic grammar rules or an advanced learner aiming to refine your usage, this space offers everything you need. Explore step-by-step explanations of English grammar rules, practical grammar tips, common grammar mistakes to avoid, and real-life usage examples.From tenses, articles, and prepositions to subject-verb agreement, parts of speech, modifiers, and sentence structure, and many more this comprehensive grammar resource is designed to boost your fluency and clarity in both written and spoken English. Perfect for English language enthusiasts,competitive exam aspirants,ESL learners,and anyone looking to improve English grammar skills effectively. Check out our other English resources. If you are looking for online & offline Subject English tuition, Spoken English Tuition or English Honours Tuition, check out our various English courses.
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“Else” in English: The One Word That Quietly Breaks Your Sentences Every Single Day
You have been using the word else since the day you started learning English. You know what it means. And yet — you pause before writing “anyone else” vs “no one else,” you second-guess whether “nowhere else” is one word or two, and you have definitely written “or otherwise” when “or else” was what you…
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Various Uses of ‘Being’ in English — Structure, Types and Clear Examples
Most English learners know ‘being’ as a simple continuous form of ‘be’. But the uses of ‘being’ in English go far beyond that. ‘Being’ works as an auxiliary verb, a gerund, a noun, an adjective modifier, and even as a connector in complex sentences. Each role is different — and confusing them is one of the most…
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‘Look Forward To’ — 30 Expressions Where ‘To’ Demands the -ing Form
Here is the grammar trap that catches almost every learner: “I look forward to meet you” — wrong. “I look forward to meeting you” — correct. But why? Because in certain expressions, ‘to’ is a preposition, not part of an infinitive. And prepositions are always followed by nouns. The noun form of a verb in English is the gerund — the -ing…
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Various Uses of ‘Been’ in English
The word ‘been’ is one of the most used words in English grammar — and also one of the most confusing for learners. You see it in sentences every day, but it is not always clear why it is there or what job it is doing. This post covers all the important uses of ‘been’ in English in a simple, clear…
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50 Uncommon Nouns Ending in ‘-er’ Every Student Must Know
Most students learn the same words everyone else learns. Teacher. Farmer. Player. These words do the job — but they never leave a mark. The students who stand out in exams, essays, and spoken English are those who reach beyond the ordinary. They choose words that are precise, vivid, and full of character. Words that…
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“Used To” vs “Would” vs “Be Used To” — Three Structures That Look Similar but Mean Completely Different Things
“Used to” vs “would” vs “be used to” — “used to” vs “would” vs “be used to” — three phrases, three completely different jobs, and one enormous source of confusion for English learners worldwide. You have probably written at least one of them incorrectly without knowing it. This post puts all three side by side, explains…