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Grammar essentials

English grammar is relatively simple compared to many languages.

Sentence structure

English uses Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) order:

  • "The company launched a new product."
  • "She manages the engineering team."

Articles

ArticleUseExample
a/anIndefinite, singular"a meeting," "an idea"
theDefinite, specific"the CEO," "the report"
(none)Plural/uncountable general"Meetings are important."

A vs An

Use "an" before vowel sounds:

  • an hour (/aʊər/)
  • a university (/juːnɪˈvɜːrsɪti/)

Nouns

Plural forms

RuleSingularPlural
Add -sreportreports
-s, -x, -ch, -sh → -esboxboxes
Consonant + y → -iescompanycompanies
-f/-fe → -veslifelives
Irregularpersonpeople

Countable vs Uncountable

CountableUncountable
a meeting, meetingsinformation
an employee, employeesadvice
a report, reportsequipment

Pronouns

SubjectObjectPossessive adj.Possessive pronoun
Imemymine
youyouyouryours
hehimhishis
sheherherhers
ititits
weusourours
theythemtheirtheirs

Adjectives

Adjectives don't change form and come before nouns:

  • "a successful launch"
  • "the new strategy"

Order of adjectives

Opinion → Size → Age → Shape → Color → Origin → Material → Purpose

  • "a beautiful small old rectangular blue French silver serving tray"

In practice, rarely more than 2–3 adjectives are used.

Comparatives and superlatives

AdjectiveComparativeSuperlative
fastfasterfastest
importantmore importantmost important
goodbetterbest
badworseworst

Questions

TypeFormationExample
Yes/NoAux + Subject + Verb"Did you finish?"
Wh-Wh-word + Aux + Subject + Verb"What did you finish?"
TagStatement + opposite tag"You finished, didn't you?"

Negation

Add "not" after the auxiliary verb:

  • "I do not understand." / "I don't understand."
  • "She has not finished." / "She hasn't finished."

Next: Verb tenses →

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