English Grammar
It’s
better to learn English in English, because that also helps you think in
English, which is a good. Even if you don’t understand some things you will be
able to understand them later and when you do you will not forget them easily.
Adjectives
An
adjective describes a noun, and usually come before the noun, in many
languages adjectives change from singular to feminine and plural, but that
doesn't happen in English, so it's very easy to use adjectives. You can
understand the size and color of a noun just from the adjective before
it.
Examples:
the white house. (white here is an adjective telling us the color of the house)
The
tall man (tall
here is an adjective telling us the size
of the man)
Also
adjectives can help you know what people think
about a noun (something or someone).
Examples:
he is a nice person, she is a beautiful lady, it's a good lesson. (nice, beautiful and good are all adjectives showing
us the opinion of others).
Types of Adjectives:
There
are many types of adjectives, some of them express:
Size (big, small, tall, short, little ...), Color (black,
white, green, blue, red ...), Age (old, young ...), Origin (French,
British, American ...), Time (early, late …) ...etc.
Click here for Adjectives List.
The Comparative
To
compare two things we usually add (…er than)
to the adjective, for example the rabbit is fast,
the turtle is slow, to compare them we
say: the rabbit is faster than the turtle (superiority).
Or the turtle is slower than the rabbit (inferiority).
Superiority is when you start with the higher thing you want to
compare. Inferiority when you start with
the lower thing or person compared.
So
you must remember to add (er) to the
adjective and then place (than) after
the (er). My brother is taller than
me. It's very easy! (adjective+er) + than.
Note
that some words with two syllables or more take a different form, especially if
they don’t have a “y” at the end. Example
Exercise
A is difficult, and exercise B is not very difficult, so we say: Exercise A is more difficult than Exercise B, (you cannot say difficulter),
usually words with two syllables are longer. So whenever you feel a word is
longer than one syllable and doesn’t end in “y”, use the second form which is: more + adjective + than.
Note
that there are some exceptions, that's why you need to look at the table below.
|
Rule
|
Examples
|
|
If
a word of one syllable is ending in 'e' then add –r at the end.
|
nice
becomes nicer
|
|
If
a word has one syllable, with one vowel + consonant at the end, then double
the consonant and add –er.
|
big
becomes bigger
|
|
If
a word has two syllables, and is ending in 'y', then change 'y' to 'i', and
add -er at the end.
|
tasty
- tastier
|
|
The
following words change entirely: Good becomes better, bad becomes worse, far
becomes further
|
freedom
is better than slavery
|
|
If
a word has two syllables or more, and is not ending in 'y' then place 'more'
before the adjective.
|
difficult
becomes more difficult
|
The Superlative
The
superlative is different from the comparative because it makes a comparison
between one thing or person and the rest (more than two). So it’s not only a
comparison between (one and one) but (one and many). Example: Emanuel is the
tallest student at school. Emanuel is not only taller than one person, but the
tallest in the whole school.
To
form the superlative we add (the ~est) and put the adjective in between them: (tall
becomes the tallest,
small becomes the smallest, high becomes the highest),
very easy! the + (adjective+est)
Note
that there are some small exceptions:
|
Rule
|
Examples
|
|
If
a word of one syllable is ending in 'e' then add –st at the end.
|
nice becomes the
nicest
|
|
If
a word has one syllable, with one vowel + consonant at the end, then double
the consonant and add –est.
|
big
becomes the biggest
|
|
If
a word has two syllables, and is ending in 'y', then change 'y' to 'i', and add
-iest at the end.
|
tasty – the tastiest
|
|
The
3 Irregular adjectives: Good becomes the best, bad becomes the worst, far
becomes the furthest
|
freedom
is the best
|
|
If
a word has two syllables or more, and is not ending in 'y' then place the
most before the adjective.
|
difficult
becomes the most difficult
|
I
think Couscous is the tastiest dish in
the world; Russia is the largest
country, but not the most populated
place in the world.
Adverbs
The
adverb tells you (how, why, when, where)
something happened. Usually an adverb is formed from an adjective, and you simply need to add the suffix
(-ly): quick becomes quickly, easy becomes easily (note that "y" becomes "i"
before adding "ly"), happy becomes happily...
Note
that some adverbs don’t need to take (-ly), like: hard, fast
…etc
Adverbs
can come before adjective: He is actually tall.
Adverbs
can come before other adverbs if they’re modifying them: she pushed him really
hard.
Adverbs
can modify nouns it’s really a nice house, as you have
noticed there is an adjective between (really) and (a house).
-Some
adverbs indicate intensity (how strong or intense something was): almost, entirely, extremely, highly, partially, practically,
strongly, totally, very …
I
entirely agree with you, we strongly recommend this website.
-Some
adverbs indicate duration (how long something happened): briefly, forever, shortly, permanently, temporarily …
She
can’t wait for you forever, she would
like to live in the USA permanently, but
is temporarily working in Japan.
-These
adverbs indicate a degree of frequency or how many times you do something …, we
will start with the most frequent, and we will end with the least frequent:
Always, constantly, usually, generally, normally, regularly, often,
frequently, sometimes, periodically, occasionally, now and then, once in a while,
rarely, seldom, hardly ever, almost never, never. Also you can use
the expressions: daily (every day), weekly (every week), monthly
(every month), yearly (every year) …
He
usually speaks English, but sometimes he speaks Spanish with his wife, and once in a while speaks German with his friend
from Germany, but never speaks Russian
because he can’t speak it. He travels to Mexico monthly
or every two months with his wife
because he lives in Texas.
-Some
adverbs can indicate the manner in which something was done or happened,
usually this kind of adverbs take (-ly):
badly, quickly, beautifully, smoothly …
The
cake was decorated beautifully and
everything was going smoothly, the cook
was trying to cut the cake quickly, but
he dropped it on the floor, so his day ended badly.
-Adverbs
of place are: here, there, inside, outside,
upstairs, downstairs… Examples: We will stay here with you, while the rest stays there, we feel warm inside,
but I think our friends outside will
need some umbrellas because it’s raining, I will go and look for them downstairs and if I don’t find them I will look upstairs.
-Adverbs
of probability are used to express how likely it is for something to happen: Probably, certainly, definitely, maybe, perhaps, possibly …
Note that probably, maybe, perhaps, possibly mean that the person is not sure
if the thing will happen or will be done.
-
Will you come to the party?
-
Probably! (it means maybe I will come,
and maybe not, other similar expressions are maybe, perhaps, possibly …)
-
Can you call me if you’re not coming to the party?
-
Definitely! (also certainly can be used,
which means that I’m sure that I’ will call whether I decide to come to the
party or not).
-Some
adverbs indicate time, such as: today, yesterday,
now, later, soon, already, still, finally… Examples:
Finally
school is opening today, yesterday was the last day of vacation, I still wish that the vacation was longer, because
exams will start soon, and we will be
tested later.
Click here for Adverbs List.
Articles
Articles
in English are easy to use than in many other languages, they are: "a (or
an)" and "the", the first one is indefinite article, the second
one is definite article.
Indefinite Articles:
As
mentioned earlier "a (or an)" are indefinite articles, they are used
when referring to something not known to the person you're talking to, or
something not mentioned before in the same discussion: I have an apple and a banana. We use
"an" with words starting with
these vowel (a, e, i, o, u), and "a"
with the rest, note that sometimes we need to use "a" even if a word start with "u",
like university for example, we used "a" because it is pronounced like
"youniversity", so it's as if this word starts with "y" and not "u". Also the word
"honest" should go with "an" even if it starts with "h",
because we pronounce it as "onest" which starts with "o". So we say: a
university, and an honest man.
The
indefinite article “a” and “an” can also be used with professions: he is a
teacher. (his job is a teacher).
Definite Articles:
You
use the definite article "the"
when the thing you're talking about was already mentioned before: Once upon a
time, there was a prince and a princess, the prince was 22 years old, and the princess was 19. There are some other times when
you use "the", but you don't have to worry about them right now.
No Article:
Sometimes
you don't need to use an article at all, especially when talking about general
terms: life is beautiful (it's not common to say the life is beautiful),
people are generally nice. Also no article is used when talking about
countries... Note that countries containing "states, kingdom, and republic"
need articles:
I visited Morocco, and passed by
Spain, my final destination was the United Kingdom before I came home to the United
States.
Conditional
The
conditional tense is used when an action depends on another action. Sometimes
the action is real (like in Conditional Type I), and imaginary (like Conditional
Type II).
Conditional Type I
The
first conditional is used to express situations based on fact in the present or
future, things that may happen in reality.
If
it snows tomorrow, I will not come
to school, the sentence can also be reversed as: I will
not come to school if it snows
tomorrow.
I
will jump
if you jump (future + if + present)
or: If you jump,
I will jump
(if + present + future).
So
the structure of the conditional 1 is: (future
+ if + present), or (if + present +
future). Note: never use “will” with “if”.
Conditional Type II
The
second conditional is used to express unreal situations in the present or
future.
If
I were you, I would apologize to her.
(but I'm not you, so the condition is not real). Again you can reverse the
sentence: I would apologize to her if I were
you.
The
structure of the conditional 2 is: (if +
past + would + present) or (would+
present + if + past).
Conditional Type III
The
3rd conditional is used to express conditions in the past that didn't happen, usually
the expressions (could have, should have, would
have) are used especially when there is a regret or criticism of a
past action.
For
example someone who is blaming his brother for not helping him on his homework
two days ago, so he says: If you had helped me on my homework, I wouldn't have failed
the exam. (So this means that the real situation now is the opposite, his
brother didn’t help him on his homework, and also this means that he failed the
exam).
Another
example: If you hadn’t listened
to me, you would have lost all the
money. (But it seems that he listened to him, and that he didn’t lose the
money)
The
structure of the conditional 3 is (if + past
perfect + would + present perfect) or (would
+ present perfect + if + past perfect).
Nouns
A
noun is a word talking about a person, a thing or an abstract idea. A noun can
also answer the question of "who or what".
Who
lives in the house? - David, (David = Noun), also house is a Noun.
What
do you have in your hand? - A book (Book = Noun), also hand is a Noun.
These
also are nouns, example: cat, dog, milk, brother, county, pen.
There
are different types of nouns:
Abstract
nouns: freedom, friendship, idea ... (you can't see them so they're called
abstract).
Common
nouns: man, woman, mouse, school, paper... (Talking about people, places, and
things)
Gerunds:
you can change a verb to become a noun when you add “ing” to the end of the
verb, “speak” is a verb, speak + ing = speaking (noun). I like to write (verb),
I like writing (noun).
Examples:
go => going, live => living, drive => driving, (for more information
click here English Gerund)
Nouns
are 2 types, countable, and uncountable, Countable is used for things that you
can count (one banana, a spoon, an orange), you can say one banana, two bananas,
three bananas, so that means that banana is a countable noun.
Uncountable
is when you cannot count the noun, milk for example is uncountable, because it
is a liquid. You cannot say “one milk”, “two milks” ... so that means milk is
uncountable, that means you can only say: milk, some milk, a lot of milk
...etc. If you want to use countable expressions to uncountable words then put
a countable noun before it, for example you can say: I want 2 cups of milk
(cups are countable, you can use it before milk), you cannot say "two
milks".
Plural Nouns
A
singular noun means a noun referring to one person, one thing or one place …,
if you want to refer to more than one person, thing or place, you need to use
the plural.
If
you have (one pen + one pen), then you cannot say “I have 2 pen”, you have to
use the plural, and say “I have 2 pens”, you see that we added “s” to the end
of “pen”.
Other
examples: House => houses, one computer => two computers, a friend =>
some friends, my sister => my sisters.
English
is very easy when you want to use the plural, most of the time you just need to
add “s” at the end.
But
you need to know that if the end of a word in singular is (-ch, -x, -s, -sh,
z) you will have to add “es” not only “s”, for example: one church = two
churches, fox => foxes, kiss => kisses …
There
are some other rules you need to know, but in general cases you only need to
add one “s” at the end of the nouns. Remember you only can make the plural of
nouns, unlike other languages such as Spanish, French or Arabic, English
adjectives or adverbs don’t have the plural form. (only nouns), for example you
cannot say: I have two reds cars. The correct way is: I have two red
cars. (red doesn’t add “s” at the end).
I hope the content of this page was useful to you, and that you learned some rules from the English Grammar lesson especially about Adjectives, Adverbs, Articles, Nouns, Conditional, Comparative, Superlative, and the Plural. Try to practice them to be able to use them in your daily conversation. Make sure to check our Learn English page, which contains several lessons that might help you in your learning process.
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