πŸ“ English Study Guide

Complete Grammar Guide

Master the building blocks of Englishβ€”parts of speech, sentence structure, punctuation, and common errors.

πŸ“ Overview

Grammar is the system of rules that governs how we construct sentences in English. Understanding grammar helps you communicate clearly, write effectively, and avoid common errors. This guide covers the essential building blocks every student needs to know.

Why Grammar Matters

  • Clarity: Proper grammar ensures your message is understood
  • Credibility: Good grammar builds trust in academic and professional settings
  • Flexibility: Understanding rules lets you break them intentionally for effect

πŸ“š Parts of Speech

Every word in English belongs to one of eight categories called "parts of speech." Understanding these is fundamental to grammar.

Part of Speech Function Examples
Noun Names a person, place, thing, or idea dog, city, happiness, Sarah
Pronoun Replaces a noun he, she, it, they, who
Verb Shows action or state of being run, think, is, become
Adjective Describes a noun blue, tall, happy, three
Adverb Describes a verb, adjective, or adverb quickly, very, well, often
Preposition Shows relationship between words in, on, under, between
Conjunction Connects words or clauses and, but, or, because
Interjection Expresses emotion Wow! Ouch! Hey!
🧠 Memory Trick: PAPA N VIC
Pronoun, Adjective, Preposition, Adverb, Noun, Verb, Interjection, Conjunction

Types of Nouns

Noun Categories

  • Common: General names (city, dog, book)
  • Proper: Specific names, capitalized (New York, Fido, Harry Potter)
  • Concrete: Things you can sense (table, music, perfume)
  • Abstract: Ideas and concepts (love, freedom, justice)
  • Collective: Groups (team, family, flock)
  • Countable: Can be counted (apple, car, idea)
  • Uncountable: Cannot be counted (water, information, advice)

Types of Verbs

Verb Categories

  • Action verbs: Show physical or mental action (run, think, write)
  • Linking verbs: Connect subject to description (is, seem, become)
  • Helping verbs: Support main verbs (have, will, should, can)
  • Transitive: Need a direct object (She threw the ball)
  • Intransitive: Don't need an object (He laughed)

πŸ“ Sentence Structure

Sentence Components

Essential Parts

  • Subject: Who or what the sentence is about
  • Predicate: What the subject does or is (includes the verb)
  • Object: Receives the action (direct or indirect)
  • Complement: Completes the meaning (subject or object complement)
πŸ“– Sentence Analysis Example

Sentence: "The talented student gave her teacher a thoughtful gift."

  • Subject: The talented student
  • Verb: gave
  • Indirect Object: her teacher
  • Direct Object: a thoughtful gift

Types of Sentences

Type Structure Example
Simple One independent clause The cat slept.
Compound Two+ independent clauses joined by FANBOYS The cat slept, and the dog barked.
Complex Independent + dependent clause When the sun set, the cat slept.
Compound-Complex 2+ independent + 1+ dependent clause When the sun set, the cat slept, and the dog barked.
🧠 FANBOYS - Coordinating Conjunctions
For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So

Clauses vs. Phrases

Key Difference

  • Clause: Has a subject AND a verb
    • Independent: Can stand alone (I love pizza.)
    • Dependent: Cannot stand alone (because I love pizza)
  • Phrase: Group of words WITHOUT a subject-verb pair
    • Prepositional: in the morning
    • Noun: the big red ball
    • Verb: has been running

✏️ Punctuation Rules

Commas

When to Use Commas

  1. Lists: apples, oranges, and bananas
  2. Before FANBOYS: I ran, but I didn't win.
  3. After introductory elements: However, I disagree.
  4. Around non-essential info: My brother, who lives in NYC, visited.
  5. Dates and addresses: July 4, 1776 / Paris, France
  6. Direct address: John, please listen.
πŸ’‘ The Oxford Comma

The comma before "and" in a list (red, white, and blue) is called the Oxford comma. Use it to avoid ambiguity: "I love my parents, Batman and Wonder Woman" vs. "I love my parents, Batman, and Wonder Woman."

Semicolons & Colons

πŸ“– Semicolon vs. Colon

Semicolon (;) - Joins two related independent clauses:

"I love reading; it expands my mind."

Colon (:) - Introduces a list, explanation, or emphasis:

"I need three things: food, water, and sleep."

Apostrophes

Apostrophe Rules

  • Contractions: don't, can't, it's (it is)
  • Singular possession: the dog's bone
  • Plural possession: the dogs' bones (multiple dogs)
  • Irregular plurals: children's toys, women's rights
⚠️ Common Apostrophe Errors
  • It's = it is | Its = belonging to it
  • Your = belonging to you | You're = you are
  • Their = belonging to them | They're = they are

🀝 Subject-Verb Agreement

Subjects and verbs must agree in number (singular or plural).

Basic Rules

  • Singular subject β†’ singular verb: The dog runs.
  • Plural subject β†’ plural verb: The dogs run.
  • Compound subjects with "and" β†’ plural: Tom and Jerry are friends.
  • Compound subjects with "or/nor" β†’ match nearest subject: Neither the cat nor the dogs are here.

Tricky Cases

πŸ“– Watch Out For These!
  • Collective nouns: The team is winning. (acts as one unit)
  • Indefinite pronouns: Everyone is here. (singular)
  • Phrases between subject/verb: The box of chocolates is on the table.
  • Inverted sentences: There are many reasons.

Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement

Pronouns Must Match Their Antecedents

  • Correct: Every student should bring their book. (singular they is now accepted)
  • Correct: The team won its game.
  • Incorrect: Everyone should bring his book. (gendered assumption)

✏️ Practice Questions

Question 1 Easy
Identify the parts of speech for each underlined word: "The quick fox jumped gracefully over the fence."
quick = Adjective (describes "fox")
jumped = Verb (action word)
gracefully = Adverb (describes how the fox jumped)
Question 2 Medium
Fix the subject-verb agreement error: "The group of students were excited about the field trip."
Corrected: "The group of students was excited about the field trip."
Explanation: "Group" is the subject (singular), not "students." The prepositional phrase "of students" doesn't change the subject.
Question 3 Medium
Add correct punctuation: "I bought apples oranges and bananas however I forgot the milk"
Corrected: "I bought apples, oranges, and bananas; however, I forgot the milk."
Explanation:
β€’ Commas separate list items
β€’ Semicolon before "however" (conjunctive adverb joining two independent clauses)
β€’ Comma after "however"
Question 4 Hard
Identify the sentence type and label all clauses: "Although she was tired, Maria finished her homework, and then she went to bed."
Sentence Type: Compound-Complex
Clauses:
β€’ "Although she was tired" = Dependent clause (starts with subordinating conjunction)
β€’ "Maria finished her homework" = Independent clause
β€’ "then she went to bed" = Independent clause
Why: It has 2 independent clauses joined by "and" (compound) + 1 dependent clause (complex).

πŸ’‘ Tips & Tricks

πŸ“– Read Aloud

When proofreading, read your sentences aloud. Your ear often catches errors your eyes missβ€”especially run-ons and fragments.

πŸ” Find the Subject First

When checking subject-verb agreement, cross out prepositional phrases to find the true subject. "The box [of chocolates] IS on the table."

βœ‚οΈ When in Doubt, Split It

If a sentence feels too long or confusing, try splitting it into two shorter sentences. Clarity beats complexity.

⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid

❌ Run-On Sentences

Wrong: I love pizza it's my favorite food.

Right: I love pizza. It's my favorite food. OR I love pizza; it's my favorite food.

❌ Sentence Fragments

Wrong: Because I was tired.

Right: I went to bed because I was tired.

❌ Misplaced Modifiers

Wrong: Walking to school, the rain started falling.

Right: Walking to school, I got caught in the rain.

❌ Comma Splices

Wrong: I love pizza, it's my favorite food.

Right: I love pizza, and it's my favorite food.

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πŸ“š Further Resources