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Simplifying the Fundamentals of Key Grammar Structures

 


Whilst grammar is the foundation for all of our writing and speaking in English, and quite stressful for many students to learn, it is actually far simpler to understand than most people believe. 

One of the problems is that in English books, grammar is often explained in a way that makes it complex to understand therefore making it difficult for many students to fully understand. Also, many teachers teach grammar in the same manner which only goes to increasing students' level of frustration and confusion.

Having a solid foundation in the basics of grammar makes it easier to achieve fluency, but, this will only happen for the majority of our students when it is explained in the most basic way.

Below, in basic terms, are the structures of grammar in their simplest form.

Parts of Speech

In English grammar, the eight major parts of speech are noun, pronoun, adjective, verb, adverb, preposition, conjunction, and interjection.

Nouns

The easy way to remember nouns is that they refer to people, places, or things. Even intangible or abstract concepts like ideas or thoughts are things. In the following sentences, the nouns are highlighted:

Juan doesn’t use a smartphone. Maria doesn’t eat pork. The sun is not the center of the universe.

Pronouns

Pronouns are words that replace nouns: I, me, she, we, they, who, that, yours, his, her, etc.

Pronouns need antecedents. That means that the thing (or person, or place) that the pronoun refers to needs to have been mentioned already by name somewhere earlier in the sentence or paragraph. If it’s not clear which thing the pronoun refers to, the reader can get quite confused.

I ran in the park. You ran in the park. He ran in the park. She ran in the park. It ran in the park.

Adjectives

Adjectives are descriptive words that add detail to a sentence. They can give important or necessary information (e.g., Please hand me the red shirt), or they can just make the sentence more interesting (e.g. A howling wind blew around the quiet town). Adjectives describe nouns. Please wear the blue shoes. The weather is cold and windy. The stuffed potato is juicy and delicious.

Verbs

Verbs are action words: that’s a rather simplified explanation, but it’s the clearest one. Verbs tell you what the subject of the sentence is up to.

He walked into the store. She buys a new dress. The dog eats its food.

Adverbs

Adverbs describe verbs, adjectives, or even a whole sentence. Adverbs often end with the suffix -ly (for example, badly, hungrily), but some look the same as their adjective forms (for example, the word fast is used as both an adjective and adverb).

Prepositions

Prepositions are little words that tell where or when (among other things) something is. The monkey is on his back. The glue is behind the poster. The dreamcatcher is above the garden.

Conjunctions

Conjunctions are words like and, but, and or that connect concepts, clauses, or parts of sentences.

I wanted to meet her there on time, but I got stuck in traffic. You can’t wear socks and sandals.

Interjections

Interjections are words like wow and yay. They’re sounds we make to convey extreme emotion or to create emphasis when we’re talking, sometimes when we can’t think of a good way to express ourselves. The problem with interjections is that they require a great deal of context to be understood. For instance, hey can mean hello, or that’s great, or stop doing thatHey! How’s it going? Wow! Those fireworks are impressive. Yay! I passed calculus!

Verb Tenses

Verbs come in past, present, and future tenses. The past is used to describe things that have already happened (e.g., earlier in the day, yesterday, last week, three years ago). The present tense is used to describe things that are happening right now, or things that are continuous. The future tense describes things that have yet to happen (e.g., later, tomorrow, next week, next year, three years from now).

Past tense I lived here when I was ten. Present tense I live here now. Future tense I will live there when I am retired.



























Subject-Verb Agreement

Singular subjects take singular verbs and plural subjects take plural verbs.

(In this example, the subject is in bold and the verbs are italicized.)

My brother is a veterinarian. My parents are school teachers.

Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement

When a pronoun replaces a noun, the noun is called an antecedent. On Miguel's first day of work, he was a little nervous. Michael is the antecedent and he is the pronoun.

The antecedent doesn’t have to go before the pronoun, but in longer sentences, it can be confusing to introduce the pronoun before the antecedent. On his first day of work, Miguel was a little nervous.

Subjunctive Mood

The subjunctive is a form verbs can take to express conditions that are hypothetical or not true. It’s not a verb tense. The subjunctive form usually uses the third-person form of the verb with the ‑s dropped. When using the verb “to be” in the subjunctive, the present tense is http://be and the past tense is were.

The subjunctive is used with certain expressions that imply a good or bad quality or an imperative. Often, the subjunctive verb is preceded by the word that (as in the phrases “it is best that,” and “it is essential that”).

The subjunctive mood can express conditions that are not true:

If I were queen for a day, I would eat cake for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

It can express hypothetical situations:

If I were to design a dresser, it would be made of teak.

It can be used to express wishes:

I wish I were able to go on vacation with you.

It can express commands or demands:

The boss demanded that he complete the project or be fired.

It can express suggestions:

I suggest that she cut back on refined sugar to improve her health.



Comments

  1. Thank you very much. My grammar is very bad. But your blog help me learn Grammar more active, more interesting.

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