Indefinite Pronouns in English
Indefinite pronouns are: anyone, anything, anybody, anywhere, someone, something, somebody, somewhere, no one, nothing, nobody, nowhere.
Indefinite pronouns are: anyone, anything, anybody, anywhere, someone, something, somebody, somewhere, no one, nothing, nobody, nowhere.
Comparison of Adjectives in English: as … as, not as … as, as much as, as many as Hello English learners! Welcome to another grammar lesson. In this lesson, you will learn about the comparison of adjectives in English using structures such as as … as, not as … as, Read more
Conditional sentences consist of two or more clauses. One of the clauses is the “if clause” and the other is the “main clause”. In the real or zero conditional, both if clause and the main clause are usually in the Present Simple Tense.
The most commonly used relative pronouns in English are who, which, that, whose, when and where. They introduce the relative clause by replacing the noun or pronoun mentioned previously.
An adverb is a word that gives more information about a verb, an adjective, another adverb, or even an entire sentence. It can be one word or an adverbial phrase. But, how much do you know about order of adverbs in a sentence?
In this lesson, we will be learning about the use of “used to”.
The structure used to + infinitive is used to talk about past habits, jobs, or hobbies we no longer practice or which we replaced with the new ones
We all know that nouns have singular and plural forms. But does this rule stand for all nouns? Here are some exceptions.There are three groups of nouns that we use only in the plural. We use them with plural verbs and plural pronouns