confused words Grammar Mistaken Words Vocabulary
Both, Either, Neither
Hi English learners. Welcome to a new lesson. We will talk about both, either and neither.
Hi English learners. Welcome to a new lesson. We will talk about both, either and neither.
Hi English learners. Welcome to a new lesson. Teachers at My Lingua Academy are happy to help you improve your English. In today’s lesson, we will discuss the use of commonly mistaken words expect, hope and wait.
Hi dear English students. You might have wondered which word to use and you weren’t sure. Are the words allow, permit, let and enable synonymous and what is the difference between them? That’s the topic of today’s blog entry. Well, we can say that allow, permit and let are synonymous words and they mean ‘to give permission‘. However, enable is different; it means to make it possible for someone to do something and it has nothing do to with permission but with ability.
Hi English learners! Were you surprised when you found out that rivers don’t have coasts but banks? Well, that’s right. In today’s lesson, we will clear out the difference between beach, bank, coast, shore.
Beach, bank, coast and shore all refer to the edge of the land by a body of water. But what is the difference between these words? Are they just synonymous or do they differ in meaning? Let’s find out!
What is the difference between able and capable? Is there a difference at all? These two words are very similar and very often we just can’t tell the difference, but let’s try to clear things out.
In this blog post, we will be discussing the difference between the two commonly confused words: between and among. These words are synonymous and they are both prepositions. The point is that they are often confused not only by English learners but also by native English speakers.
Amount of, number of, quantity of are phrases we use to express the volume of something. How do we know which phrase to use? Let’s find out.