Sikho Angreji

📘 Grammar Made Easy

🔤 Learn Fast. Fix Mistakes. Speak Right – From A to Z! 🔠

Learn English grammar step by step with real-life examples, voice practice, and fun activities. Whether you’re just starting or want to fix common mistakes, this course helps you build strong, clear English from the ground up.

✅ Simple lessons
✅ For every level
✅ Speak and write confidently

🎯 Ready to test yourself? Take the quiz below! 👇📝

Side effects may include sudden grammar confidence, correcting your friends, and speaking English in your sleep!😄📢

You’re about to enter a grammar zone where mistakes run scared and sentences shine! This course is packed with easy tips, fun examples, and quick quizzes to turn your English from so-so to super. Just remember — once you start learning, you might never stop correcting signs, menus, and even WhatsApp messages! 😉

Table of Contents

📚Parts of speech (nouns, verbs, adjectives, etc.)

👋 Understanding grammar is the first step to speaking English with confidence!

Let’s break down a big grammar topic into small, easy pieces — Parts of Speech! 🧩

Every sentence you speak or write is made using 8 basic blocks — like nouns, verbs, and adjectives. Once you understand these, you can form clear, confident sentences in English!

👉 Swipe through the cards below to learn each part of speech with simple definitions, real-life examples, and mini challenges. Ready to begin? Let’s go! 🚀

Learning English starts with one simple step: forming sentences. A sentence is more than just words — it’s a complete thought that helps you communicate clearly. Whether you’re saying “I am happy” or asking “Do you like tea?”, you’re using sentence formation skills.

In English, the most common sentence structure is:
Subject + Verb + Object
👉 I (subject) eat (verb) apples (object).

Mastering this basic structure will help you speak, write, and understand English with more confidence!

Simple tenses help us describe actions that happen now, in the past, or in the future. They form the foundation of English grammar and are essential for clear communication.

In this lesson, we will explore:

  • What is the Simple Present Tense (daily habits and facts)

  • What is the Simple Past Tense (actions already completed)

  • What is the Simple Future Tense (things yet to happen)

Mastering these three tenses will help you speak and write more confidently.

Understanding Articles, Prepositions, and Conjunctions is like learning the glue that holds English sentences together. 🧠💬

These may be small words, but they play a big role in making your English sound natural, clear, and correct.

👉 In the next few slides, you’ll learn:

  • When to use a, an, the

  • How to show time, place, or direction

  • And how to join ideas smoothly

Let’s break it down, step by step. 🚀👇

Questions are a big part of any conversation.
They help us get information, start a discussion, or simply confirm something.

In English, there are two main types of questions you must learn:

🔹 Yes/No Questions – These can be answered with a simple “yes” or “no.”
🔹 WH-Questions – These begin with words like What, Where, Why, and How and ask for more detailed answers.

In this lesson, you’ll learn:

  • How to form questions correctly

  • The right structure for each type

Swipe through the slides to master Question Formation – a key skill for speaking English confidently! 💬👇

English grammar can be tricky—even fluent speakers slip up! As learners, it’s natural to make mistakes. But the key to fluency is to notice, understand, and correct them.

In this lesson, we’ll show you the most common grammar mistakes made by students around the world—and how to fix them easily. From subject-verb agreement to confusing prepositions, every slide has a real example, a clear correction, and a simple rule.

👉 Ready to stop making the same grammar mistakes?
👉 Let’s learn the smart way—one correction at a time!

👉 “Many learners struggle with matching the subject and the verb correctly. This is called Subject-Verb Agreement — a basic but important rule of English grammar. Let’s learn it step-by-step with simple examples.”

Table of Contents

📘Continuous and Perfect tenses

In English, tenses help us express time – when an action happens. While beginners learn simple tenses, intermediate learners go deeper into Continuous and Perfect forms to express ongoing or completed actions with precision.

We’ll cover:

  • Present Continuous

  • Past Continuous

  • Future Continuous

  • Present Perfect

  • Past Perfect

  • Future Perfect

Ever wondered how to talk about possibilities, give advice, ask permission, or express strong obligations in English?

That’s where modal verbs come in!

🔸 Words like can, should, must, may, and would are small but powerful.
They change the mood or meaning of the main verb and help you speak more clearly and confidently.

✅ “I can swim.” – (Ability)
✅ “You should rest.” – (Advice)
✅ “She must be tired.” – (Strong belief)

In this lesson, we’ll break down the most useful modal verbs for intermediate learners—explaining how to use them correctly and naturally in everyday English.

Let’s dive in and upgrade your grammar skills!

Conditionals, also known as if-clauses, are sentences that describe a condition and the result of that condition.

They are used to talk about:

  • Real or possible situations

  • Imagined or hypothetical events

  • Past regrets or wishes

  • Future possibilities

A conditional sentence has two parts:

  1. The ‘if’ clause (condition)

  2. The main clause (result)

In everyday conversation, storytelling, news reporting, or even writing essays, we often need to repeat what someone else said. This is where Direct and Indirect Speech comes in.

🔹 Want to report a friend’s message?
🔹 Quoting a character’s dialogue in a story?
🔹 Telling someone what your teacher said?

You’ll need to know how to shift between quoting exact words (Direct Speech) and summarizing or reporting them (Indirect Speech).

Learning this helps you:
✅ Avoid confusion in conversations
✅ Improve storytelling and writing clarity
✅ Sound more fluent and grammatically accurate

Let’s explore the differences and learn how to convert from Direct ➝ Indirect Speech step by step!

In English, we use the Passive Voice when we want to focus on the action or the receiver of the action, rather than who is doing it. This structure is often used in formal writing, reports, and when the doer is unknown or unimportant.

In English, not all nouns are the same—some can be counted, and others cannot.
For example, you can count apples (1 apple, 2 apples…), but you can’t count water (you don’t say “1 water, 2 waters” ❌).

Knowing whether a noun is countable or uncountable helps you:

  • Use the correct articles (a, an, some, much, many)

  • Choose the right quantifiers (few, little, much, many)

  • Speak and write more naturally

Let’s break it down simply—with examples, rules, and common mistakes to avoid!

👉 Swipe through to learn the difference step by step!

📚 Let’s Make Sentences Smarter: Understanding Relative Clauses!

Ever seen two short sentences that could be joined together to sound smoother and clearer?

That’s where Relative Clauses come in!

They help us connect ideas, add useful details, and avoid repeating the same words.

In this lesson, you’ll learn:
✅ What relative clauses are
✅ When to use them (and when not to!)
✅ The difference between who, which, that, and more
✅ How to fix common mistakes

👉 Swipe through to master them easily with examples & tips!

Table of Contents

📘Advanced tense usage and consistency

At an advanced level, mastering English tenses isn’t just about knowing the forms — it’s about using tenses strategically to express time relationships, intentions, and subtle meanings.
Consistency in tense means keeping your tenses logical and clear throughout your writing or speech. This is especially important in storytelling, professional writing, and academic communication.

As you move beyond intermediate English, grammar becomes more than just rules—it becomes style.
In this lesson, we explore two powerful techniques:
🔁 Inversion – rearranging word order to create emphasis, drama, or formality.
✂️ Ellipsis – removing words that are understood to avoid repetition and enhance fluency.
These structures appear in speeches, literature, and high-level writing. Ready to sharpen your skills?

When speaking or writing in formal English—especially at an advanced level—it’s important to go beyond simple sentence structures. One powerful tool for this is the subjunctive mood.

Unlike the regular indicative mood (used for facts), the subjunctive is used to express:

  • Wishes and desires

  • Unreal or hypothetical situations

  • Formal suggestions, demands, and recommendations

  • Polite or literary expressions

It adds a refined, professional tone to your English and is commonly found in academic writing, business communication, legal contexts, and formal speeches.

In this lesson, you’ll explore:

  • The structure and use of the subjunctive

  • How to form subjunctive sentences correctly

  • Key expressions used in formal English

  • Differences between American and British usage

  • Real-life examples to practice and master

Let’s begin mastering this elegant and expressive side of English grammar.

When we speak or write, clarity and balance in our sentences help us communicate ideas more effectively. One of the most powerful tools to achieve this is parallel structure — the technique of using the same grammatical pattern in related parts of a sentence.

Parallelism isn’t just a rule — it’s a hallmark of professional and polished English. Writers, public speakers, and professionals use it to create rhythm, emphasis, and logical flow in their language.

📌 Why Learn Parallel Structure?

🔹 To avoid awkward and confusing sentences
🔹 To express ideas with balance and precision
🔹 To improve fluency in both writing and speaking
🔹 To develop advanced-level grammatical control

In this lesson, we’ll explore the rules, common mistakes, and examples of parallel structure used in formal writing, professional speech, and academic English.

Let’s dive in and learn how to make your sentences smooth, symmetrical, and sophisticated.

In real life, things don’t always happen in a neat timeline. Sometimes we wish the past had been different so that our present would change — or we imagine how our current traits could have changed something in the past.

That’s where Mixed Conditionals come in.

These advanced sentence structures allow us to:

  • Express deep regret or hypothetical reflection,

  • Explain past causes with present effects, or

  • Imagine how present reality could have rewritten the past.

Mixed conditionals are powerful tools in academic writing, critical thinking, and emotional storytelling — but mastering them takes a clear understanding of how time and condition interact.

Let’s explore how these timelines mix and how you can start using them to speak like a pro.

Have you ever heard expressions like “give up,” “look after,” or “run into” and felt confused?

These are called phrasal verbs—everyday combinations of verbs and little words (like up, off, in) that can completely change the original meaning.

👉 They’re short, common, and often idiomatic—which means they don’t always make sense word-for-word!

🔹 Learning phrasal verbs is key to understanding real-life conversations, movies, and informal English.
🔹 They make your English sound more natural, fluent, and expressive.

Let’s break them down step by step—how they work, how to use them, and how to avoid common mistakes.

➡️ Swipe through to explore the grammar of phrasal verbs with examples, rules, and visuals!

✅ You already know the rules of grammar…
But do you know how to use them with style?

Stylistic Grammar helps you:

  • ✨ Sound fluent, not robotic

  • 🧠 Emphasize your ideas clearly

  • 🗣 Adjust your tone for different audiences

  • 🎯 Write and speak with elegance, precision, and flow

It’s not just about being correct
It’s about making your English stand out.

Let’s explore the tools that turn grammar into an art form. 🎨✍️

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