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❇️ Common Grammer Mistakes


Wrong : I have visited Niagara Falls last weekend.
Right : I visited Niagara Falls last weekend.

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Wrong : The woman which works here is from Japan.
Right : The woman who works here is from Japan.

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Wrong : She's married with a dentist.
Right : She's married to a dentist.

Wrong : She was boring in the class.
Right : She was bored in the class.

Wrong : I must to call him immediately.
Right : I must call him immediately.

Wrong : Every students like the teacher.
Right : Every student likes the teacher.

Wrong : Although it was raining, but we had the picnic.
Right : Although it was raining, we had the picnic.

Wrong : I enjoyed from the movie.
Right : I enjoyed the movie.

Wrong : I look forward to meet you.
Right : I look forward to meeting you.

Wrong : I like very much ice cream.
Right : I like ice cream very much.

Wrong : She can to drive.
Right : She can drive.

Wrong : Where I can find a bank?
Right : Where can I find a bank?

Wrong : I live in United States.
Right : I live in the United States.

Wrong : When I will arrive, I will call you.
Right : When I arrive, I will call you.

Wrong : I've been here since three months.
Right : I've been here for three months

Wrong : My boyfriend has got a new work.
Right : My boyfriend has got a new job. (or just "has a new job")

Wrong : She doesn't listen me.
Right : She doesn't listen to me.

Wrong : You speak English good.
Right : You speak English well.

Wrong : The police is coming.
Right : The police are coming.

Wrong : The house isn't enough big.
Right : The house isn't big enough.

Wrong : You should not to smoke.
Right : You should not smoke.

Wrong : Do you like a glass of wine?
Right : Would you like a glass of wine?

Wrong : There is seven girls in the class.
Right : There are seven girls in the class.

Wrong : I didn't meet nobody.
Right : I didn't meet anybody.

Wrong : My flight departs in 5:00 am.
Right : My flight departs at 5:00 am.

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📚get in someone's hair in British
informal

✍🏾to annoy someone persistently

🔺I know that the children get in your hair, but you should try not to let it upset you so much.- Listen, Jim. I can't help it. The children bother me and make me very angry.

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🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹

📕Equitable
👉Decision is based on fair, just, legitmately, right for situation.

e.g. Public schools are designed to provide an equitable education to all students, regardless of their background.

Fair & impartial = Fair & equitable

👉Government decision for traffic regulation is fair & equitable for denizens.

🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹🔹


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❇️ WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ACCEPT AND EXCEPT ?

🌐 In Detail Explanation by @english_grammar_eg
💠 Type of sentence

The type of sentence is determined by the number and type of clauses it contains. It falls into one of the following:

1⃣ Simple sentence

A simple sentence conveys a single idea. It has only one subject and one verb.

EXAMPLE:

She is my girlfriend. / I am bored. / That is a fat monkey.
The verb in each sentence is in bold.

2⃣ Complex Sentence

A complex sentence has one independent clause and at least one dependent clause. The independent clause is called the main clause, and the dependent clause is called the subordinate clause. These clauses are joined by conjunctions which include: as, as if, even if, if, because, unless, etc.

EXAMPLE: As she is a big bully, I stay away from her. / I will do it if I have the time.
The main clauses are in bold; the subordinate clauses are not.

3⃣ Compound Sentence

a compound sentence is composed of at least two clauses or sentences joined together by conjunction, i.e. words like: and, but, for, nor, or, so, therefore, either ... or, neither ... nor, not only ... but also, etc., or punctuated by a semi-colon. A compound sentence consists of at least two Independent or Main Clauses and verbs. The subordinate or dependent clause may or may not be present in a compound sentence. It is possible for a compound sentence to have three, four or more independent clauses. But commonly, it contains only two clauses.


EXAMPLE:

I am skinny and you are obese. (Two main clauses joined by a conjunction.)

EXAMPLE:

I know what you know. (Main clause: I know; subordinate clause: what you know)

EXAMPLE:

I always tell you what I know but you never tell me what you know.
The last example shows a sentence with two main clauses and two subordinate clauses.
Compound-complex Sentence
A compound-complex sentence has at least two independent clauses and at least one dependent clause.



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❇️ Direct And Indirect Speech

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❇️ Subject Verb Agreement

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❇️ Error Spotting Rules

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❇️ Pronoun ( Basic to Hard )


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Greeting

❇️ There are different ways to greet people:

Greeting means welcoming someone with particular words or a particular action.

When meeting people formally for the first time, we greet by shaking hands and saying

"How do you do?" or "Pleased to meet you."
"How do you do?" isn't really a question, it just means "Hello".
When young people meet informally they sometimes greet and say "Give me five!" and slap their hands together (high five).

Generally, we do not greet by shaking hands with people we know well. We greet by just saying 'hi' or 'hello'

Here are some expressions you can use to greet people.

❇️ Greeting

Hi, hello.
Good morning, good afternoon, good evening.
How are you?
How are you doing?
How do you do?
Responding to greeting
Hi, hello.
Good morning/Good afternoon/Good evening.
I'm fine thank you (thanks)/Okey! Thank you (thanks)/Can't complaint/Not bad.
How about you?/And you?
How do you do?


Things to remember about greeting:
When you greet someone and say:

"How do you do?"

this isn't really a question, it just means "Hello".


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❇️ Free English grammar 150+notes pdf Download 👇

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❇️ Direct And Indirect Speech

https://bit.ly/3ebdIMo

❇️ Subject Verb Agreement

https://bit.ly/3ebdIMo

❇️ Error Spotting Rules

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❇️ Pronoun ( Basic to Hard )


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#Vocabulary

❇️ beginning

Definition 1. (Adjective) serving to begin
Synonym: beginning
first
Example: the beginning canto of the poem
the first verse

Definition 2. (Noun) the event consisting of the start of something
Synonym: beginning
Antonym: conclusion
ending
finish
Hyponym: casus belli
conception
creation
egress
emergence
generation
genesis
ground floor
growth
inception
issue
origin
origination
outgrowth
start
hypernym: happening
natural event
occurrence
occurrent
Example: the beginning of the war

❇️ Definition 3. (Noun) the time at which something is supposed to begin
Synonym: beginning
commencement
first
get-go
kickoff
offset
outset
showtime
start
starting time
Antonym: end
ending
middle
Hyponym: birth
incipience
incipiency
starting point
terminus a quo
threshold
hypernym: point
point in time
Example: they got an early start
she knew from the get-go that he was the man for her

Definition 4. (Noun) the first part or section of something
Synonym: beginning
Antonym: end
middle
hypernym: division
part
section
Example: `It was a dark and stormy night' is a hackneyed beginning for a story

Definition 5. (Noun) the place where something begins, where it springs into being
Synonym: beginning
origin
root
rootage
source
Hyponym: birthplace
cradle
derivation
fountainhead
head
headspring
headwater
home
jumping-off place
place of origin
point of departure
point source
provenance
provenience
spring
trail head
trailhead
wellhead
wellspring
hypernym: point
Example: the Italian beginning of the Renaissance
Jupiter was the origin of the radiation
Pittsburgh is the source of the Ohio River
communism's Russian root

Definition 6. (Noun) the act of starting something
Synonym: beginning
commencement
start
Antonym: finish
finishing
Hyponym: activation
attack
constitution
creation
debut
entry
establishment
face-off
first appearance
first step
formation
foundation
founding
groundbreaking
groundbreaking ceremony
housing start
icebreaker
inauguration
initiation
initiative
innovation
installation
installing
installment
instalment
instauration
institution
introduction
jump ball
jumping-off point
kickoff
launching
opening
opening move
organisation
organization
origination
point of departure
recommencement
resumption
scrum
scrummage
springboard
startup
tone-beginning
unveiling
hypernym: change of state
Example: he was responsible for the beginning of negotiations
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❇️ Free English grammar 150+notes pdf Download 👇

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❇️ Direct And Indirect Speech

https://bit.ly/3ebdIMo

❇️ Subject Verb Agreement

https://bit.ly/3ebdIMo

❇️ Error Spotting Rules

https://bit.ly/3ebdIMo

❇️ Pronoun ( Basic to Hard )


https://bit.ly/3ebdIMo
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2025/10/31 05:33:41
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