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English Grammar | Complete Guide 2026

This guide is designed for K12 and high school students to master the core concepts, rules, and structures of English grammar.

Complete English Grammar Guide for K12 & High School

Master English Grammar with this comprehensive guide! This complete resource covers all essential grammar concepts from K12 through high school level. Learn the 8 parts of speech, sentence structure, verb tenses, punctuation rules, and common grammar mistakes. Perfect for students, teachers, and anyone looking to improve their English writing and communication skills.

What You'll Learn

  • Parts of Speech: Nouns, Pronouns, Verbs, Adjectives, Adverbs, Prepositions, Conjunctions, Interjections
  • Sentence Structure: Subjects, Predicates, Clauses, Phrases
  • Verb Tenses: Present, Past, Future, Perfect, Progressive
  • Subject-Verb Agreement: Rules and exceptions
  • Punctuation: Proper use of periods, commas, semicolons, and more
  • Common Grammar Mistakes: How to avoid and correct them
  • Writing Tips: Practical advice for better communication

The 8 Parts of Speech

Every word in the English language belongs to one of eight categories called parts of speech. Understanding these categories is fundamental to mastering English grammar.

1. Nouns

Name people, places, things, or ideas

2. Pronouns

Replace nouns to avoid repetition

3. Verbs

Express actions or states of being

4. Adjectives

Describe or modify nouns

5. Adverbs

Modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs

6. Prepositions

Show relationships between words

7. Conjunctions

Join words, phrases, or clauses

8. Interjections

Express emotions or exclamations

1. Nouns

A noun is a word that names a person, place, thing, or idea. Nouns are the foundation of sentences and can serve as subjects, objects, or complements.

Types of Nouns

TypeDefinitionExamples
Common NounsGeneral names for people, places, or thingsdog, city, book, teacher
Proper NounsSpecific names (always capitalized)John, London, Bible, Shakespeare
Concrete NounsThings you can see, hear, smell, taste, or touchapple, music, perfume, ice cream
Abstract NounsIdeas, emotions, qualities, or conceptslove, happiness, freedom, courage
Collective NounsGroups of people, animals, or thingsteam, flock, family, committee
Countable NounsCan be counted (have plural forms)cat/cats, book/books, idea/ideas
Uncountable NounsCannot be counted (no plural forms)water, sugar, information, advice

Noun Examples in Sentences:

  • Sarah (proper noun) loves her dog (common noun).
  • The happiness (abstract noun) of the children (concrete noun) was evident.
  • Our team (collective noun) won the championship (common noun).

2. Pronouns

A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun to avoid repetition and make sentences flow more naturally.

Types of Pronouns

TypePurposeExamples
Personal PronounsRefer to specific people or thingsI, you, he, she, it, we, they
Possessive PronounsShow ownershipmine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs
Reflexive PronounsRefer back to the subjectmyself, yourself, himself, herself, itself
Demonstrative PronounsPoint to specific thingsthis, that, these, those
Interrogative PronounsAsk questionswho, whom, whose, which, what
Relative PronounsIntroduce relative clauseswho, whom, whose, which, that
Indefinite PronounsRefer to unspecified people or thingssomeone, anyone, everyone, nothing, all

Pronoun Examples:

  • She gave him the book that belonged to her.
  • This is the house that Jack built.
  • Everyone should bring their own lunch.

3. Verbs

A verb is a word that expresses an action, occurrence, or state of being. Verbs are essential for creating complete sentences.

Types of Verbs

  • Action Verbs: Show what the subject does (run, jump, think, write)
  • Linking Verbs: Connect the subject to additional information (am, is, are, was, were, seem, appear, become)
  • Helping Verbs (Auxiliaries): Work with main verbs to show tense, mood, or voice (have, has, had, will, would, can, could, may, might, must, should)

Verb Examples:

  • Action: The dog runs quickly.
  • Linking: She is a teacher.
  • Helping: I have been studying all day.

4. Adjectives

Adjectives describe or modify nouns and pronouns, providing more specific information about them.

Adjective Questions: Adjectives answer these questions about nouns:

  • What kind? - red car, beautiful sunset
  • Which one? - this book, those students
  • How many? - three cats, several people

Degrees of Comparison

DegreeUseFormationExample
PositiveBasic formNo changetall, beautiful
ComparativeCompare two thingsAdd -er or use "more"taller, more beautiful
SuperlativeCompare three or moreAdd -est or use "most"tallest, most beautiful

5. Adverbs

Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. They often end in -ly and answer questions about how, when, where, or to what extent.

Adverb Questions:

  • How? - quickly, carefully, loudly
  • When? - yesterday, soon, always
  • Where? - here, there, everywhere
  • To what extent? - very, quite, extremely

6. Prepositions

Prepositions show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and another word in the sentence.

Place

in, on, at, under, over, beside, behind, in front of

Time

at, on, in, during, before, after, since, until

Direction

to, from, into, onto, through, across, toward

7. Conjunctions

Conjunctions join words, phrases, or clauses together.

TypePurposeExamples
CoordinatingJoin equal elementsand, but, or, nor, for, so, yet
SubordinatingJoin dependent clauses to independent clausesbecause, although, if, when, while, since
CorrelativeWork in pairseither...or, neither...nor, both...and

8. Interjections

Interjections express strong emotion or sudden feeling. They are often followed by exclamation points.

Interjection Examples:

  • Wow! That's amazing!
  • Ouch! That hurt!
  • Oh, I forgot my keys.
  • Alas, we lost the game.

Sentence Structure

Understanding sentence structure is crucial for writing clear, effective sentences. Every sentence has two basic parts: a subject and a predicate.

Basic Sentence Parts

Subject

Who or what the sentence is about

Example: The dog barked loudly.

Predicate

What the subject does or is

Example: The dog barked loudly.

Types of Sentences by Structure

TypeDefinitionExample
SimpleOne independent clauseThe cat sleeps.
CompoundTwo or more independent clausesThe cat sleeps, and the dog plays.
ComplexOne independent clause + one or more dependent clausesWhen it rains, the cat sleeps.
Compound-ComplexTwo or more independent clauses + one or more dependent clausesWhen it rains, the cat sleeps, and the dog hides.

Types of Sentences by Purpose

Declarative

Makes a statement (ends with period)

Example: I love pizza.

Interrogative

Asks a question (ends with question mark)

Example: Do you love pizza?

Imperative

Gives a command (ends with period or exclamation)

Example: Eat your pizza!

Exclamatory

Shows strong emotion (ends with exclamation)

Example: What delicious pizza!

Clauses and Phrases

Clause: A group of words with a subject and predicate

  • Independent Clause: Can stand alone as a sentence
  • Dependent Clause: Cannot stand alone; depends on an independent clause

Phrase: A group of words without both a subject and predicate

  • Noun Phrase: the big red balloon
  • Verb Phrase: has been running
  • Prepositional Phrase: in the morning

Verb Tenses

Verb tenses show when an action takes place. English has three main time periods (present, past, future) and four aspects (simple, progressive, perfect, perfect progressive).

Simple Tenses

TenseFormUseExample
Simple Presentbase form (or base + s/es)Habitual actions, general truthsI walk to school. She walks daily.
Simple Pastpast form (or base + ed)Completed actions in the pastI walked yesterday.
Simple Futurewill + base formActions that will happenI will walk tomorrow.

Progressive (Continuous) Tenses

TenseFormUseExample
Present Progressiveam/is/are + verb + ingActions happening nowI am walking right now.
Past Progressivewas/were + verb + ingActions in progress in the pastI was walking when it rained.
Future Progressivewill be + verb + ingActions that will be in progressI will be walking at 3 PM.

Perfect Tenses

TenseFormUseExample
Present Perfecthave/has + past participleActions completed with relevance to nowI have walked 5 miles today.
Past Perfecthad + past participleActions completed before another past actionI had walked before it rained.
Future Perfectwill have + past participleActions that will be completed by a certain timeI will have walked 10 miles by evening.

Subject-Verb Agreement

The subject and verb in a sentence must agree in number (singular or plural).

Basic Rules

  • Singular subjects take singular verbs: The dog runs.
  • Plural subjects take plural verbs: The dogs run.
  • Compound subjects joined by "and" are usually plural: Tom and Jerry are friends.
  • Subjects joined by "or/nor" agree with the nearest subject: Neither the cat nor the dogs are here.

Special Cases

  • Collective nouns: Can be singular or plural depending on context
    • The team is winning. (team as a unit)
    • The team are arguing. (individual members)
  • Indefinite pronouns: Most are singular (everyone, someone, nobody)
  • Titles and names: Always singular: "Romeo and Juliet" is a play.

Punctuation Rules

Proper punctuation clarifies meaning and makes writing easier to understand.

Major Punctuation Marks

MarkNamePrimary UsesExample
.PeriodEnd of sentences, abbreviationsI am happy. Dr. Smith arrived.
?Question MarkDirect questionsAre you coming?
!Exclamation PointStrong emotion, commandsWhat a surprise! Stop!
,CommaSeparate items, clauses, phrasesI bought apples, oranges, and bananas.
;SemicolonJoin related independent clausesI studied hard; I passed the test.
:ColonIntroduce lists, explanationsI need three things: paper, pen, and time.
" "Quotation MarksDirect speech, titlesShe said, "Hello." I read "Hamlet."
'ApostropheContractions, possessivesDon't go. That's Tom's book.

Comma Rules

Use commas to:

  • Separate items in a series: I like red, blue, and green.
  • Join independent clauses with coordinating conjunctions: I studied, but I still failed.
  • Set off introductory elements: After dinner, we went home.
  • Set off nonessential information: My brother, who lives in Texas, called.
  • Separate adjectives: It was a dark, stormy night.
  • In addresses and dates: July 4, 1776, was significant.

Common Grammar Mistakes to Avoid

Run-on Sentences and Sentence Fragments

Run-on Sentence: Two or more independent clauses incorrectly joined

✗ Incorrect: I went to the store I bought milk.

✓ Correct: I went to the store, and I bought milk.

✓ Correct: I went to the store. I bought milk.

Sentence Fragment: Incomplete sentence missing subject or predicate

✗ Incorrect: Walking to the store.

✓ Correct: I am walking to the store.

Pronoun Errors

Pronoun-Antecedent Agreement:

✗ Incorrect: Everyone should bring their lunch. (everyone is singular)

✓ Correct: Everyone should bring his or her lunch.

✓ Correct: All students should bring their lunches.

Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers

Misplaced Modifier:

✗ Incorrect: I saw a dog running down the street with a wagging tail.

✓ Correct: I saw a dog with a wagging tail running down the street.

Dangling Modifier:

✗ Incorrect: Walking down the street, the houses looked beautiful.

✓ Correct: Walking down the street, I noticed the houses looked beautiful.

Commonly Confused Words

Word 1Word 2DifferenceExample
theirthere/they'repossession vs. place/contractionTheir car is there. They're leaving.
youryou'repossession vs. contractionYour book is here. You're smart.
itsit'spossession vs. contractionThe dog wagged its tail. It's raining.
affecteffectverb vs. nounRain affects plants. The effect was positive.
thenthantime vs. comparisonFirst eat, then sleep. I'm taller than you.

Writing Tips for Better Grammar

1. Read Your Writing Aloud

Reading aloud helps you catch errors and awkward phrasing that you might miss when reading silently.

2. Use Parallel Structure

Keep similar elements in the same grammatical form:

✗ Incorrect: I like reading, writing, and to paint.

✓ Correct: I like reading, writing, and painting.

3. Vary Your Sentence Structure

Mix simple, compound, and complex sentences to create interesting, flowing text.

4. Be Consistent with Tense

Don't shift tenses unnecessarily within a paragraph or passage.

5. Use Active Voice When Possible

Active: The teacher graded the papers.

Passive: The papers were graded by the teacher.

Quick Review and Practice

Grammar Checklist

  • ✓ Subject and verb agree in number
  • ✓ Pronouns agree with their antecedents
  • ✓ Modifiers are placed correctly
  • ✓ Sentences are complete (not fragments or run-ons)
  • ✓ Punctuation is used correctly
  • ✓ Verb tenses are consistent and appropriate
  • ✓ Word choices are precise and appropriate

Sample Paragraph Analysis

Original: "Me and my friend went to the store yesterday we bought some apples and oranges their really delicious and we ate them while walking home its was a nice day."

Corrected: "My friend and I went to the store yesterday. We bought some apples and oranges. They're really delicious, and we ate them while walking home. It was a nice day."

Corrections Made:

  • Pronoun case: "Me and my friend" → "My friend and I"
  • Run-on sentence split into multiple sentences
  • Homophones: "their" → "they're", "its" → "it"
  • Added proper punctuation

Advanced Grammar Concepts

Subjunctive Mood

The subjunctive mood expresses wishes, hypothetical situations, or demands.

  • Wish: If I were rich, I would travel.
  • Demand: I insist that he be on time.
  • Suggestion: I suggest that she study harder.

Conditionals

Conditional sentences express "if-then" relationships.

TypeConditionResultExample
ZeroPresent simplePresent simpleIf you heat ice, it melts.
FirstPresent simpleFuture simpleIf it rains, I will stay home.
SecondPast simpleWould + base verbIf I won the lottery, I would quit my job.
ThirdPast perfectWould have + past participleIf I had studied, I would have passed.

Additional Study Resources

Recommended Practice Activities

  • Daily Writing: Keep a journal to practice grammar in context
  • Grammar Exercises: Complete online grammar quizzes and worksheets
  • Reading Analysis: Identify parts of speech and sentence structures in your reading
  • Peer Review: Exchange writing with classmates for grammar feedback
  • Grammar Games: Use educational games and apps to make learning fun

Remember: Practice Makes Perfect!

Grammar rules become natural through consistent practice. Don't try to memorize everything at once. Focus on one concept at a time, practice it in your writing, and gradually build your skills. Good grammar is not about following rigid rules—it's about communicating clearly and effectively.

About the Author

Adam

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Co-Founder @RevisionTown

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Math Expert in various curriculums including IB, AP, GCSE, IGCSE, and more

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