What is grammar ?

What Is the Grammar? Grammar is the set of rules that helps us build correct sentences in a language. It explains how words change and how they work together. With grammar, your English becomes clearer and easier to understand. Simple Example Correct: She likes coffee. Incorrect: She like coffee. In the present simple, we often…

What Is the Grammar?

Grammar is the set of rules that helps us build correct sentences in a language. It explains how words change and how they work together. With grammar, your English becomes clearer and easier to understand.

Simple Example

  • Correct: She likes coffee.
  • Incorrect: She like coffee.

In the present simple, we often add -s for he / she / it.

The Elements of Grammar

Grammar has several main parts. These parts help you choose the right form and the right order of words.

Element What It Means Example
Word order The position of words in a sentence I (subject) eat (verb) rice (object).
Verb tenses Forms that show time (past, present, future) She walked yesterday.
Agreement Words “match” (often subject + verb) They are happy. / He is happy.
Articles a, an, the before nouns I saw a dog. The dog was friendly.
Prepositions Small words for place, time, direction on Monday, in the box, at 7 o’clock

1) Word Order (Sentence Structure)

English often follows this order: Subject + Verb + Object.

  • I play tennis.
  • They watch a movie.
  • My sister speaks English.
Part Example
Subject My brother
Verb drives
Object a car

2) Verb Tenses (Time in English)

Verb tenses tell us when something happens.

Tense When? Example
Present simple habits, facts He works every day.
Past simple finished past actions We visited Paris.
Future (will) future plans or predictions I will call you.
  • Habit: I drink tea in the morning.
  • Past action: I drank tea yesterday.
  • Future: I will drink tea tomorrow.

3) Articles and Countable / Uncountable Nouns

Articles help us talk about nouns in a precise way.

  • a / an: one thing (not specific) → I need a pen.
  • the: a specific thing → I found the pen you lost.

Some nouns are countable (1, 2, 3…). Some are uncountable (we do not count them easily).

Type Examples How to Use
Countable a book, two books a/an, numbers, many
Uncountable water, rice, information some, much (not “a water”)
  • Countable: I have a question.
  • Uncountable: I need some water.

Why Grammar Is Important

  • Clarity: People understand your message more easily.
  • Precision: Small grammar changes can change meaning.
  • Confidence: You speak and write with fewer doubts.
  • Better listening and reading: You understand structures faster.

Compare these:

  • I am bored. (I feel bored.)
  • I am boring. (Other people think I am not interesting.)

Comparison with Other Languages

Languages use different grammar rules. Here are a few useful comparisons with French.

1) Adjective Position

  • French: une voiture rouge
  • English: a red car

In English, adjectives usually come before the noun.

2) Questions (Do / Does)

  • French: Tu aimes le café ?
  • English: Do you like coffee?
  • English (3rd person): Does she like coffee?

English often uses do/does to form questions in the present simple.

3) Subject Pronouns Are Usually Required

  • French: Mange ! (possible)
  • English: Eat! (possible, but only as an imperative)
  • French: Je mange. / Mange. (context can help)
  • English: I eat. (the subject is normally needed)

Complete Example

Here is a short text that uses several grammar elements: word order, tense, articles, and prepositions.

Text:

  • Yesterday, I went to the supermarket.
  • I bought some fruit and a bottle of water.
  • The cashier was friendly, so I said thank you.
  • Then I went home and made a simple dinner.

What to notice:

  • Past simple: went, bought, was, said, made
  • Articles: the supermarket, a bottle
  • Uncountable noun: some fruit, water
  • Preposition: to the supermarket

Conclusion

Grammar is the system that organizes a language. It helps you make correct sentences and express your ideas clearly. If you learn grammar step by step and practice with examples, your English will improve faster.

Sources

  • Huddleston, Rodney & Pullum, Geoffrey K. (2002). The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge University Press.
  • Swan, Michael (2016). Practical English Usage (4th ed.). Oxford University Press.
  • Quirk, Randolph; Greenbaum, Sidney; Leech, Geoffrey; Svartvik, Jan (1985). A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language. Longman.

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