Basic English Grammar — The Complete Beginner's Workbook
COMPLETE BEGINNER'S WORKBOOK

Basic English
Grammar.
Fully Explained.

Every grammar rule a beginner needs — broken down into simple, honest language. No textbook confusion. No teacher required. Just clear logic, real examples, and the confidence to speak correctly.

8Parts of Speech
12Grammar Topics
50+Examples
2Interactive Games

// 8 Parts of Speech

Noun Pronoun Verb Adjective Adverb Preposition Conjunction Interjection
01
// Foundation

What Is Grammar — And Why Does It Matter?

Grammar is simply the set of rules that tells you how to put words together so that other people understand you. Think of it as the operating system of a language — it runs quietly in the background, making sure everything works. Without grammar, words are just a pile of scattered puzzle pieces. With grammar, they become a complete picture.

Here is the most important thing to understand right now: grammar is not about being perfect. Native English speakers make grammar mistakes every single day. Grammar is about being understood — clearly, confidently, and correctly most of the time. That is all you need.

// REAL TALK

People who learn grammar as rules to memorize often struggle. People who learn grammar by understanding why each rule exists tend to remember it forever. This guide focuses on the "why" — so by the end, grammar will feel logical, not like a list of rules to fear.

The Three Questions Grammar Answers

🧩

What do I say?

Grammar tells you which words belong together and which combinations sound natural vs. wrong.
"She goes" ✓ not "She go" ✗
⏱️

When did it happen?

Tenses tell your listener whether something happened in the past, is happening now, or will happen in the future.
"I ate" vs "I eat" vs "I will eat"
🔗

How do parts connect?

Grammar shows how nouns, verbs, adjectives, and ideas link together to form one clear, complete thought.
"A big, friendly dog sat quietly."

The Basic Sentence Formula

Before anything else, lock this formula into your memory. Every sentence in English — from simple to complex — is built on this foundation:

THE GOLDEN FORMULA
Subject + Verb + Object = A complete sentence

Example: Riya (subject) drinks (verb) tea (object). That is a complete English sentence. Everything else you learn is just expanding and enriching this basic formula.

02
// The Building Blocks

The 8 Parts of Speech

Every single word in English belongs to one of eight categories called "Parts of Speech." These categories describe what a word does in a sentence — what job it performs. Understanding them is like learning the names of the chess pieces before you play the game. Once you know each piece's role, everything makes sense.

🏷️

1. Noun

A person, place, thing, or idea. The subject or object of most sentences.
dog, city, love, teacher, India
🔄

2. Pronoun

Replaces a noun so we don't repeat it over and over.
I, he, she, they, it, we, you

3. Verb

The action or state of being. Every sentence MUST have one.
run, is, think, eat, become, go
🎨

4. Adjective

Describes a noun. Answers: What kind? How many? Which one?
big, happy, three, blue, old
🔍

5. Adverb

Describes a verb, adjective, or other adverb. Answers: How? When? Where?
quickly, yesterday, very, always
📍

6. Preposition

Shows the relationship between a noun and other words — position, time, direction.
in, on, at, under, before, with
🔗

7. Conjunction

Joins words, phrases, or sentences together. The glue of English.
and, but, or, because, although
😮

8. Interjection

A sudden expression of emotion. Usually followed by an exclamation mark.
Wow! Oh! Hey! Ouch! Yes! No!
// PRO TIP

A word's "part of speech" can change based on how it is used in a sentence. "Fast" can be an adjective ("He is a fast runner") or an adverb ("He runs fast"). The same word — different jobs. Context is everything in English grammar.

03
// The Little Words That Matter

Articles — A, An & The

Three tiny words — A, AN, THE — cause more confusion for English beginners than almost anything else. But once you understand the logic, they are surprisingly simple. Articles are special adjectives that come before nouns and tell us whether we're talking about something specific or something general.

Indefinite Articles: A and AN

Use A or AN when talking about any one thing — not a specific one. The noun is new to the conversation, or you're introducing it for the first time.

  • Use A before consonant sounds
  • A dog, a car, a hotel, a university*
  • Use AN before vowel sounds
  • An apple, an egg, an hour*, an umbrella
// TRICK — It's About SOUND

"A university" (not "an") because it starts with a "you" sound. "An hour" (not "a") because the H is silent — it sounds like "our." Always go by the sound, not the letter!

Definite Article: THE

Use THE when both the speaker and listener know exactly which specific thing is being talked about. It signals: "We both know which one I mean."

    1️⃣
    Already mentioned

    I saw a dog. The dog was barking.

    First: "a dog" → Then: "the dog"
    🌍
    Only one exists

    The sun, the moon, the internet.

    There is only one, so we both know.
    📌
    Specific + obvious

    Please close the door. Pass the salt.

    Context makes it obvious which one.

When to Use NO Article At All

Sometimes English uses no article. This trips up many learners. Here are the main cases where you skip both A/AN and THE:

❌ Wrong — extra article
I love the music. (general music)
She plays the tennis.
He goes to the school every day.
Life is the beautiful.
✓ Correct — no article needed
I love music. (general = no article)
She plays tennis. (sports = no article)
He goes to school every day. (function)
Life is beautiful. (abstract nouns)

🎮 Practice: Pick the Right Article

// Article Challenge

Choose A, AN, THE, or NONE to complete the sentence correctly.

04
// People, Places, Things, Ideas

Nouns — Types & Plurals

A noun names a person, place, thing, or idea. It is the most common word type in English. There are several types of nouns, and understanding them helps you use the right article, the right verb form, and the right plural ending.

Types of Nouns

👤

Proper Nouns

Specific names. Always capitalized. No "a" or "an" before them.
Amit, London, Google, Hindi, Monday
📦

Common Nouns

General names for things. Not capitalized unless they start a sentence.
city, phone, teacher, river, idea
💭

Abstract Nouns

Things you cannot touch or see — feelings, ideas, qualities.
love, freedom, happiness, anger
🐦

Collective Nouns

A single word for a group of things or people treated as one.
team, family, flock, class, army

Making Nouns Plural — The Full Rules

Plurals (more than one) are mostly formed by adding -S or -ES. But there are important exceptions every beginner must know:

RuleWhen to ApplyExamples
Add -SMost nouns (default rule)cat→cats, book→books, tree→trees, car→cars
Add -ESWords ending in s, x, z, ch, shbus→buses, box→boxes, watch→watches, dish→dishes
Change Y→IESWords ending in consonant + ybaby→babies, city→cities, story→stories
Add -S (not IES)Words ending in vowel + yday→days, key→keys, toy→toys
Add -ES (f→ves)Many words ending in f or feleaf→leaves, knife→knives, wolf→wolves
Irregular — memorizeSpecial words with unique pluralsman→men, woman→women, child→children, foot→feet, tooth→teeth, mouse→mice, person→people
Same singular & pluralCertain words don't changefish, sheep, deer, aircraft, series

Countable vs Uncountable Nouns

This is one of the most important noun rules. Some nouns can be counted (one apple, two apples), but others cannot be counted (water — not "one water, two waters").

// COUNTABLE NOUNS

Have singular and plural forms. Use A/AN with singular. Use numbers with them.

book / books · egg / eggs · idea / ideas · friend / friends

✓ "Give me a book." · "I have two friends."

// UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS

Have no plural form. Never use A/AN with them. Use "some," "much," "a lot of."

water · rice · money · information · advice · milk · knowledge

✓ "I need some water." · "Give me a piece of advice."

05
// Word Replacements

Pronouns — The Replacers

A pronoun replaces a noun. Instead of saying "Riya went to school. Riya studied. Riya came home," we say "Riya went to school. She studied. She came home." Pronouns make language smooth and natural. Without them, every sentence would repeat the same noun endlessly.

All Pronoun Forms — One Complete Table

PersonSubject (doing)Object (receiving)Possessive AdjectivePossessive PronounReflexive
1st – SingularImemyminemyself
2nd – Singular/Pluralyouyouyouryoursyourself
3rd – Malehehimhishishimself
3rd – Femalesheherherhersherself
3rd – Thing/Animalitititsitsitself
1st – Pluralweusouroursourselves
3rd – Pluraltheythemtheirtheirsthemselves
❌ Common Pronoun Errors
Me and John went to school.
The gift is for I.
Her went to the market.
This is my book. That is your.
✓ Correct Forms
John and I went to school.
The gift is for me.
She went to the market.
This is my book. That is mine.
06
// The Engine of Every Sentence

Verbs & All 12 Tenses

A verb is the engine of a sentence. Without a verb, you have no sentence — just a collection of nouns floating in space. Verbs show action (run, eat, think) or state of being (is, was, feels). The tense of a verb tells your listener when that action takes place.

English has 12 tenses total. As a beginner, you need to master 6 and understand the rest. Let's go through every single one with a clear example.

Present Tenses — Right Now or Always

Tense NameFormulaUse It When...Example
Simple PresentSubject + V1 (+s/es)Habits, facts, routinesShe eats rice every day.
Present Continuousam/is/are + V-ingHappening right nowHe is eating right now.
Present Perfecthave/has + V3Past action, present resultI have eaten already.
Present Perfect Cont.have/has + been + V-ingAction started in past, still goingShe has been studying for 2 hours.

Past Tenses — Already Happened

Tense NameFormulaUse It When...Example
Simple PastSubject + V2Completed action in the pastI ate breakfast at 8.
Past Continuouswas/were + V-ingWas happening at a past momentShe was sleeping when I called.
Past Perfecthad + V3Before another past actionHe had left before I arrived.
Past Perfect Cont.had + been + V-ingWas ongoing before another past eventThey had been waiting for hours.

Future Tenses — Will Happen

Tense NameFormulaUse It When...Example
Simple Futurewill + V1Decisions made now, promisesI will call you tomorrow.
Future Continuouswill be + V-ingWill be in progress at a future timeI will be sleeping at 10pm.
Future Perfectwill have + V3Will be completed by a future timeShe will have finished by 5pm.
Future Perfect Cont.will have been + V-ingWill have been going on until a future pointBy June, I will have been studying for a year.

🛠️ Sentence Builder — Build Any Tense

// Interactive Tense Builder

// Select a subject, verb, and tense to build a correct sentence

Subject
Verb
Tense
Click Build →

Subject-Verb Agreement

One of the most common beginner mistakes. The verb form must match who is doing the action in the simple present tense:

// THE RULE

With I, You, We, They → use the base form of the verb. With He, She, It → add -s or -es to the verb.

I go · You go · We go · They go — but — He goes · She goes · It goes

07
// Words That Describe Nouns

Adjectives — Add Color to Nouns

An adjective describes a noun. Without adjectives, everything is flat. "I have a car" is fine. "I have a shiny, red, fast car" is vivid. Adjectives answer three questions about a noun: What kind? Which one? How many?

Position of Adjectives

// BEFORE THE NOUN (Attributive)

The most common position — adjective comes directly before the noun it describes.

A tall building · Three fresh oranges · A beautiful song · The old temple

// AFTER THE VERB (Predicative)

After verbs like is/was/seems/feels/looks/sounds — the adjective describes the subject.

She is tall. · The food smells delicious. · He looks tired. · The music sounds loud.

Degrees of Comparison

Adjectives have three forms: base (the normal form), comparative (comparing two things), and superlative (comparing three or more, to identify the most/least).

Base FormComparative (+er / more)Superlative (+est / most)Example
talltallertallestShe is the tallest in class.
happyhappierhappiestToday I am happier than yesterday.
beautifulmore beautifulmost beautifulShe is the most beautiful flower.
goodbetterbestThis is the best food I've had! (irregular)
badworseworstThis is the worst day ever. (irregular)
littlelessleastI have less time today. (irregular)
many / muchmoremostShe has more money than me. (irregular)
// RULE OF THUMB

Short adjectives (1-2 syllables) usually take -er / -est: fast → faster → fastest.
Long adjectives (3+ syllables) usually use more / most: important → more important → most important.

08
// Words That Modify Verbs

Adverbs — Describe the Action

An adverb modifies (gives more information about) a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Most adverbs are formed by adding -LY to an adjective — quick → quickly, happy → happily, loud → loudly. But many important adverbs have no "-ly" at all.

🏃

Manner (How?)

Describes how an action happens.
quickly, slowly, carefully, happily, loudly
📅

Time (When?)

Tells when an action happens.
now, today, yesterday, soon, already, yet
📍

Place (Where?)

Tells where an action happens.
here, there, everywhere, nearby, outside
🔢

Frequency (How often?)

Tells how often something happens.
always, usually, often, sometimes, rarely, never

Adverb vs Adjective — Don't Confuse These

❌ Adjective Used as Adverb
She speaks very good. ✗
He runs quick. ✗
Drive careful. ✗
She sings beautiful. ✗
✓ Correct Adverb Forms
She speaks very well. ✓
He runs quickly. ✓
Drive carefully. ✓
She sings beautifully. ✓
09
// Location, Time, Direction

Prepositions — Position & Relationship

A preposition is a small word that shows the relationship between a noun and other parts of the sentence — usually expressing location, time, direction, or cause. Think of prepositions as the connectors that place things in context. Without them, sentences feel incomplete and disjointed.

Prepositions of Place — Where Things Are

ininside somethingThe keys are in my bag.
onsurface contactThe book is on the table.
atspecific pointShe is at the door.
underbelow somethingThe cat is under the chair.
abovehigher thanThe fan is above my head.
besidenext toSit beside me.
betweenin the middle of twoSit between Ali and me.
behindat the back ofThe garden is behind the house.

Prepositions of Time — When Things Happen

PrepositionUsed WithExample
atSpecific times, night, noon, midnightat 5 o'clock · at night · at Christmas
onDays, dates, specific occasionson Monday · on 14th March · on my birthday
inMonths, years, seasons, parts of dayin January · in 2025 · in the morning · in winter
forDuration of timeI have lived here for 3 years.
sinceA starting point in timeI have known her since 2010.
byDeadline — not later thanPlease finish this by Friday.
duringThroughout a periodShe slept during the film.
10
// The Glue of Language

Conjunctions — Joining Ideas Together

Conjunctions join words, phrases, or complete sentences. Without them, you would have to write very short, choppy sentences all the time. With them, you can express complex thoughts, show relationships between ideas, and make your speech sound natural and connected.

Coordinating Conjunctions (FANBOYS)

There are 7 coordinating conjunctions, and the easiest way to remember them all is the acronym FANBOYS. They join two equal parts — two words, two phrases, or two sentences.

F

For

Because / to show reason
I eat, for I am hungry.
A

And

Adds one thing to another
Tea and biscuits.
N

Nor

Neither this nor that
Neither hot nor cold.
B

But

Shows contrast
I tried, but I failed.
O

Or

Shows choice
Tea or coffee?
Y

Yet

Surprise contrast
Simple, yet powerful.
S

So

Shows result
It rained, so we stayed.

Subordinating Conjunctions — Make Complex Sentences

These conjunctions make one part of a sentence depend on another. They create complex sentences that show time, reason, condition, contrast, and more. These are what make English speakers sound truly fluent.

CategoryConjunctionsExample
Timewhen · before · after · while · until · as soon asCall me when you arrive.
Reason / Causebecause · since · asI stayed home because it was raining.
Conditionif · unless · provided that · in caseI'll come if you invite me.
Contrastalthough · though · even though · whileAlthough it rained, we went out.
Purposeso that · in order to · so as toI study so that I can pass.
Resultso · such...that · so...thatShe was so tired that she slept at 7pm.
11
// Building Different Sentences

The 4 Types of Sentences

In English, every sentence you speak or write belongs to one of four types. Knowing all four — and being able to build them — makes you a complete communicator. Most beginners only use Statements. Using all four types makes you sound truly fluent.

📣
1. Declarative Sentence — Statement

The most common type. It makes a statement or shares information. It ends with a full stop (period).

I am from India. · She loves reading. · The sky is blue. · He will come tomorrow.
2. Interrogative Sentence — Question

Asks for information. Always ends with a question mark. Usually starts with a question word (who, what, where…) or the auxiliary verb (do, did, is, will).

Where are you going? · Do you like tea? · Have you eaten? · Is this seat taken?
📢
3. Imperative Sentence — Command or Request

Gives a command, instruction, or request. The subject "You" is usually invisible — it's understood. Can end with a period or exclamation mark.

Please sit down. · Open the window. · Don't touch that! · Be quiet. · Help me, please.
😲
4. Exclamatory Sentence — Strong Feeling

Expresses a strong emotion — surprise, excitement, joy, anger, shock. Always ends with an exclamation mark. Often starts with "What" or "How."

What a beautiful day! · How fast he runs! · I can't believe it! · This is amazing!

Negative Sentences — Saying "No"

Making a sentence negative is simple in English. For most tenses, you add "not" after the auxiliary (helping) verb. The contractions (don't, doesn't, can't, won't) are what native speakers use in conversation:

// NEGATIVES — THE PATTERN

Present: She does not (doesn't) like coffee. · I do not (don't) know.
Past: He did not (didn't) come. · We did not (didn't) finish.
Future: I will not (won't) be late. · She won't forget.
"Be" verbs: She is not (isn't) here. · They are not (aren't) ready.

🧠 Quick Grammar Recap

Before the quiz — a lightning-fast reminder of everything you've covered in this guide.

  • 8 Parts of Speech
  • A / An / The Rules
  • 12 Tenses
  • Subject + Verb + Object
  • Countable vs Uncountable
  • Comparative & Superlative
  • FANBOYS Conjunctions
  • 4 Sentence Types
12
// Test Your Knowledge

Grammar Knowledge Quiz

You have covered every essential grammar topic a beginner needs. Now put it to the test. 12 questions. No timer. Just you and the grammar you've learned. Get it wrong? The explanation will teach you instantly.

📝 Grammar Quiz

// 12 QUESTIONS · INSTANT FEEDBACK · NO PRESSURE

Grammar is
learned by doing,
not by reading.

You have the knowledge now. Every rule, every tense, every part of speech. But reading this guide once is the beginning, not the end. Use it as a reference. Come back when you're confused. Practice one rule at a time, one sentence at a time.

  • You now know all 8 Parts of Speech and what each one does.
  • You can use A, AN, and THE correctly in any sentence.
  • You understand all 12 tenses and when to use them.
  • You know the difference between adjectives and adverbs.
  • You can use prepositions of time and place accurately.
  • You can build all 4 types of English sentences.
  • You know countable and uncountable nouns and their rules.
  • You understand subject-verb agreement completely.
  • You can join sentences using FANBOYS and subordinating conjunctions.