Basics of Grammar
Definition
Grammar is the set of structural rules that govern how words, phrases, clauses, and sentences are formed in a language.
In simpler terms, grammar explains:
- how words change to show tense, number, or person,
- how words combine to make phrases and sentences,
- and how sentences are organized to convey complete meaning.
For example:
She walks to school.
This sentence is grammatical because it follows the subject-verb agreement rule.
She walk to school.
This is incorrect because the verb does not agree with the subject.
Grammar includes several major parts such as:
- parts of speech,
- sentence structure,
- punctuation,
- tenses,
- agreement,
- and word order.
Main Content
1. Parts of Speech
Noun, pronoun, verb, adjective, adverb, preposition, conjunction, interjection
- are the basic word classes in grammar. Each plays a distinct role in building meaning.
Nouns
- name people, places, things, or ideas: student, city, honesty.
Pronouns replace nouns to avoid repetition: he, they, it, her.
Verbs express action or state of being: run, think, is, appear.
Adjectives describe nouns: beautiful flower, tall building.
Adverbs describe verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs: quickly, very, yesterday.
Prepositions show relationships: in, on, under, between.
Conjunctions connect words or groups of words: and, but, because, although.
Interjections show emotion: Oh!, Wow!, Alas!
Example:
- The small child ran quickly across the busy street.
- The = article/determiner
- small = adjective
- child = noun
- ran = verb
- quickly = adverb
- across = preposition
- busy = adjective
- street = noun
2. Sentence Structure
- A sentence is a group of words that expresses a complete thought. A well-formed sentence usually contains a subject and a predicate.
Subject
- tells who or what the sentence is about, while predicate tells what the subject does or what happens to it.
Example:
- Birds / fly in the sky.
- Subject: Birds
- Predicate: fly in the sky
Sentences can be classified into:
-
Simple sentence: one independent clause
Example: The teacher explained the lesson. -
Compound sentence: two independent clauses joined by a conjunction
Example: The teacher explained the lesson, and the students listened carefully. -
Complex sentence: one independent clause and one or more dependent clauses
Example: Because the teacher explained the lesson clearly, the students understood it. -
Compound-complex sentence: more than one independent clause and at least one dependent clause
Example: Because the teacher explained the lesson clearly, the students understood it, and they completed their work quickly.
A sentence can also be shown like this:
Subject + Verb + Object
Example: The boy + kicked + the ball
This structure helps keep sentences organized and understandable.
3. Tenses, Agreement, and Punctuation
Tenses
- show the time of an action or event. The main tenses are:
- Present: She studies daily.
- Past: She studied yesterday.
- Future: She will study tomorrow.
Each tense may have forms such as:
- simple,
- continuous,
- perfect,
- and perfect continuous.
Example:
- I eat lunch. → present simple
- I am eating lunch. → present continuous
- I have eaten lunch. → present perfect
Agreement
- means parts of a sentence must match properly. The most common type is subject-verb agreement.
- Correct: He plays football.
- Incorrect: He play football.
Agreement also applies to:
- pronouns and antecedents,
- singular and plural forms,
- and consistency in number and person.
Punctuation
- helps separate ideas and show meaning clearly.
- Period (.) ends a statement.
- Comma (,) separates items or ideas.
- Question mark (?) ends a question.
- Exclamation mark (!) shows strong feeling.
- Apostrophe (’) shows possession or contraction.
- Quotation marks (“ ”) show direct speech.
Examples:
- Where are you going?
- Please bring pens, pencils, and notebooks.
- It’s my sister’s book.
- She said, “I am ready.”
Proper punctuation prevents misunderstanding and improves readability.
Working / Process
1. Identify the sentence parts
- Find the subject, verb, object, and modifiers.
- Determine which words are nouns, verbs, adjectives, and so on.
- Example: The hardworking student completed the assignment.
- Subject: student
- Verb: completed
- Object: assignment
- Modifier: hardworking
2. Apply the grammar rules
- Check whether subject and verb agree.
- Verify the correct tense.
- Ensure pronouns refer clearly to nouns.
- Use the right word order.
- Example:
- Incorrect: They was happy.
- Correct: They were happy.
3. Revise for correctness and clarity
- Read the sentence aloud to detect awkward structure.
- Check punctuation, capitalization, and spelling.
- Simplify long or confusing constructions when needed.
- Example:
- Before: Although the weather was bad, but we went outside.
- After: Although the weather was bad, we went outside.
Advantages / Applications
- Grammar helps create clear and correct communication, which is essential in speaking, writing, reading, and listening.
- It improves academic performance by helping students write essays, answers, reports, and exams with precision.
- It supports professional communication in emails, presentations, interviews, and official documents, where accuracy is important.
- It also strengthens language learning, because learners can understand sentence patterns, vocabulary usage, and meaning more effectively.
Summary
- Grammar is the rule system that organizes words into meaningful sentences.
- It includes parts of speech, sentence structure, tenses, agreement, and punctuation.
- Good grammar makes communication clear, correct, and effective.
Important terms to remember
- noun, verb, adjective, adverb, subject, predicate, tense, agreement, punctuation