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GrammarGetting Started

Start Here — Your Grammar Journey

New to the grammar section? This is your map. Learn which group to start with, what order to follow, and how to make real progress without feeling overwhelmed.

Published May 21, 20263 min read

Welcome — you are in the right place

Grammar does not have to be confusing. Most people who struggle with English grammar are not struggling because English is hard — they are struggling because nobody showed them where to start.

This guide does exactly that.

The six groups — in the order you should learn them

The grammar library is organised into six groups. Follow them in this order. Each group builds on the one before it.

StepGroupWhat you will learn
1Basic GrammarThe building blocks — nouns, verbs, adjectives, articles, prepositions
2TensesHow to talk about the past, present, and future clearly and correctly
3Sentence StructureHow to build clear, complete sentences — simple, compound, and complex
4Common MistakesThe errors that quietly hold most learners back — fixed one at a time
5Speaking GrammarHow real spoken English differs from textbook grammar
6Writing GrammarPunctuation, email writing, and how to write clearly and precisely

Your first three lessons — start here today

You do not need to read everything at once. Start with these three articles. Read one, practise it for a day, then return for the next.

  1. What is a Noun? — The most basic building block. Every sentence has one. Start here.
  2. What is a Verb? — The engine of every sentence. Without it, nothing moves.
  3. Subject and Predicate — Once you can find these two parts in any sentence, you understand how English works.

How to learn without feeling overwhelmed

One lesson per day is enough. Each article is a 2–3 minute read. Do not rush through ten at once. Read one, find one example in your own life, and move on. Slow learning that sticks is worth ten times more than fast learning that fades.

Do the quiz at the end. Every article has a three-question quiz. It takes thirty seconds. It tells you whether the idea has landed — or whether you need one more read.

Use the "Try this today" box. Every article ends with one small action. Do it. Writing one real sentence, fixing one mistake in an email, or noticing one thing in your own speech — that is real practice.

Come back to Common Mistakes every week. Once you have finished Steps 1 to 3, treat the Common Mistakes group as an ongoing habit. Read one article per week, find that mistake in your own English, and fix it. By the end of two months, your English will be noticeably cleaner.


A realistic timeline

WeekWhat to focus on
Week 1–2Basic Grammar — all 8 articles
Week 3–4Tenses — start with Simple Present, Past, Future
Week 5–6Tenses — Continuous and Perfect forms
Week 7–8Sentence Structure — all 6 articles
Week 9 onwardCommon Mistakes — one article per week, every week
Whenever readySpeaking Grammar + Writing Grammar

This is not a rigid schedule. It is a rough guide. Go faster when you feel confident. Slow down when something does not click. The only goal is to keep going.


One last thing

Grammar is not a test. It is a tool.

The goal is not to memorise rules — it is to express yourself more clearly, more confidently, and more naturally. Every lesson here is designed with that in mind: simple language, real examples, and something you can use the same day.

You already know far more than you think. These lessons will help you use what you know — better.

Your first step

Go to What is a Noun? right now. Read it. Do the quiz. Write three nouns you see around you. That is your first grammar lesson — done.