Why Grammar Rules Matter (and Which Ones to Focus On)
English has hundreds of grammar rules. Trying to master them all before communicating is a strategy that produces paralysis, not fluency. The productive approach is to identify the rules that appear most frequently in real communication, learn those deeply, and build from there.
At B1 to C1 level, the grammar errors that most impede comprehension fall into four categories: subject-verb agreement, tense selection, article use, and preposition choice. These four areas account for the large majority of errors in learner writing and speech. This guide focuses on them.
1. Subject-Verb Agreement
In English, a singular subject takes a singular verb and a plural subject takes a plural verb. This sounds simple but produces consistent errors at every level.
Third-person singular present simple: add -s
She works hard every day.
| Subject type | Example | Verb form |
|---|---|---|
| Singular noun | The manager / my colleague | works, decides, has |
| Plural noun | The managers / my colleagues | work, decide, have |
| Collective noun (unit) | The team, the company | is (British: are also acceptable) |
| Indefinite pronoun | Everyone, nobody, each | singular: everyone is |
| Compound subject (and) | Ali and Sara | plural: Ali and Sara are |
| Compound subject (or/nor) | Ali or Sara | verb agrees with nearer subject |
Common trap: intervening phrases
When a phrase separates the subject from the verb, learners often match the verb to the nearest noun rather than the subject.
The results of the analysis show a clear trend.
Subject is "results" (plural), not "analysis".
2. Tense Selection
English has 12 tense forms. Most communication uses only 6 of them regularly. The most frequently confused pairs are covered in depth in the English Tenses guide, but the key distinctions are:
| Confused pair | Rule | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Past simple vs Present perfect | Use past simple with a finished time; present perfect for unfinished relevance | "I lived in Paris" vs "I have lived in Paris" |
| Present simple vs Present continuous | Habits/facts vs actions happening now | "I work in IT" vs "I am working on a project" |
| Will vs Going to | Decisions made now vs pre-existing plans | "I'll help you" vs "I'm going to study tonight" |
| Past simple vs Past continuous | Completed action vs background action | "She called" vs "She was calling when..." |
3. Article Use: a / an / the / zero
Articles are one of the hardest areas for Arabic speakers (Arabic has no indefinite article) and a consistent challenge for French speakers (French articles are gendered and behave differently). The core logic of English articles is simpler than it appears:
Use a/an for countable nouns mentioned for the first time
First mention: "a meeting". Second mention (now known): "the meeting".
Use the when the noun is specific or known to both speaker and listener
Both parties know which report and which client.
Use no article for uncountable nouns and plurals used in a general sense
Information is power.
4. Preposition Choice
English prepositions do not map directly onto Arabic or French prepositions. The most important distinctions are for time and place, plus fixed expressions after verbs and adjectives. See the full English Prepositions guide for complete coverage.
| Category | in | on | at |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time | months, years, seasons: in July, in 2024, in winter | days, dates: on Monday, on 15 June | specific times, holidays: at 9am, at Christmas |
| Place | enclosed spaces: in the office, in the car | surfaces: on the desk, on the wall | points/locations: at the door, at the airport |
Common Errors by First Language
| Error type | Arabic speaker pattern | French speaker pattern | Correction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Articles | Omits articles: "I have meeting" | Uses article before abstract nouns: "The happiness is important" | Apply first-mention and generic rules above |
| Tense | Overuses present simple for ongoing actions | Confuses past simple and present perfect (passé composé overlap) | Past simple for finished time; present perfect for continuing relevance |
| Plurals | Omits -s plural marker: "three document" | Occasionally omits -s (silent in French): "two report" | Always mark plural nouns with -s/-es in writing |
| Verb position | Adverb placed between verb and object: "I like very much English" | Adverb placed between verb and object: "She speaks well English" | Adverbs of manner follow the object: "I like English very much" |
| Question formation | Uses statement word order: "You are coming tomorrow?" | Rising intonation without inversion: "You come tomorrow?" | Invert subject and auxiliary: "Are you coming tomorrow?" |
How to Study Grammar Effectively
Grammar study that stays in a notebook does not transfer to spontaneous communication. The most effective process is:
- Identify your top 3 error types (from teacher feedback or writing review)
- Study the rule: understand why, not just what
- Controlled practice: targeted exercises on that one rule
- Production practice: write 5 sentences or speak for 3 minutes using the rule deliberately
- Monitor in real use: watch for the rule in your next lesson or writing task
Repeat the cycle every 2 weeks per rule until the correction becomes automatic. Do not move to a new error type until the current one is largely resolved.
Fix Your Grammar with a Teacher Who Explains Why
Understanding a grammar rule is one thing. Using it automatically under the pressure of a real conversation is another. Direct English Live lessons build both.
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