Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts with the label Lists

British and American English

British vs American English: Differences Illustrated

List of irregular verbs

In English, verbs can be regular or irregular .   

Adverbs of definite frequency

Adverbs of frequency describe how often something happens . There are two types of adverbs of frequency:     D efinite : We exactly know how often something happens, and use them at the end of a sentence.   I ndefinite : We do not know how often something happens, and use them  before the main verb, after the modal verb or first auxiliary verb, or after the verb to be.   Here   is  the list of  some  adverbs of definite frequency with examples:  

Consonant-doubling verbs

List of consonant-doubling verbs When a regular verb ends with a vowel plus a consonant, and the final syllable is stressed, the verb doubles the last consonant before adding -ed    and –ing . Here is the list of verbs that double the last consonants before adding –ed and –ing.

List of the words with silent letters

A silent letter is a letter that is not pronounced, but it is written in a word.  There are a lot of words with silent letters in English. Silent letters

100 most common English words with examples

Here the list of  100 most common English words with examples. The (definite article): The US president And (conjunction): She was singing and dancing. To (preposition): He wants to go to Spain. Of (preposition): The colours of the rainbow A (indefinite article): This is a car. I (pronoun): I am a teacher. In (preposition): She is staying in Room 15. Was (past simple of be): I was right. He (pronoun): He is my father. That (determiner): That ’s my car, over there. It (pronoun): Is it a girl or a boy? Please do not do it again. His (determiner): His voice trembled a little. Her (determiner; pronoun): Her name is Anna. You must help her. You (pronoun): You are very clever. I sent you the letter.