English Grammar
28 subjects covering parts of speech, tenses, voice change, and school writing formats — with notes and answered MCQs.
28
Grammar subjects
490+
Topics
1,510+
Study notes
MCQ
Practice with answers
Parts of Speech
Nouns, verbs, adjectives, and the building blocks of sentences
Introduction to the Parts of Speech
Foundation of grammar
Nouns
Names of people, places and things
Pronouns
Words that replace nouns
Adjectives
Describing words
Verbs
Action and state words
Adverbs
Modify verbs and adjectives
Prepositions
Position and direction
Conjunctions
Connecting words
Interjection
Expressing emotions
Sentence & Structure
Tenses, voice change, phrases, and punctuation
Vocabulary & Usage
Articles, gender, and word skills
Writing Skills
Letters, reports, stories, and school writing formats
Letter Writing
Formal and informal letters
Paragraph Writing
Topic sentence and paragraph structure
Story Writing
Plot, characters, and story format
Email Writing
Professional communication
Biography writing
Life stories
Report Writing
Factual documentation
Processing Writing
Step-by-step formats
Notice writing
Official announcements
Summary Writing
Concise overviews
Dialogue Writing
Conversations
Diary Writing
Personal journal
Also explore
Related grammar and speaking resources on QList.
Common questions
Short answers to frequently asked grammar questions.
- What are the 8 parts of speech in English?
- The 8 parts of speech are: Noun, Pronoun, Adjective, Verb, Adverb, Preposition, Conjunction, and Interjection. Each has a distinct role in forming sentences.
- What is the difference between active and passive voice?
- In active voice, the subject performs the action (e.g., 'She wrote the letter'). In passive voice, the subject receives the action (e.g., 'The letter was written by her').
- How many tenses are there in English?
- There are 12 main tenses: four present (simple, continuous, perfect, perfect continuous), four past, and four future.
- What is an article in English grammar?
- Articles are words placed before nouns. The definite article is 'the'; the indefinite articles are 'a' and 'an'.