It doesn’t have to be very complicated. We can say that grammar is the set of rules that helps us putting words together in meaningful sentences. In English it is not only important to write the words correctly, but also in the right order. Syntax is about that order.
Usually we write digitally and use the spell check on our text program. Microsoft office provides a curly red line for spelling mistakes and a double blue line for grammatical errors. Many others use the same system. It is a very good help. But it is not fool proof. Our languages are so complicated they can fool the computer programs. We therefor need to know something about grammar and spelling.
Word classes is the way we sort words that are used in similar ways in sentences into the same groups. The two most important are nouns and verbs.
Nouns are the names for things; it could be material things, places, living creatures or immaterial things: rock, Istanbul, Polly and love.
Nouns can change to tell us something about number: one rock- two rocks. Immaterial things like love cannot be counted.
Names of people, places etc don’t change. When we write, we start these names with a capital letter: Anna, Barcelona, New York and Ibrahim.
Verbs tell something is happening or somebody does something: Jump, rain, scream, fall, bite, change and know.
Verbs can change to tell us when something happened:
I jump (today)
I jumped (yesterday)
I have jumped (for an hour)
I will jump (tomorrow).
We call this “tense” Past tense is something that has happened, present tense is things that are happening now and future tense is something that will or may happen in near or distant future.
In English the verbs in present tense get an -s in the end if linked to one noun or the pronouns he, she it: “The girl jumps” but “the girls jump”, “he smiles” but “I smile”.
Other word classes are:
Adjectives (describe the nouns): pretty, sick, wet, blue
Adverbs (describe the verbs): quickly, well, awfully
Prepositions (describes where something is): under, next to, on, inside
Determiners (introduce the nouns): a, the, some, my, that
Conjunctions: (tie together words or sentences): but, and, for, because
Pronouns (instead of saying the noun): she, I, you, us, it
And there are even more, like numbers. And all words belong in a word class:
Source of image: Flexible education Norway
I |
walk |
happily |
in |
the |
rain |
wearing |
My |
red |
boots |
pronoun |
verb |
adverb |
prepo-
sition |
deter-
miner |
noun |
verb |
deter-
miner |
adjec-
tive |
noun |
Why is this useful to know? Many words look and sound similar, but they mean different things. Knowing your grammar helps you write more professional looking texts.
Do you see the difference between: “I walk happy in the rain wear my red boots” and “I walk happily in the rain wearing my red boots”? They look very much alike, but you clearly understand that the writer of the first sentence is not a native speaker.
Knowing the grammar can also help us with the correct punctuation.