Common English Grammar Mistakes
Common English Grammar Mistakes
4) Misplacing Apostrophes
You find apostrophes a little tricky, but once you follow the rules, it will become
easy. Putting an apostrophe in the wrong place is a common mistake.
Rules:
Apostrophes indicate something belongs to something or is owned by someone
else.
To show that something belongs to one person, place the apostrophe before the
letter ‘S.’
For example – “The girl’s sheep”.
To show that something belongs to more than one person, you need to place the
apostrophe after the letter ‘S’.
For example – “The girls’ sheep”.
Apostrophes are also used in contracted words such as “Can’t” to indicate that
the ‘O’ is missing from “Cannot.”
Apostrophes should never be used to make a word plural.
Many words in the English language imply a comparison – and using them
without “completing the comparison” is a common grammatical mistake.
To make this example grammatically correct, you would need to complete this
comparison. Here’s one way you could do that:
Confusing your adjectives and adverbs often results in speech or writing that
comes off as very informal, and even uneducated – and it’s a great way of
infuriating many English teachers.
Often, you’ll notice this issue happening with words that end in “-ly.”
And here’s how these two examples would look if they were made grammatically
correct:
Language would be pretty dull without words to add a bit of extra flavour to
sentences and descriptive speech.
With modifiers, “the tiger” can become “the fearsome tiger,” “the
sunrise,” can become “the beautiful sunrise,” and so on.
The issue is that these modifiers need to be placed very close to the word
they’re modifying, or else the meaning falls apart.
“Misplacing your modifiers” means that you are putting these modifiers too far
away from the terms they are meant to be modifying, in your sentence.
In fact, misplaced modifiers can even completely change the meaning of your
sentence in unintended ways.
In the example with the misplaced modifier, it is not clear if he “crawled”, “ran
slowly”, or simply “thought about walking” for the entire day.
A common grammatical mistake for English learners is for their pronouns and
nouns to disagree, when dealing with singular and plural examples.
The straightforward rule is that singular pronouns must go with singular nouns,
and plural pronouns must go with plural nouns.
“Every boy must sign in when they arrive” is incorrect. “Boy” is singular,
and “they” is plural.
Grammar and punctuation are essential in the English language and gaining
confidence in how to avoid any grammatical errors is a valuable part of your
learning journey.
You should practice developing your grammar daily; it will help you to become a
confident writer with a firm grasp on the English language.