Welcome to English Grammar Pro – Page 45 – English Grammar Profiler

The position of the adjective when placed directly before a noun is referred to being in the attributive position. At lower levels, students already do this so here it becomes important to look at the range of adjectives used to create these noun phrases. One could just leave this to vocabulary if it were not …

adjective range in noun phrases Read More »

‘all’ is a predeterminer which means that it comes before central and post determiners if there are any.  For example: ‘all the people’.   In this post, we look at “all” in a short noun phrase. 1 ALL DAY 276848 2 ALL THINGS 219082 3 ALL KINDS 209290 4 ALL TIMES 197318 5 ALL TIME …

all + noun Read More »

This A2 grammar point is quantities of PLURAL NOUNS. Its made up of an adverb + determiner + noun.

The latest news using this grammar point.

These are ranked by frequency and then the number of words found.  In bold are vocabulary related to the timing of events. 1 ALSO 26453321 2 JUST 23263966 3 HOW 15767798 4 SO 15131792 5 EVEN 10857610 6 WELL 9843940 7 REALLY 9725060 8 STILL 8922147 9 WHEN 7741964 10 MORE 7552800 11 ALWAYS 6795335 …

adveRb geneRal on iWeb corpus Read More »

There are a few types of codes used on this site. The first is Regex related to Claws 7. As much as we try to share them online in a way that can be easily copied and pasted, quite annoyingly, “WordPress” doesn’t like to leave them as they appear. \w+_ The backslash “\“, in particular, …

codes Read More »

Point 51 in the category of adverbs/phrases is defined as: degree adverbs (‘almost’, ‘very’) to modify determiners. Adverbs phrases can be put together with degree adverbs such as “almost” and “very” to modify determiners, such as “all” and “few”. *.[RR] *.[DB] After removing a few unrelated results to the intention of finding degrees, the search …

almost all & very few Read More »