These tenses focus heavily on the ongoing duration of an action rather than its completion.
Used for temporary actions happening right now or around the present moment. Example: "We are launching a new system this week." Day 9: Past Simple vs. Past Continuous
Before you can build complex sentences, you must master the fundamental building blocks of the language: nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and the absolute basics of verbs. Week one focuses on the structural DNA of English. Day 1: Nouns and Pronouns
Target frequent errors: your/you're , there/their/they're , its/it's , dangling modifiers, and double negatives.
Day 27: Mastering Advanced Punctuation (Semicolons, Colons, Em-Dashes) master english grammar in 28 days pdf exclusive
"The meeting is at 9:00 AM on Monday in the boardroom." Day 6: Basic Sentence Structure (SVO)
Avoid using state-of-being or static verbs in the continuous form (e.g., say "I know the answer," never "I am knowing the answer"). Day 14: The Perfect Tenses (The Ultimate Hurdles) The Goal: Connect two different points in time seamlessly.
People, places, things, ideas, and the words that replace them (e.g., team, concept, they, it ).
Take a paragraph of your writing and circle every pronoun. Draw an arrow back to the noun it replaces to verify agreement. These tenses focus heavily on the ongoing duration
Prepositions rarely follow strict rules; they rely heavily on natural pairings called collocations.
Grammar is a muscle. To preserve your gains, spend 5 minutes every morning reading high-level publications, and perform a structural proofread of everything you write before pressing send. 28-Day Grammar Mastery Tracker
You cannot build a house without a foundation. This week defines the essential components of a sentence.
Adjectives modify nouns; adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. Master the correct order of adjectives (Opinion, Size, Age, Shape, Color, Origin, Material, Purpose). Day 6: Prepositions and Conjunctions Past Continuous Before you can build complex sentences,
Week 4: Polishing and Precision (Modals and Relative Clauses) The final stretch focuses on nuance and flow.
Express future intentions, predictions, and sudden decisions.
Isolate the Simple Past for completed actions with specific time markers. Contrast this with the Past Continuous for ongoing background actions in the past. Master the Past Perfect ( had done ) to clearly establish which of two past actions occurred first. Day 10: The Future Timeline
Coordinate ideas using FANBOYS (For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So) or subordinate them to show cause and effect using words like although , because , and since . Day 7: Weekly Review & Synthesis