English Grammar Hub

Understand English Grammar Faster

Browse the grammar system by level and category, then open clear explanations with practical examples.

780 Total Rules
126 Chapters
7 CEFR level
Understand English Grammar Faster

New to English Grammar?

Start with the basics and build your foundation step by step.

Start Here
Active filters: CEFR level: A2
A2 Sentence Structure

Verbs with Two Objects: Give Me the Book / Give the Book to Me

Some verbs take two objects: a direct object (the thing) and an indirect object (the person). You can put the person first or use to/for.

  • Two patterns: give me the book / give the book to...
  • Common verbs: give, send, show, tell, teach, buy,...
5 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
Read rule
A2 Grammar

Confusing Phrases: On Time vs. In Time / At the End vs. In the End

"On time" means punctual (not late). "In time" means with enough time to spare. "At the end" refers to the final point of something. "In the end" means finally, after a process.

  • on time = punctual, exactly when planned: The trai...
  • in time = not too late, with enough time: We got t...
5 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
Read rule
A2 Grammar

Connectors: However, Although, While, Before & After

Connectors link ideas together. "However" and "although" show contrast; "before", "after", "when", and "while" show time relationships.

  • however — contrast between two sentences (starts a...
  • although — contrast within one sentence (= even th...
5 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
Read rule
A2 Grammar

Reported Speech: Saying What Someone Said

Reported speech shifts tenses back one step and changes pronouns to report what someone else said.

  • Direct speech uses the speaker's exact words in qu...
  • Reported speech reports what was said without quot...
5 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
Read rule
A2 Grammar

Agreeing with So and Neither: "So am I" / "Neither do I"

Use "So + auxiliary + subject" to agree with a positive statement and "Neither + auxiliary + subject" to agree with a negative statement.

  • "So + auxiliary + I/you/he..." agrees with a posit...
  • "Neither + auxiliary + I/you/he..." agrees with a...
5 examples 8 exercises 8 FAQ
Read rule

Why Learn English Grammar?

Grammar is the foundation of language fluency. Without understanding grammar patterns, you can memorize vocabulary but struggle to form correct sentences. Here's why structured grammar study matters:

Build Accurate Sentences

Move beyond memorized phrases. Understand the rules so you can create original, correct sentences in any situation.

Pass Language Exams

Grammar is tested in every major language exam — IELTS, DELE, DELF, JLPT, HSK, TOPIK, and more. Our CEFR-aligned curriculum maps directly to exam requirements.

Understand Native Speakers

Knowing grammar helps you parse complex sentences, understand nuance, and follow conversations even when speakers use advanced constructions.

Progress Faster

Students who study grammar systematically reach fluency faster than those who rely on immersion alone. Structure accelerates learning.

How Our English Grammar Course Works

1

Choose Your Level

Start with your CEFR level — from A0 Zero Point to C2 Mastery. Not sure? Begin at A0 and progress at your own pace.

2

Study Structured Chapters

Each chapter covers a grammar topic with clear explanations, pattern tables, and real-world example sentences.

3

Practice with Exercises

Test your understanding with interactive exercises — fill-in-the-blank, multiple choice, sentence building, and translation practice.

4

Track & Progress

Your progress is saved automatically. Complete chapters, unlock new levels, and watch your grammar mastery grow.

Frequently Asked Questions About English Grammar

SubLearn covers 780 English grammar rules organized across 7 CEFR proficiency levels (from A0 to C2), spanning 126 structured chapters. Each rule includes clear explanations, real-world examples, and interactive practice exercises.

Our English grammar curriculum covers CEFR levels from A0 to C2. Each level is designed to match your current proficiency — beginners start with basic sentence patterns at A1, while advanced learners tackle nuanced structures at C1-C2.

Yes! All English grammar rules, explanations, and examples are completely free to access. You can browse the full curriculum, read detailed explanations, and practice with exercises at no cost.

Grammar is organized into 126 thematic chapters following the CEFR framework. Each chapter groups related rules together — for example, verb tenses, sentence structure, or particles — so you can learn related concepts in a logical sequence.

Yes! Create a free account to track which grammar rules you've studied, see your progress across all CEFR levels, and pick up exactly where you left off. Your learning progress syncs across devices.