Using "for" for a period of time (for 2 years) and "since" for a starting point (since 2021). Articles: Overusing or omitting "a," "an," and "the".

These structures help you describe relationships between things and people. Modals of Probability and Obligation Ability in the present and past.

Using who, which, and that to join sentences (e.g., "That is the man who lives next door").

comparing two things (better than) or many things (the best).

Pre-intermediate English grammar (often aligned with the of the CEFR) is the bridge between basic survival English and being able to express complex ideas.

Are you using the (Red) or Intermediate (Blue) version? Is there a specific unit or tense you find confusing? Do you need practice exercises for a specific topic?

For general truths (e.g., "If you heat ice, it melts ").

For likely future events (e.g., "If it rains, I will stay home").

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