B1 – Intermediate

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About Course

Course Introduction: Mastering English Grammar at the B1 Level

Welcome to your comprehensive guide to mastering English grammar! This course is designed for learners at the intermediate (CEFR B1) level, providing clear explanations and practical exercises to boost your confidence and fluency. Each session focuses on essential grammar topics to enhance your understanding and usage in both spoken and written English.

Through engaging lessons, you’ll explore a wide range of topics, including verb tenses, conditional forms, articles, comparatives, quantifiers, prepositions, passive voice, and much more. We’ll also dive into areas like phrasal verbs, modal verbs, and indirect speech to refine your grasp of more complex structures.

Whether you’re preparing for exams, improving your professional communication, or simply advancing your English skills, this course equips you with the tools to succeed. Join us and take the next step in your language journey!

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Course Content

Present simple or present continuous

  • Present Simple vs. Present Continuous
  • Quiz – Grammar: Present Simple vs. Present Continuous
  • Use
  • Quiz – Grammar: Use of Present Simple vs. Present Continuous
  • Stative Verbs
  • Quiz – Grammar: Stative Verbs
  • Quiz – Present Simple or Present Continuous

Future forms – will, be going to, present continuous

Present Perfect vs Past simple

Present perfect simple and present perfect continuous

During, for, while

Comparative and Superlative Adjectives and Adverbs

Articles: A/An, The, and No Article
Articles are words that define nouns as specific or unspecific. Understanding when to use a/an, the, or no article at all is essential for proper English grammar.

Another, other, others, the other, the others

Can, Could, and Be Able To

Must, Mustn’t, Have To, Don’t Have To

Reflexive pronouns

-ED / -ING Adjectives

Past simple, past continuous, past perfect

Review of all intermediate verb tenses (CEFR B1)

Usually, used to, be used to, get used to

Reported Speech – Verb Forms

Using Both, Either, and Neither

No, any, none

“So” and “Such” for Emphasis

Relative Clauses

Question Tags

Had Better and It’s Time

For, since – from

Compound adjectives with numbers

Would rather & Would sooner

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