Day 1 & 3
Day 4 & 5
Day 4 & 5 cont
Day 6
Misc
100
Rise vs Raise
When used as a verb they both have the same general meaning of "to move upwards", the main difference is that rise is an intransitive verb (it does not take an object), while raise is a transitive verb (it requires an object):
100
Natural Instinct
Redundant : Instincts are natural!
100
Around vs about
Colloquial : The mail usually comes around noon ( Avoid using around to designate time, distance, or any other quantity, as in around 3 hours, ... ) Standard : The mail usually comes at about noon
100
So
The use of "so" as synonym for "therefore" is extremely informal Colloquial : Nikita thought that Maria was hungry, so he brought her ... Standard : Because Nikita thought Maria was hungry, ..... Colloquial : The problem is so hard Standard : The problem is very hard
100
Altogether vs All Together
‘Altogether’ means ‘as a whole,’ and ‘all together’ means ‘everyone together’
200
Everyday vs Every day
Every day: here every is a determiner and day is a noun. When you say every day you mean each day without exception. Everyday is an adjective.When you say everyday you mean ordinary, unremarkable.
200
Free gift
Redundant : Gifts, by definition, are free ; otherwise they wouldn't be gifts
200
Badly - as used as a substitute for "very much"
Do not use. For example: Colloquial : The twins badly want tickets to the concert Standard : The twins desperately want tickets to the concert
200
Out loud
Say aloud instead
200
Among vs Between
Among is used to compare more than two persons or things where between is used to compare two persons or things.
300
Lay vs lie
“Lay” is a transitive verb. It requires a direct subject and one or more objects. “Lie” is an intransitive verb. It needs no object.
300
Common Problem with graduate.
What is leaving the preposition "from" out. "I graduated from high school."
300
when/where
Avoid using these words in definitions. They make for awkward and grammatically illogical sentences
300
Plenty
use only when talking about actually mass or size, not for very. e.g. It must have been plenty cold because the pipes froze
300
amount vs number
‘amount’ is for uncountable things while ‘number’ is for countable things
400
Which and That-
“That” is a restrictive pronoun. It’s vital to the noun to which it’s referring. Which” introduces a relative clause. It allows qualifiers that may not be essential.
400
Good vs Well
Good is an adjective while well is an adverb answering the question how.
400
who’s vs whose
Whose is the possessive form of who (or, occasionally, which). It means "belonging to whom or which." Who's is a contraction of who is or who has. Notice the apostrophe replacing the missing letters.
400
anxious vs eager
To be anxious is to be fearful. To be eager is to be desirous.
400
much vs many
much is used to measure an abstract thing (like hate) while many is for countable things (like books)
500
Old Fashion
Say Old Fashioned instead
500
less vs fewer
‘less’ is for an uncountable thing while ‘fewer’ is for countable objects
500
Farther vs Further
‘Farther’ is for expressing distance while ‘further’ is for advancing an idea (Further more...)
500
Comparatives vs. Superlatives (More vs. Most)
Comparatives are used to contrast two objects while superlatives contrast three or more objects
500
affect, effect
‘affect’ is a verb which means ‘to influence.’ ‘effect’ can be a noun which means ‘the change that happened’ or it can be a verb which would mean ‘to bring about’