The most common irregular verbs in English — forms, patterns, and practice.
Present Simple vs Present Continuous
Habits and routines vs actions happening right now — and state verbs you can never use in continuous.
Past Simple vs Present Perfect
The most common error for Spanish speakers in English — finally demystified.
Zero, First & Second Conditionals
Real, possible, and hypothetical situations — using conditionals with confidence.
When the action matters more than who did it — essential for professional and formal English.
Can, could, should, must, might — expressing ability, obligation, advice, and possibility precisely.
How to report what someone said — tense shifts, pronouns, time expressions, and reporting verbs.
Who, which, that, whose, and where — adding information elegantly and precisely.
Articles: a, an, the & zero article
When to use a, an, the, or nothing at all — one of the most persistent challenges in English.
Prepositions at the end of sentences, questions, and relative clauses — natural, correct, and professional.
Talking about hypothetical situations in the past — what would have happened if things had been different.
Combining past and present — when the time in the if-clause and the result clause are different.
Formal alternatives to if-clauses — essential for written and professional English.
Will, going to, present continuous, present simple, and future perfect — choosing the right form.
When to use -ing and when to use to + verb — with verbs that change meaning depending on which you use.
Polite, professional question forms — essential for emails, meetings, and client communication.
Concise, professional alternatives to subordinate clauses — common in written and formal English.
Formal recommendations, requirements, and hypothetical expressions — when to use the base form.
Linking ideas, structuring arguments, and signalling contrast — the glue of fluent professional English.
It is... that / What... is — adding emphasis and precision to professional English.