20 Common English Grammar Mistakes (And How to Fix Them)

Every English learner makes grammar mistakes. Even advanced speakers slip up. The difference between a good speaker and a great one is not avoiding all mistakes — it is knowing which mistakes to fix and understanding why they happen.

In this guide, you will learn 20 of the most common grammar mistakes English learners make, why they happen, and exactly how to correct them.

Common English grammar mistakes
English grammar mistakes are common but fixable. Here are the 20 errors learners make most often — and how to avoid them.

1. He dont Instead of He doesnt

Wrong: He dont understand the question.

Correct: He doesnt understand the question.

Third-person singular subjects (he, she, it) need “s” or “es” on the verb in present simple tense.

2. Much vs Many

Wrong: How much books do you have?

Correct: How many books do you have?

“Much” is for uncountable nouns. “Many” is for countable nouns.

3. Omitting the Verb To Be

Wrong: She very tired today.

Correct: She is very tired today.

4. Its vs Its

Wrong: The dog lost it’s bone.

Correct: The dog lost its bone.

“Its” = “it is” (contraction). “Its” = possessive form.

5. Learn vs Study

Wrong: I need to learn English tonight.

Correct: I need to study English tonight.

You study English but you learn specific things.

6. Forgetting Articles

Wrong: She is student at Oxford University.

Correct: She is a student at Oxford University.

English requires articles (a, an, the) before singular countable nouns.

7. In vs On for Time

Wrong: I always work on the mornings.

Correct: I always work in the mornings.

In = parts of the day. On = specific days. At = specific times.

8. Double Negatives

Wrong: I dont have no money.

Correct: I dont have any money. or I have no money.

Standard English only uses one negative in a sentence.

9. Would for Real Conditions

Wrong: If I would study harder, I would pass.

Correct: If I studied harder, I would pass.

In second conditional, use the past simple after “if,” not “would.”

10. Forgetting -ed in Past Simple

Wrong: He work there for five years.

Correct: He worked there for five years.

11. Me and John vs John and I

Wrong: Me and John went to the cinema.

Correct: John and I went (subject) / They gave tickets to John and me (object).

12. Since vs For

Wrong: I have lived here since five years.

Correct: I have lived here for five years.

“Since” = a specific starting point. “For” = a duration.

13-20. Quick Reference

  • 13. Question word order: What do you want? (not “You want what?”)
  • 14. Another vs Other: Give me another one. (not “other one”)
  • 15. Wrong preposition: interested in, good at, afraid of (not “interested on”)
  • 16. Present perfect: I have seen that movie (not “I saw” when no specific time)
  • 17. Omitting prepositions: Listen to, look at, depend on
  • 18. Few vs A Few: A little money (some) vs little money (almost none)
  • 19. Apostrophes: Its (possessive), its (it is = contraction)
  • 20. All of vs Both of: Both of = exactly two people

How to Fix Grammar Mistakes Permanently

  • Keep an error journal: Note mistakes you make and review them weekly
  • Read extensively: Your brain absorbs correct patterns through input
  • Get feedback: A teacher or language partner who can correct you
  • Practice with writing: Errors in writing often appear in speech too

Grammar mistakes are a natural part of learning. Do not be embarrassed — be systematic. Each mistake you fix is permanent progress.

For more English grammar guides, visit ReadEnglishToday.com.

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