A Simple A1 English Grammar Routine That Does Not Feel Heavy
A1 grammar is not about memorizing a giant rulebook. It is about making basic sentence patterns feel automatic.
Keep the routine narrow
Beginner grammar becomes stressful when you study too many topics at once. For A1, the goal is not to know every exception. The goal is to build a few sentence shapes you can use without panic.
A useful routine has three parts: one tiny lesson, ten practice sentences, and one personal sentence about your life.
Practice one pattern at a time
For example, spend one day on 'I am', 'You are', 'She is'. Another day, practice present simple: 'I work', 'He works', 'They study'. Mixing everything too early makes mistakes harder to understand.
When a pattern feels easy, change the subject, time, or object. That gives variety without losing the grammar focus.
- Day 1: be verbs in positive sentences.
- Day 2: be verbs in questions.
- Day 3: present simple positive sentences.
- Day 4: present simple negatives.
- Day 5: short review with mixed examples.
Use personal examples
Grammar sticks better when the sentences are true. 'I live in Mumbai' is easier to remember than 'Tom lives in a city' if Tom means nothing to you.
After each exercise, write or say three sentences about your own day. This turns grammar from a school topic into language you can actually use.
Review mistakes, not everything
A good review is small. Keep a list of five mistakes you often make, then practice only those for a few minutes. This is more effective than rereading a full chapter.
In Englishoo, grammar practice can help you focus on the topic and level you are working on, so practice feels less random.
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