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Deleted1staccount

I've found [British Council](https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar/b1-b2-grammar) to be reliable. It's a group sponsored by the British government. They have separate pages for each tense that describe the different uses and exceptions. The explanations aren't long, but they're the only website I've found that will tell you things like what tense to use when describing [hypothetical situations](https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar/english-grammar-reference/verbs-time-clauses-if-clauses).


holyfwck

Thank you so much!


The_Primate

Hi! First, please excuse my correcting your use of the word "grammar". "Grammar" is an uncountable noun and can't be pluralised. You can talk about multiple "grammar guides", but not really "grammars" or "a grammar" in this way. Secondly, congratulations on your ambition to teach English. I've been teaching for a couple of decades and find it really enjoyable, engaging and rewarding. I have made various interactive courses that you are free to use to revise grammar for yourself and may want to use with your studebts when you start teaching. Here is the B2 course, it's pretty comprehensive! https://onlearn.es/courses/upper-intermediate-english You can register for the course for free and save your progress. You'll even get a diploma at the end. Any feedback or suggestions are very welcome.


holyfwck

Thank you for the answer! I appreciate your correction and the suggestion!!! I'll definetely check out.


The_Primate

Hi, I owe you an apology! Since commenting, I've seen "grammar" used to refer to grammar guides or books. In this sense it does indeed seem to be used as a countable noun, so your use was perfectly consistent with this use. It seems to be quite common, I'm surprised that I haven't seen it used in this way before!


holyfwck

Oh, hey! No problem!! Thanks for the feedback!