Ask your grammar questions here and I'll answer them ALL!!! talking about mistakes - the auto-correct on my editing software put 'reflective pronouns' not the correct 'REFLEXIVE Pronoun' Sorry! editing errors!!
Hi, Leila & Sabrah I can not really thank you enough...You are great help...I am from India and I work as Senior Customer Service Associate and I have worked as a Debt Collector as well and your lessons have helped me tremendously .. Thank you so much and please continue the great work....God Bless The Both of You.
good work ma'am, both of you are taking great efforts for people to teach them correct and apt English in a simple and lucid way........i love watching your videos thank you Leila and Sabrah for teaching us correct accurate and proper English....thanks a lot
Thanks Leila! This video is really very useful 👏 Unbelievable! I don't normally make the mistakes that you listed ... I'm happy for that 😀! I have a grammar question to ask you: how to use "that" and when it can or should be omitted... I've always had difficulty understanding this rule. Thank you so much again 🙋
Namaste Leila, Definitely your lesson provide markable information about English grammar mistakes and appreciate your suggestions to rectify these mistakes. Thank you.
What a great teacher and a great teacher as well! Leila, thanks a bunch for helping us with these videos. Could you possibly create videos about phrasal verbs? I have studied all the ones you and Sabrah have made. They really helped me a lot and I wanna learn mire ones. They're incredibly useful!
Hello Leila. I can't thank you enough for your lovely and useful lessons. Your efforts to contribute to our English's progress are very much appreciated. I have to admit that there are occasions when I struggle with a past perfect tense. If you already have a lesson on this subject would you please leave a link here. Thank you.
We don’t have a lesson one the last perfect, but I’ll try and do one in January. It is a difficult tense so I’m not surprised you struggle with it. You could watch our lesson on ALL the tenses. It’s the main video on the UA-cam homepage. 👍
@@LoveEnglishwithLeilaSabrah I really appreciate you taking the time to reach back out. I'll certainly take a look at your home page and share my feedback with you Leila afterwards.
Hi Leila, I work in a company where i would have to converse with Americans over the phone and obtain various information. So, most of the time they would say"What did you need? " instead of" What do you need?". According to the grammar rule for present participle we should be using its correct form which is" do" not "did". Is my understanding correct???
Thank you so much for improving our English since I found your channel I watch 3or4 your videos everyday to improve my English, love your teaching and British accent and this channel is very useful for me
Tell them to watch "Keeping up appearances" that will straighten them out pretty quickly :) I watched an episode the other day and Mrs. Bucket said "listen horse, I am not a person to be trifled with " ha ha. I still remember that expression "trifled with". I have never been to an English-speaking Country but boy oh boy how television has helped me learn English, especially American movies.
1. Apostrophes (Possessive’s) - the girl’s book = 1 girl. The girls’ books = 2 girls. The Horse’s are in the field. 2. You’re = you are, your = possessive - You’re happy. You’re sad. You’re dancing. You’re driving. Your brother. Your car. Your house. 3. Its or It’s - It’s = it is / It has. Its = possessive (no’s) The sofa looks great with its new cover. 4. Should of, could of, would of, might of - Would + have (not of) 5. Their = possessive, there = location, they’re = they are 6. Two = 2, to = preposition, too = also/ as well 7. Then = next, than = comparison 8. Myself (incorrectly using reflective pronouns). I like myself SUB verb Obj. I myself think… 9. Who or Whom? Preposition + WHOM. To whom am I speaking? To whom it may concern, Who shall I invite? Whom shall I invite? Who said that? 10. Me and Sabrah. Sabrah and I…
I used Ur instead of "your" very often but i knew that it was not correct, i normally used it because it makes me write rapidly,😭😭😭 am so grinning that you finally opened my eyes to let me see where i was wrong. I can not thank enough.
Hi mam! Thanks for your brilliant lesson! I previously knew all of these mistakes but still now I'm not fluent. Not only is it embarrassing after three-year learning but also it's got so long! However I never give up n support you!
Hello there ! Thank you so much for making this awesome lesson . And I have a question, which is, what am I to understand if someone says it's finished ? Because" it's" means" it is" or "it has". Please reply !
You are a great. Personally I make similar mistakes but didn't guess so far how much harmful they're. This lesson is eye opening and I feel that I am lucky to have attended to this session. Good luck.
Murphy’s ‘Grammar in use’ is one of my favourite grammar books. Intermediate and advanced are good. In terms of the grammar to study, I guess 3rd and mixed conditionals and maybe more advanced future forms like the future perfect and continuous. Just make sure you are using the main tenses correctly 👍😊
Hi, Leila... Please I would like to ask you about the pronunciation of Possessive S , how can we distinguish ,in its pronunciation , between Plural and Singular, namely certainly, we know that we could recognize between them in the writing by apostrophe but the question how can we recognize in Pronunciation?
@@LoveEnglishwithLeilaSabrah Sorry, Leila indeed you didn't understand what l meant, actually I mean when we utter a sentence which included S possessive how we recognize the S possessive either for singular or plural for example: student's school / students' school. By the way, l know all the Pronunciation rules of 'S' ( /s/, / iz/ , / z/) whereas, my question is different.
Honestly it is a gist of how Polish learners struggle to understand why native English speakers say "Me and Deborah" or "I myself think" whereas the English students book state in an opposite way. Myself refers to your own person e.g. I've shaved myself so I cannot myself think as it would be like I think myself ;) Myself, yourself etc. are referred to as się or samemu in Polish so it is pretty logical to just follow the same pattern. Another interesting thing is that I was taught at uni that "whom" is an old fashioned form and can be omitted. I always wondered how it could be omitted especially that we in Polish language strongly differantiate the relative pronouns with their male, female and neutral form ;) LoveEnglishUk
THANKS.MADAM how are doing and how is madam Sabrah, please would you mind making a video about the use of tthe past infinitive and would rather in the past and reporting verbs and any other complicated grammar lesson, thanks, madam.
well hi love english with leila & sabrah , interestingly enough recently have asked about possessive with the plural situation and no body answered , now there we have it , appreciate it , keep up the great work , also actually i have question , is then sometimes mean (so) in some situations ?
Hi! Sorry we didn’t answer your previous question, we really do try! I will try and do some more focused lessons on these grammar errors in the future. Sorry, could you explain your final question again? I didn’t quite understand? 😊👍
Very often in the stores (H&M for example) You can see “womens department” or “mens”, so this is a mistake? I remember I had a conversation with a native speaker who explained me that this is correct because they add “s” to plural form of a noun to indicate a possession (department for women). Apparently she was wrong. It should be “women’ department”, “men’ department”? Can You please clarify this for me? 🙏🏻
My native language (Polish) is highly inflected and the field for grammar errors or mistakes to occur is much wider than in English, even though we don't usually have the homophones issue. The 'learned' sources say, that the users of any particular language can be native or non-native, careful or careless, educated (enough) or non-educated. Most (if not all) of the mistakes you listed - in case of native speakers - are probably made because they're careless. Another possibility (and that applies to all nations) is that they finished their education so long ago, that now they no longer remember the proper form anymore. But what about the "exetra" issue in English. An educated person must know its Latin original form, which is 'et cetera' (or even 'et caetera'). Four of my top favourite UA-cam teachers (out of nine) unfortunately pronounce it wrong. And at least one of them is supposed to love English very much.
Almost in all clothing shops we see Mens clothing, womens clothing,.. I always wondered which one is correct. Men's clothing, Women's clothing or what's written there. I want to know the reason. Is it because Mens, Womens looks better??
The correct answer is men’s and women’s when it’s an irregular plural ending in ‘en’ we treat it as a singular. Does that help? I’ll try and do a lesson on ossessive S soon 👍💕
Excellent delivery with much clarity.
Thank you so much 😊
Iam very much impressed with your lucid explanation about Grammar mistakes.
Thank very much Leila for your training
Thank you lila for the great English teaching
Ask your grammar questions here and I'll answer them ALL!!!
talking about mistakes - the auto-correct on my editing software put 'reflective pronouns' not the correct 'REFLEXIVE Pronoun' Sorry! editing errors!!
Love English with Leila & Sabrah "whom am I talking to " is it correct ! Guess it 's the same as to whom you're talking !just less formal
Please, comment your recent former conversation word by word or phrase by phrase and try to reuse them in new situations.
Thanks in advance!
I'm from Francophone Africa.
Thanks a lot from the bottom of my heart
Would you like to talk to me, I wanna talk you
Brilliant lesson.
Thanks Leila God bless you always
Hi, Leila & Sabrah I can not really thank you enough...You are great help...I am from India and I work as Senior Customer Service Associate and I have worked as a Debt Collector as well and your lessons have helped me tremendously .. Thank you so much and please continue the great work....God Bless The Both of You.
Dear Sabrah,
your presentations are fabulous I love the way you deliver your lessons.It is a pleasure to watch.Congratulations !!
good work ma'am, both of you are taking great efforts for people to teach them correct and apt English in a simple and lucid way........i love watching your videos thank you Leila and Sabrah for teaching us correct accurate and proper English....thanks a lot
Thank you my best teacher !
I enjoyed a great deal. Many thanks
Thanks
You're an amazing teacher I've known in my life. I wish I were your neighbour, so I could take more lessons from you.
Thanks Leila! This video is really very useful 👏 Unbelievable! I don't normally make the mistakes that you listed ... I'm happy for that 😀! I have a grammar question to ask you: how to use "that" and when it can or should be omitted... I've always had difficulty understanding this rule. Thank you so much again 🙋
Can anyone like my recent posts on Instagram Rounnok7 please so I can also like yours too in return
Namaste Leila,
Definitely your lesson provide markable information about English grammar mistakes and appreciate your suggestions to rectify these mistakes.
Thank you.
A good Leila. Your explanation is perfect. But I wonder, I never thought that some English natives commit such mistakes in writing English.
What a great teacher and a great teacher as well!
Leila, thanks a bunch for helping us with these videos.
Could you possibly create videos about phrasal verbs?
I have studied all the ones you and Sabrah have made. They really helped me a lot and I wanna learn mire ones. They're incredibly useful!
It is great to make correct mistakes by the help of your lecture.
Thanks, it's very useful.
Actually, I work For American and European Clients so need to have a great spoken and written English you are helping me every day.
Thank you very very much
❤️ Leila, we'll appreciate if you can share more similar lessons. This lesson was fantastic. At least for me! Thank you. 👀
very lovely teaching by you thanks Leila
very nice lesson today. Great smiling face i ever liked. Respect for my brilliant teacher.
Hello ma'am I'm an Indian citizen and I love the work you are doing by helping us.thanks for your videos and they helping me in my day to day life
I love your lession
Fantastic thanks.
But number 9 is a little difficult for me .I'll take some exercise for this case.
Hello Leila. I can't thank you enough for your lovely and useful lessons. Your efforts to contribute to our English's progress are very much appreciated.
I have to admit that there are occasions when I struggle with a past perfect tense. If you already have a lesson on this subject would you please leave a link here. Thank you.
We don’t have a lesson one the last perfect, but I’ll try and do one in January. It is a difficult tense so I’m not surprised you struggle with it. You could watch our lesson on ALL the tenses. It’s the main video on the UA-cam homepage. 👍
@@LoveEnglishwithLeilaSabrah I really appreciate you taking the time to reach back out. I'll certainly take a look at your home page and share my feedback with you Leila afterwards.
lots of apprication. you are an amazing teacher.
very interesting it real gives me more concept about the using of some words
Thank you♥️
Hi Leila,
I work in a company where i would have to converse with Americans over the phone and obtain various information. So, most of the time they would say"What did you need? " instead of" What do you need?". According to the grammar rule for present participle we should be using its correct form which is" do" not "did". Is my understanding correct???
Thank you so much for improving our English since I found your channel I watch 3or4 your videos everyday to improve my English, love your teaching and British accent and this channel is very useful for me
thank you so much
İ like the way your speaking, thanks for this great lesson
Tell them to watch "Keeping up appearances" that will straighten them out pretty quickly :) I watched an episode the other day and Mrs. Bucket said "listen horse, I am not a person to be trifled with " ha ha. I still remember that expression "trifled with". I have never been to an English-speaking Country but boy oh boy how television has helped me learn English, especially American movies.
Dear Leila, you pronunciation is exquisite. 🏅I have learned lot you new word from you videos. Thanks Asif Hyder Pakistan
1. Apostrophes (Possessive’s) - the girl’s book = 1 girl. The girls’ books = 2 girls. The Horse’s are in the field.
2. You’re = you are, your = possessive - You’re happy. You’re sad. You’re dancing. You’re driving. Your brother. Your car. Your house.
3. Its or It’s - It’s = it is / It has. Its = possessive (no’s) The sofa looks great with its new cover.
4. Should of, could of, would of, might of - Would + have (not of)
5. Their = possessive, there = location, they’re = they are
6. Two = 2, to = preposition, too = also/ as well
7. Then = next, than = comparison
8. Myself (incorrectly using reflective pronouns). I like myself SUB verb Obj. I myself think…
9. Who or Whom? Preposition + WHOM. To whom am I speaking? To whom it may concern, Who shall I invite? Whom shall I invite? Who said that?
10. Me and Sabrah. Sabrah and I…
I used Ur instead of "your" very often but i knew that it was not correct, i normally used it because it makes me write rapidly,😭😭😭 am so grinning that you finally opened my eyes to let me see where i was wrong. I can not thank enough.
Thanks Leila you helped me to correct my mistakes 😘
Hi mam!
Thanks for your brilliant lesson! I previously knew all of these mistakes but still now I'm not fluent. Not only is it embarrassing after three-year learning but also it's got so long!
However I never give up n support you!
I’m sure you’ll achieve the level of fluency you want! Please let us know if there are any lessons we can provide to help ? 😊👩🏻🏫
@@LoveEnglishwithLeilaSabrah here is my question : how should I insert negative dependant clauses to prevent a danger for instance?
Wow!
Thank you !! Mam
Hi teacher, what is the correct form: where are you going or where do you go? Thanks for your help.
It depends on the situation, both are correct. Present simple suggests a repeated action.
Hello there ! Thank you so much for making this awesome lesson . And I have a question, which is, what am I to understand if someone says it's finished ? Because" it's" means" it is" or "it has". Please reply !
Stunning and clever teacher 💗👌
Thank you !! 😊😊 Remember to share ! 💕💕
Thank you !! 😊😊 Remember to share ! 💕💕
Thanks so much, it's really heavily loaded with cultural capsule
You are a great. Personally I make similar mistakes but didn't guess so far how much harmful they're. This lesson is eye opening and I feel that I am lucky to have attended to this session. Good luck.
Definitely, "English with Lucy" and "Love English with Leila and Sabrah" are truly UA-cam blessings. Love you for eternity, girls! 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
great teacher
Thank you 😊
Awwwe i used to make this mistake of misusing who and whom. Thanks Leila
Interesting video.
Many thanks :-)
Miss Marvelous , thank you so much
You’re welcome Muhammad! 😊👩🏻🏫
Nice,thanks
Welcome 👍😊
Thank you ! Well presented and useful tips. (I) love it ;)
I am always keen to watch your new lesson..
thanks from bottom of my heart...
love you and your lesson, lots thanks
I agree with you 100%. A British friend of mine is always texting ”Your” instead of ”You’re”. It maked me confuse what it means.
Oh no! Send them the link to this lesson! 😂😂😂👍
Well we have learnt from you and now it's time to correct for us
👍😊😊
Your teaching wonderful
and your english is pathetic.
11:20 Not often in some cases followed by noun like * I go TO supermarket *( THANK YOU )
Is to correct to say Sabrah and myself... rather than Sabrah and I..? Many thanks in advance for clarification
ma'am please make a lesson on still vs yet
I have already pressed bell icon dear coz I am fond of you
Hi Leila I have no words to thank you Leila you're amazing I learned a lot from you
Have a nice weekend you and Sabrah 😉. My beautiful Teachers 👍
Thank you for your kind comment 💕have a lovely weekend too! 😊
Wawwww how i love you your lesson Teacher Liela even for you thank you from Eritrea
Thank you sooooooo much ! 💕
You are well come teacher Liela I have a Question what a different above and over than you
Nice video.
Love English raises me up.
And you us! 💕💕😊
It's an amazing lesson.
Could you please tell me what grammar should I focus in upper intermediate level?
What are sort of books may I read?
Thanks.
Murphy’s ‘Grammar in use’ is one of my favourite grammar books. Intermediate and advanced are good. In terms of the grammar to study, I guess 3rd and mixed conditionals and maybe more advanced future forms like the future perfect and continuous. Just make sure you are using the main tenses correctly 👍😊
Thanks for advice and guide me
That was quite nice of you 😘
No problem at all 👍💕😊
thanks Ma'am , i always enjoy your lessons
thanks Pawan! We really appreciate your support! ;-)
Thanks a lot👍
You are very welcome 😊
Thank u
You’re welcome 😊🇬🇧💕
Make a video on the correct use of these three adverbs even, also, too and rather. Thanks in advance
Could you create videos about pregnancy medical vocabulary ?
you are the best !!!carry on
We will! Just keep watching! 😊💕
Hi, Leila...
Please I would like to ask you about the pronunciation of Possessive S , how can we distinguish ,in its pronunciation , between Plural and Singular, namely certainly, we know that we could recognize between them in the writing by apostrophe but the question how can we recognize in Pronunciation?
Try this...it should explain everything. m.ua-cam.com/video/EMWmCb1CIdc/v-deo.html
@@LoveEnglishwithLeilaSabrah
Sorry, Leila indeed you didn't understand what l meant, actually I mean when we utter a sentence which included S possessive how we recognize the S possessive either for singular or plural for example: student's school / students' school. By the way, l know all the Pronunciation rules of 'S' ( /s/, / iz/ , / z/) whereas, my question is different.
Sabrah and me and i we always make video for our students thank Leila is helpful
‘Sabrah and I’ is correct . Thanks for your comment! 👍
Honestly it is a gist of how Polish learners struggle to understand why native English speakers say "Me and Deborah" or "I myself think" whereas the English students book state in an opposite way.
Myself refers to your own person e.g. I've shaved myself so I cannot myself think as it would be like I think myself ;)
Myself, yourself etc. are referred to as się or samemu in Polish so it is pretty logical to just follow the same pattern.
Another interesting thing is that I was taught at uni that "whom" is an old fashioned form and can be omitted.
I always wondered how it could be omitted especially that we in Polish language strongly differantiate the relative pronouns with their male, female and neutral form ;)
LoveEnglishUk
I love you out of distraction
THANKS.MADAM how are doing and how is madam Sabrah, please would you mind making a video about the use of tthe past infinitive and would rather in the past and reporting verbs and any other complicated grammar lesson, thanks, madam.
well hi love english with leila & sabrah , interestingly enough recently have asked about possessive with the plural situation and no body answered , now there we have it , appreciate it , keep up the great work , also actually i have question , is then sometimes mean (so) in some situations ?
Hi! Sorry we didn’t answer your previous question, we really do try! I will try and do some more focused lessons on these grammar errors in the future. Sorry, could you explain your final question again? I didn’t quite understand? 😊👍
@@LoveEnglishwithLeilaSabrah for instance (if you did it then why have not you told me about it ?) in this case are (then) and (so) replaceable ?
You did it..so why didn’t you tell me.
You did it...then why didn’t you tell me.
Yep, you can!
I kept on going England
please explain this sentence, is it grammatically correct ?
‘Keep on ‘ is a phrasal verb meaning ‘to continue! After ‘on’ you need a gerund. 👍💕
Good video! If I hadn't watched this great video, I would of made many mistakes. Oh, no. I have already got a mistake
admirable
I love you love English
"Should of" or "Would of" derive from the sound of "Should've" and "Would've". My pet peeve is "Let's get started" instead of "Let's begin".
A great kiss from Brazil my Love teacher !
Hi Cristiano! Amazing to have you watching us from Brazil! 💕
@@LoveEnglishwithLeilaSabrah 😃😉😆😙😗😁
@@LoveEnglishwithLeilaSabrah I am also Brazilian, Leila !
We love British English here on Brazil Leila! Thanks a lot by your lessons!
@@cristianomedeiros8996 😃😆😉😙😗😁
Very often in the stores (H&M for example) You can see “womens department” or “mens”, so this is a mistake? I remember I had a conversation with a native speaker who explained me that this is correct because they add “s” to plural form of a noun to indicate a possession (department for women). Apparently she was wrong.
It should be “women’ department”, “men’ department”?
Can You please clarify this for me? 🙏🏻
No they are correct, the departments belong to the genders. Its just they are too lazy to put the apstrophe in the signagec
Nice video Maam
Thank you 😊
I often made the 9 th one but no longer after watching this. Thanks
That’s great 😀 💕
great
You are the best
Thank you so much 😊😊
My native language (Polish) is highly inflected and the field for grammar errors or mistakes to occur is much wider than in English, even though we don't usually have the homophones issue. The 'learned' sources say, that the users of any particular language can be native or non-native, careful or careless, educated (enough) or non-educated. Most (if not all) of the mistakes you listed - in case of native speakers - are probably made because they're careless. Another possibility (and that applies to all nations) is that they finished their education so long ago, that now they no longer remember the proper form anymore. But what about the "exetra" issue in English. An educated person must know its Latin original form, which is 'et cetera' (or even 'et caetera'). Four of my top favourite UA-cam teachers (out of nine) unfortunately pronounce it wrong. And at least one of them is supposed to love English very much.
I think the biggest problem we have in the UK is the grammar is no longer taught in schools! 🤪 Thank you so much for your comment 😊👍
could you please teach Manchester accent? please
I’ll get Sabrah to do that one! She’s amazing at accents! 👍😊
@@LoveEnglishwithLeilaSabrah Thank you so much🧡
I want to know why don't you go ther --is it a wrong sentence or a right one, what's the rule
"ITS" IS NOT AN EXCEPCION, IT IS A POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVE like my, your, his, her, our, their.
Almost in all clothing shops we see
Mens clothing, womens clothing,..
I always wondered which one is correct. Men's clothing, Women's clothing or what's written there.
I want to know the reason. Is it because Mens, Womens looks better??
The correct answer is men’s and women’s when it’s an irregular plural ending in ‘en’ we treat it as a singular. Does that help? I’ll try and do a lesson on ossessive S soon 👍💕
@@LoveEnglishwithLeilaSabrah Much appreciated. I didn't expect a reply. Thanks 👍
I make mistake number 7. I can never remember distinction between "then" and "than".
Another meaning for too is very
It is, of course 👍
Love from haryana India