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Gmloft Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

What are some grammar rules that even native-speakers have trouble with?

Can you list them here so I can use it as a reference later on?

  

Top answer

" This could happen with words the writer or speaker may not realize are negative: *This hardly never happens. ) Another mistake that native speakers make is that they may not know the past participle of some irregular verbs, so they use the simple past with has, have, or had. *He had went.

  • " This could happen with words the writer or speaker may not realize are negative: *This hardly never happens.
  • ) Another mistake that native speakers make is that they may not know the past participle of some irregular verbs, so they use the simple past with has, have, or had.
  • *He had went.
  • That should be He had gone.
  • Sometimes native speakers choose the wrong word from a pair of words that sound similar or the same to them: affect, effect hear, here
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4 Answers
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Some common native speaker errors include difficulty with tricky subject-verb agreement, especially with indefinite pronouns and compound subjects using "or." Another common error is creating a "double negative." This could happen with words the writer or speaker may not realize are negative:
*This hardly never happens. (This hardly ever happens.)

Another mistake that native speakers

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Thank you for this post. This information is relevant for me too

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Dangling/misplaced modifiers in writing, especially at university level.
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The English language can be hard even for native speakers sometimes. Everyone can make mistakes, no matter how long they've been studying and speaking it. And to be honest, that is normal. When you're making mistakes in speaking, you're one step closer to progress in the language you're learning. Some of the most common mistakes are the following: the wrong usage of "good" and "well", "fewer"

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