Reaching the final stage of an advanced English course is a rewarding moment, and this wrap-up highlights every major grammar skill practiced along the way. From complex verb forms to nuanced ways of expressing beliefs and causes, each topic builds toward more confident and precise communication in English.
What grammar structures were covered in this course?
The course focused on a rich set of grammatical tools that help learners move beyond intermediate English. Here is a quick overview of the main areas practiced:
- Future perfect passive. This structure combines the future perfect tense with the passive voice (will have been + past participle). It is used to describe actions that will be completed by a certain point in the future, with emphasis on the action rather than the doer. [0:04]
- Hypothetical results. Expressing what would, could, or might happen under imagined conditions is essential for academic and professional discussions. [0:06]
- Impersonal possessive adjectives. These allow speakers to refer to possession in a general or formal way, avoiding direct reference to specific people. [0:08]
How can you talk about reasons, causes, and beliefs?
Two closely related skills strengthen argumentative and explanatory language:
- Reasons and causes. Using connectors and structures that clearly link an event to its origin helps produce well-organized speech and writing. [0:09]
- Impersonal beliefs. Phrases such as it is believed that… or it is thought that… let you present opinions or widely held views without attributing them to a specific person, which is especially useful in formal or academic contexts. [0:10]
What about adverbs, outcomes, and complex questions?
- Complex adverbs. Going beyond simple adverbs like quickly or often, this skill involves using adverb phrases and positions that add precision and sophistication to sentences. [0:11]
- Describing outcomes of a situation. This means explaining the results or consequences of events clearly, connecting cause and effect in extended discourse. [0:12]
- Questions with complement clauses. Forming questions that contain embedded clauses—such as Do you know what she said?—is a higher-level skill that makes everyday and professional communication smoother. [0:13]
Why does practicing all these skills together matter?
Each of these grammar points reinforces the others. Being able to combine passive structures, hypothetical thinking, and impersonal language in a single paragraph or conversation is what separates competent speakers from truly advanced ones. Consistent practice with real examples, like those provided throughout the lessons, turns knowledge into natural output.
If you completed every lesson, take the final exam to measure your progress, leave a rating, and share your feedback—your experience helps shape future courses and supports other learners on the same path.