Tip 3: A or An

What do you do when you must choose between using ‘a’ or ‘an’ when it precedes a letter or word? Use ‘a’ before a consonant sound (b, c, d, f, g, etc.). Use ‘an’ before a vowel sound (a, e, i, o, u). The key is to look at the sound the word makes. Example:…

Tip 2: Who or Whom

How do you know when to use who or whom? ‘Who’ replaces the subject of a clause or sentence. ‘Whom’ replaces the object in a sentence. How do I decide? Replace ‘who’ with he, she, or they. Replace ‘whom’ with him, her, or them. Examples: Can you tell me (who, whom) turned in their outlines?…

Tip 1: Either/or or Neither/nor

What do you do when you have ‘either/or’ or ‘neither/nor’ in your sentence? When subjects in a sentence are joined by ‘either/or’ or ‘neither/nor,’ choose the subject that is closest to the verb and make it agree! Example 1: Either the manager or the engineers (is, are) going to be fired. “Engineers,” which is closest…