Jaspreet,
Dont Mistake my saying so....
As a person who taught English Grammar two decades back & who looks at purity to a language,esp Grammar, I find some mistakes in this presentation. For eg Noun is a name of a person .place,animal or thing & not "idea" as given.
Please Refer to Wren & Martin the authority on Grammar & Composition

From India, Bangalore
Hi Thanks for ur intrest i wrote an "idea" just taking an example of a the word "thought" ot an idea is itselves a noun ....if you could suggest isnt it right?
From India, Chandigarh
Hello Jaspreet, Thank you very much for the presentation, it will help me for my some of the office employees as they are very poor in English. Looking forward for the part 2. Regards, Ms. Suvarna
From India, Pune
Hi jaspreet Too good yaar when will you r going to post your next blog i m desperately waiting for the same Regds Vipla
From India, Patiala
Hi It was a very good effort & i realy want to lookforward to the tense part.. Regards sujala
From India, Mumbai
Hi Jaspreet, Excellent ...Keep up the good work..of sharing more such ppts. All the Best. Regards, N Ramesh

Good and simple but Jaspreet, please add the different types of nouns like countable, collective etc under the noun section.
From Australia
Jaspreet,
Nice presentation, with well organized information flow. Shows your command not only on the grammer aspect, but also on information presentation.

One small constructive feedback, however. The presentation is a bit long - about 44 slides. Typically, an effective PPT is around 15 slides (at most 20). The law of deminishing returns on a reader's interest level kicks in around slide 15 (of any PPT) and grows pretty rapidly. A couple of key things in a presentation to keep the interest of the audiance.
1. Keep it tight, making effective usage of the real estate on a slide
2. Keep about 10 points per slide (or column in a slide - if you are using multi-column approach), and about 10 to 15 words per point (actually, you got this pretty well covered)
3. Keep it to a maximum of 15 to 20 slides (all in all). If you have to go beyond that because of the subject of your presentation, make logical topic groupings and make multiple presentations (one or more topics per presentation, no more than 20 slides)

Thank you for providing the information. I am sure it is useful for many.
Best regards,
--Som G


From United States, Woodinville
very well prepared and easy-to-comprehend style...keep up d work, jaspreet..
u r into teaching language skills??
Its my domain too. would like to know more material U have so that we can use yr knowledge at professional level...
pankaj

From India, Ghaziabad
Hello,
This is a good piece for beginners of grammar. I recommend the presentation to all students in second cycle schools in countries where English Language is not a first language but used as a medium of expression.
SIMON BORIBAH

From Ghana
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