Openai/68a77b60-0ee4-800c-9acc-cd3fd573c311


This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]

gpt-5 edit

User: I’d like a list of grammar topics that a student should understand by the time they graduate from high school edit

I’d like a list of grammar topics that a student should understand by the time they graduate from high school

Assistant: Here’s a solid list of core grammar topics a student should understand by the end of high school. edit

Here’s a solid list of core grammar topics a student should understand by the end of high school. These cover the mechanics of English grammar, usage, and style—what’s typically expected for college, career, and effective communication.

Parts of Speech & Their Functions edit
  • Nouns (common, proper, abstract, collective, countable vs. uncountable)
  • Pronouns (personal, possessive, reflexive, intensive, relative, demonstrative, indefinite, interrogative)
  • Verbs (action, linking, helping; regular vs. irregular; phrasal verbs)
  • Adjectives (descriptive, comparative, superlative)
  • Adverbs (manner, degree, frequency, time, place; comparative forms)
  • Prepositions (time, place, direction, idiomatic use)
  • Conjunctions (coordinating, subordinating, correlative)
  • Interjections (basic awareness)
Sentence Structure edit
  • Subjects, predicates, and objects
  • Simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences
  • Independent vs. dependent clauses
  • Phrases: noun, verb, prepositional, participial, gerund, infinitive, appositive
  • Sentence fragments vs. complete sentences
  • Run-on sentences and comma splices
Verb Usage edit
  • Verb tense (present, past, future; perfect and progressive aspects)
  • Tense consistency within a passage
  • Active vs. passive voice
  • Mood (indicative, imperative, subjunctive, conditional)
  • Subject–verb agreement (including with compound subjects and tricky cases)
Pronoun Usage edit
  • Pronoun–antecedent agreement (singular/plural, gender, indefinite pronouns)
  • Case (subjective, objective, possessive)
  • Avoiding ambiguous pronoun reference
Modifiers edit
  • Placement of modifiers (avoiding misplaced and dangling modifiers)
  • Adjective vs. adverb forms
  • Comparative and superlative usage
Punctuation & Mechanics edit
  • End punctuation (periods, question marks, exclamation marks)
  • Commas (lists, compound sentences, introductory elements, nonessential clauses/phrases, direct address, etc.)
  • Semicolons (between independent clauses, in complex lists)
  • Colons (introductions, lists, explanations)
  • Quotation marks (direct speech, titles of short works, punctuation placement)
  • Apostrophes (possessives, contractions, plural forms of letters/numbers)
  • Parentheses, dashes, ellipses, brackets (awareness of usage)
  • Capitalization rules (proper nouns, titles, first words of sentences)
Style & Usage edit
  • Parallel structure (in lists, comparisons, correlative conjunctions)
  • Consistency in person, tense, and point of view
  • Formal vs. informal register
  • Commonly confused words (affect/effect, who/whom, fewer/less, etc.)
  • Avoiding double negatives
Advanced Awareness edit
  • Syntax variety for clarity and emphasis
  • Agreement in complex sentences (e.g., collective nouns, indefinite pronouns)
  • Common rhetorical sentence patterns (periodic, cumulative, balanced)

👉 Would you like me to turn this into a tiered checklist (e.g., what’s usually mastered in middle school, high school basics, and advanced/pre-college) so it’s easier to see what skills build on one another?

References edit

  1. "High school grammar topics". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2025-11-19.