Author: Manjusha Nambiar

But As A Conjunction

As a conjunction But, as a conjunction, is used to join contrasting ideas. Their front door was open, but nobody was at home. The rope was thin but it was strong. He is hardworking,...

Bring vs. Take

Bring is used when something is being moved towards the speaker. Bring me that book. Take is used when something is being moved away from the area of the speaker. Take that paper with...

Both vs. Both Of

Both means the one and also the other of two persons/things etc. I want both books. Both shirts are good. Both and both of Before a noun with a determiner (the, this, my, your,...

Born vs. Borne

The passive form of the verb born (be + born) is used to talk about coming into the world at birth. He was born to poor parents. I was born on a Friday. She...

Big vs. Large vs. Great

Big and large are used mostly with concrete nouns – the names of things you can see, touch etc. They have a big/large house in the city. Great is used mostly with abstract nouns...

Between vs. During

The words between and during are often confused. During is used to say when something happens. We were in Switzerland during last summer. I was unwell during the whole of last week. He got...

Between vs. Among

We use between to say that somebody or something is between two or more clearly separate objects. The letter B comes between A and C. The Mediterranean Sea is between Europe and Africa. He...

Beside vs. Besides

Beside is a preposition. It means at the side of, close to. She sat beside her mother. Beside can also mean compared with. You are quite tall beside your sister. Besides Besides can be...

Below vs. Under

The prepositions below and under can both mean lower than. But there are some differences. Below Below is preferred when one thing is not directly under another. When the sun sets, it sinks below...