Grammar is acquired from the very start of learning language as an infant, by listening to parents and other people around the child when they're talking. Children continue learning grammar as they grow and develop. They learn the grammar of the people around them, whatever language is being spoken, until they reach elementary school and begin to learn the rules for grammar. Children of any age can learn the grammar of new languages and adults can too; but the older you are when you are learning a language, the more the grammar of that language will need to be taught, unlike acquiring it as you grow.
Grammar is one of the most important factors in speaking any language. Even the smallest task in daily life, such as buying something from a store, or buying a house or apartment, will be much easier to accomplish with a good understanding and use of grammar.
With proper grammar.
the operation of inborn universal grammar
It is grammar.
No, grammar is spelled grammar in the U.S.
Grammar that we all use, there is no other kind of grammar.
Yes, it is grammar, but your spelling is wrong; it's spelt grammar.
English grammar is more difficult to learn then rushian grammar?
No, "will be had" is not a correct grammar. The correct grammar would be "will have."
Different types of grammar. Stratificational grammar, transformational grammar, universal grammar, tagmemic grammar, phrase structure grammar, incorporating grammar, synthetic grammar, inflectional grammar, analytic grammar, distributive grammar, isolating grammar, traditional grammar, the new grammar*. -- (from Webster's New World Dictionary) RobbieWell, this question is harder to answer than it looks. Grammar can be subdivided in several different ways. (1) English education majors often study traditional, structural and generative grammars, which are different means of studying language. (2) On the other hand, you might be looking for standards of grammar, which would include prescriptive (rules of do and don't), descriptive (descriptions of what speakers and writers actually do), and formal (grammar used in computer programming). (3) Grammar, also, has several subfields: phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax and semantics.
It is acquired
Grammar.
"She did not have" is the proper grammar.