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Below are 20 common English mistakes that advanced students 

make. Correct the


errors in each sentence and then see the answers and explanations below.

Correct the Mistakes


1. She recommended me that I take a few days off from work.

2. I tried to explain him the problem, but he had difficulty understanding me.

3. I don’t know why you didn’t go. If I were you, I should have gone.

4. Kate claims that if she got an MBA after finishing her bachelor’s degree, she
might have been considered for the position.

5. Kevin says he stopped to travel internationally because of his family.

6. We regret informing you that your application has been denied.

7. The interview was broadcasted live over the internet.

8. I’m so glad that he spoke in my behalf because I felt awful that I couldn’t
make it to the event.

9. At first I studied engineering in college, but I ended getting a marketing


degree.

10. It was a frustrating situation because we were uncapable of helping.

11. When the check came, I tried to pay but John told me to put away my wallet
and insisted that he paid for dinner.

12. They had managed a few crisises in the past, so they were able to handle
this situation fairly well.

13. If you would’ve told me, I would have given you my honest advice.

14. The four participants discussed it between themselves.

15. We thought we were going to expand this year, but we actually have less
people now than we did two years ago.

16. She’s trying to concentrate herself on finishing her degree.

17. Unfortunately, the species has gotten extinct due to human activity.
18. I’m a little afraid to do this by my own.

19. He told me that he had never been in that restaurant before.

20. Never before I had seen something quite like that.

Answers and Explanations


1. She recommended me that I take a few days off from work.

We need to use the subjunctive in this example. The subjunctive form in this
example is the infinitive without “to” (go, eat, do, run, etc.).

Common expressions followed by the subjunctive:


recommend that
insist that
demand that
request that
asked that
suggest that

Examples:
They demanded that we lower the price.
They demanded us that we lower the price.
They demanded that we lowered the price.
My boss requested that I use my vacation days before the end of the year.
My boss requested me that I use my vacation days before the end of the year.
My boss requested that I used my vacation days before the end of the year.

2. I tried to explain him the problem the problem to him, but he had difficulty


understanding me.

Some verbs can be followed by the indirect object and then the direct object.
For example, we can say I gave John the book. John is the indirect object
and book is the direct object. However, not all verbs follow this
pattern. Recommend, explain, and describe are three common verbs that take
the following form:
recommend/explain/describe + what + to whom

Examples:
We explained the situation to the client.
We explained the client the situation.
Could you describe the problem to our IT manager?
Could you describe our IT manager the problem?
3. I don’t know why you didn’t go. If I were you, I should would have gone.

To talk about a hypothetical past, we can use would/might/could + have +


participle. We do not use should to talk about a hypothetical past. We
use should to criticize past actions or express regret.

4. Kate claims that if she got had gotten an MBA after finishing her bachelor’s
degree, she might have been considered for the position.

To talk about a hypothetical past, we need to use the past perfect in


the if clause.

Examples:
What would you have said if you had been there?
What would you have said if you were there?

5. Kevin says he stopped to travel traveling internationally because of his


family.

We can use the verb stop with both the gerund and the infinitive. When we
use stop with the gerund, it means that someone was doing something and then
stopped. When we use stop with the infinitive, it means that someone stopped
an action in order to start doing something else.

Examples:
Kevin stopped working at 6 p.m. last night.
Kevin stopped to work at 6 p.m. last night.
At 10 AM, Lucy and Fernando always stop to take a coffee break.
At 10 AM, Lucy and Fernando always stop taking a coffee break.

6. We regret informing to inform you that your application has been denied.

Regret is normally used with the gerund. However, to communicate bad news
(usually in writing) we use regret + infinitive.

7. The interview was broadcasted live over the internet.

Broadcast is an irregular verbs. It doesn’t change in the simple past and


participle form, just like the verbs let, bet, set, put, cut, and shut.

 
8. I’m so glad that he spoke in on my behalf because I felt awful that I couldn’t
make it to the event.

This is a collocation with on that students typically have difficulty with. We


say speak on someone’s behalf.

At first I studied engineering in college, but I ended up getting a marketing


degree.

We use end up instead of end to talk about something that eventually happened


after other things happened first.

Examples:
We couldn’t decide on where to go for dinner, so we ended up eating at home.
We couldn’t decide on where to go for dinner, so we ended eating at home. 

10. It was a frustrating situation because we were unincapable of helping.

Overusing the prefix “un” is a common mistake.

11. When the check came, I tried to pay but John told me to put away my wallet
and insisted that he paid pay for dinner.

See explanation to number 1.

12. They had managed a few crisises crises in the past, so they were able to
handle this situation fairly well.

Many words that end in “is” have an irregular plural form that ends with “es.”
The plural form rhymes with the word “cheese.”

Examples:

crisis – crises
diagnosis – diagnoses
hypothesis – hypotheses
analysis – analyses

13. If you would’ve had told me, I would have given you my honest advice.

To talk about a hypothetical past, the if clauses takes the past perfect. We


use would/might/could + have + participle in the result clause.

Examples:
What would you have done if you had been there?
What would you have done if you would have been there?
If I had known the weather was going to be so bad, I might have chosen a
different day for the party.
If I would have known the weather was going to be so bad, I might have chosen
a different day for the party.

Note that we could also use the inverted form of the third conditional here (Had
you told me, I would have given you my honest advice).

14. The four participants discussed it between among themselves.

We need to use among here because we are talking about more than two


things that are not distinct items. Note that amongst would also be correct, but it
is not as commonly used as among.

15. We thought we were going to expand this year, but we actually


have less fewer people now than we did two years ago.

Although using less before count nouns (cars, people, resources, etc.) is


becoming more acceptable, the rule is that we use fewer before count nouns
and less before non-count nouns (time, patience, determination, etc.).

Examples:
We have fewer candidates for this position than we expected.
We have less candidates for this position than we expected.
Carl has less stress now that he has started working out after work.
Carl has fewer stress now that he has started working out after work.

 
16. She’s trying to concentrate herself on finishing her degree.

We don’t use reflexive pronouns (myself, yourself, himself, etc.) after the
verb concentrate.

Examples:
We need to concentrate on the task at hand.
We need to concentrate ourselves on the task at hand.

17. Unfortunately, the species has gotten become/gone extinct due to human


activity.

We can often use get to communicate that  something has changed or


transformed (get angry, get depressed, get scared, get excited, etc.). However,
we can’t always use get (get famous, , get available, for example).

18. I’m a little afraid to do this by on my own (or by myself).

We have the expressions by myself and on my own. By my own does not exist.

19. He told me that he had never been in to that restaurant before.

We say been to, not been in to communicate places that we have visited


(countries, cities, towns, restaurants, stores, etc.). Note that If we are talking
about a specific room, we would use in.

Examples:
Have you been to Italy?
Have you been in Italy?
I can’t believe you’ve lived in Paris for 10 years but haven’t been to the Louvre.
I can’t believe you’ve lived in Paris for 10 years but haven’t been in the Louvre.
I’ve been to his house, but I’ve never been in the basement. (specific room = in)
I’ve been to his house, but I”ve never been to the basement.

20. Never before I had had I seen something quite like that.


We use subject-verb inversion when we start a sentence with a negative adverb
(never, hardly, seldom, etc.).

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