Start with control
Reliable articles, agreements and present-tense sentences create a stronger base than memorizing isolated advanced rules.
Build tense contrast
Learn why a tense is used. Passé composé presents completed events, while imparfait often describes background, habits or ongoing past situations.
Connect clauses
Relative pronouns, object pronouns and connectors help avoid repetitive short sentences. Add them gradually and verify agreement and word order.
Write for meaning
Grammar supports communication. Choose structures you can control, then revise for clarity, accuracy and register.
Keep an error log
Group recurring mistakes by category: article, agreement, tense, preposition and sentence order. Revisit the highest-frequency category each week.