01Tenses

All 12 tenses are expected at Band 9. Use them with accuracy and variety — not just safe present/past combinations.

  • Simple PresentS + V₁(s)

    Facts, habits, scientific truths, ongoing states.

    "Research consistently shows that urbanisation accelerates economic growth."

  • Present ContinuousS + is/are + V-ing

    Current trends, actions in progress, temporary situations.

    "The number of remote workers is growing at an unprecedented rate."

  • Present PerfectS + have/has + V₃

    Recent developments, changes with current relevance, experiences.

    "Governments have increasingly prioritised renewable energy investment."

  • Present Perfect ContinuousS + have/has + been + V-ing

    Extended action from past to present, emphasising duration or recency.

    "Researchers have been investigating this link for over two decades."

  • Simple PastS + V₂

    Completed past actions, historical events, specific data points.

    "In 2015, the Paris Agreement established binding emissions targets."

  • Past ContinuousS + was/were + V-ing

    Background action interrupted or occurring alongside another past event.

    "While the economy was contracting, innovation in the tech sector accelerated."

  • Past PerfectS + had + V₃

    Action completed before another past event; sequence in narrative.

    "By the time the policy was enacted, the damage had already been done."

  • Past Perfect ContinuousS + had + been + V-ing

    Duration of an action leading up to a past event.

    "Scientists had been studying the phenomenon for years before the breakthrough came."

  • Future Simple (will)S + will + V₁

    Predictions, certain outcomes, on-the-spot decisions.

    "This trend will likely intensify over the coming decade."

  • Future with going toS + is/are + going to + V₁

    Planned intentions, predictions based on current evidence.

    "The government is going to introduce stricter regulations by year's end."

  • Future ContinuousS + will + be + V-ing

    Ongoing action at a specific future time; projected trends.

    "By 2050, coastal cities will be facing significantly higher flood risks."

  • Future PerfectS + will + have + V₃

    Action completed before a future point; projected achievements.

    "Scientists will have developed a viable solution well before mid-century."

02Conditionals

Master all five types. Mixed conditionals are a Band 8+ signal — use them to link past causes with present consequences.

  • Zero ConditionalIf + Pres. Simple, Pres. Simple

    Universal truths, scientific laws, predictable outcomes.

    "If investment in education increases, economic output improves."

  • First ConditionalIf + Pres. Simple, will + V₁

    Realistic future possibility with a likely result.

    "If the policy is implemented, costs will decrease substantially."

  • Second ConditionalIf + Past Simple, would + V₁

    Hypothetical or unlikely present/future situation.

    "If more resources were allocated, outcomes would improve significantly."

  • Third ConditionalIf + Past Perfect, would have + V₃

    Counterfactual past — imagining a different outcome.

    "If the intervention had occurred earlier, fewer lives would have been lost."

  • Mixed (3rd → 2nd)If + Past Perfect, would + V₁Band 8+

    Past cause with a present result — most common mixed type.

    "If the law had been passed in 2010, the situation would be very different today."

  • Mixed (2nd → 3rd)If + Past Simple, would have + V₃Band 8+

    Present state as the cause of a different past consequence.

    "If she were more experienced, she would have handled it differently."

IELTS note

Conditional inversion (formal 'if'-free form): "Were the policy implemented..." / "Had the government acted..." → see also §24 Inversion.

03Passive Voice

Essential in academic writing — foregrounds the action, depersonalises the agent, and signals formal register.

  • Simple Presentis/are + V₃

    "This phenomenon is widely observed across cultures."

  • Simple Pastwas/were + V₃

    "The study was conducted over a three-year period."

  • Present Continuousis/are + being + V₃

    "New policies are currently being developed."

  • Present Perfecthas/have + been + V₃

    "Significant progress has been made in recent years."

  • Past Perfecthad + been + V₃

    "The data had been collected before the policy change."

  • Future (will)will + be + V₃

    "The findings will be presented at the next conference."

  • Modal Passivesmodal + be + V₃

    Core in academic argument and recommendation.

    "This issue must be addressed. / Caution should be exercised. / These factors could be considered."

  • Double Object Passiveis expected/reported/said to + V

    Distancing stance — attributing claims without direct ownership.

    "The proposal is expected to be approved. / The policy is said to have been effective."

  • Get-passiveget + V₃

    Informal — avoid in IELTS Writing Tasks 1 and 2.

    "The proposal got rejected." → Write: "The proposal was rejected."

Academic usage

Agentless passive omits "by + agent" to foreground action: "It has been argued that..." / "It is widely accepted that..." These impersonal constructions are hallmarks of academic register.

04Modal Verbs

Modals carry precise degrees of meaning. Band 9 speakers distinguish between them — they do not use "must" where "might" is appropriate.

  • Certainty & Deduction
  • must

    Strong logical deduction (near certainty).

    "The rapid decline must be attributable to policy failure."

  • cannot / can't

    Impossibility or strong negative deduction.

    "This cannot be the only contributing factor."

  • will

    High certainty about future outcomes.

    "This trend will inevitably lead to increased pressure on infrastructure."

  • should

    Reasonable expectation — something is likely if normal conditions hold.

    "The results should confirm the initial hypothesis."

  • may / might / could

    Possibility, decreasing in certainty: may > might > could.

    "This may be attributable to changing demographics." / "Results could vary."

  • Obligation & Necessity
  • must

    Strong moral or logical obligation.

    "Governments must address inequality as a matter of urgency."

  • should / ought to

    Recommendation — what is advisable or expected.

    "Authorities should implement clearer guidelines."

  • need to / have to

    Practical or external necessity.

    "Researchers need to account for all confounding variables."

  • Ability
  • can

    Present ability or general possibility.

    "Technology can transform access to education in remote areas."

  • could

    Past ability; or tentative present possibility (softer than can).

    "This approach could yield significant results."

  • be able to

    Formal alternative; required after other modals and in future perfect.

    "Communities will be able to access clean water by 2030."

  • Permission
  • may

    Formal permission.

    "Participants may withdraw from the study at any time."

  • be permitted / be allowed to

    Formal passive alternatives preferred in academic contexts.

    "Students are not permitted to use unauthorised materials."

05Articles

Article errors are among the most visible markers of non-native writing. Master the rules and the common traps.

  • Definite — the
  • Specific / unique reference

    When both writer and reader know which one is meant.

    "the government," "the environment," "the Internet"

  • Second mention

    After first introduction with a/an, switch to the.

    "A study was published. The study found significant results."

  • Superlatives & ordinals

    Always requires the.

    "the most effective solution," "the first sign," "the only option"

  • Indefinite — a / an
  • First mention, countable singular

    Introducing a noun for the first time.

    "A significant factor is the lack of funding."

  • Classification

    Placing something in a category.

    "This is a complex issue." / "Climate change is a global challenge."

  • Zero Article
  • General plural / uncountable

    Making general statements — no article before the noun.

    "Technology transforms society." / "Education is a fundamental right."

  • Proper nouns

    Most countries, languages, names take zero article.

    "Vietnam," "English," "Professor Smith" — but: "the United States," "the Netherlands"

  • Common traps

    Over-use of 'the' before abstract nouns is a frequent Band 6 error.

    ✗ "the nature," "the society," "the life," "the technology" (in general statements)
    ✓ "nature," "society," "life," "technology"

06Nouns

Accurate noun use signals grammatical control. Uncountable noun errors and missing nominalisations are common Band 6–7 weaknesses.

  • Key uncountable nouns

    These are always singular and never take a/an or plural -s.

    research, evidence, information, advice, knowledge, progress, equipment, furniture, news, accommodation, behaviour, traffic, damage, health, wealth, work, permission

  • Uncountable repair patterns

    Use a partitive or synonymous countable noun instead.

    ✗ "a research / many informations" → ✓ "a study / a piece of research / much information"

  • Collective nouns

    British English permits singular or plural verb; choose and stay consistent.

    "The committee is/are reviewing the proposal. The team has/have reached a decision."

  • NominalisationBand 8+

    Converting verbs/adjectives to nouns — the hallmark of academic register.

    analyse → analysis  |  develop → development  |  significant → significance  |  implement → implementation

  • Compound nouns

    Fixed collocations — no article needed when used generally.

    "economic growth," "language acquisition," "policy implementation," "climate change"

07Pronouns & Reference

Clear pronoun reference is essential for cohesion. Ambiguous reference is a direct Coherence & Cohesion penalty.

  • Personal pronouns in academic writing

    Task 1: avoid first person. Task 2: "I believe/argue" acceptable but use sparingly. "One might argue..." is a formal alternative.

  • Demonstrative reference (This / These)

    Strong cohesive device — points back to previous ideas.

    "This suggests that..." / "These findings indicate..." / "Such factors..."

  • Relative pronouns

    who/whom (people)  |  which (things, clauses)  |  that (defining only)  |  whose (possession)

    "the researcher who conducted the study" / "the policy, which was introduced in 2015," / "the country whose infrastructure is underdeveloped"

  • Clarity of reference

    Every pronoun must have an unambiguous antecedent.

    ✗ "John told Mark that he should apply." → ✓ "John told Mark that John should apply." or restructure.

  • Whom vs Who

    Whom = object position. Formal writing and relative clauses after prepositions.

    "the researcher to whom the award was given" / "Whom did the committee select?"

08Relative Clauses

Defining and non-defining clauses serve different functions. Confusion between them — especially punctuation — directly affects Grammatical Range score.

  • Defining (restrictive)

    No commas. Identifies which one. Can use that, which, who, whose, whom.

    "The policy that was introduced in 2015 produced measurable results."

  • Non-defining (non-restrictive)Band 8+

    Commas required. Adds extra information. Never use 'that' — use which, who, whose.

    "The policy, which was introduced in 2015, produced measurable results."

  • Contact clause (zero relative)

    Omitting the relative pronoun in object position (defining only).

    "The approach [that] we adopted proved effective."

  • Reduced relative — present participleBand 8+

    Replace active relative clause (V-ing).

    "countries experiencing rapid growth" (= that are experiencing)

  • Reduced relative — past participleBand 8+

    Replace passive relative clause (V₃).

    "policies implemented in the 1990s" (= that were implemented)

  • Preposition + which

    Formal — preposition precedes relative pronoun rather than stranding it.

    "the context in which this is most relevant" (formal) vs "which this is relevant in" (informal)

09Conjunctions & Linking Words

Conjunctions operate within sentences; discourse markers (§10) operate between sentences. Do not confuse them or use them interchangeably.

  • Coordinating (FANBOYS)
  • for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so

    Join two independent clauses of equal weight.

    "Investment increased, yet outcomes remained poor."

  • Subordinating
  • Concession

    although, even though, while, whereas, much as, despite the fact that

    "Although progress has been made, significant challenges persist."

  • Cause

    because, since, as, given that, seeing that, now that

    "Given that resources are limited, prioritisation is essential."

  • Condition

    if, unless, provided that, as long as, on condition that, assuming that

    "Provided that funding is secured, the project will proceed."

  • Time

    when, while, as, before, after, once, until, as soon as, by the time

    "Once the policy was implemented, the number of cases declined."

  • Result

    so...that, such...that, enough...to, too...to

    "The evidence is so compelling that it cannot be dismissed."

  • Correlative
  • not only...but (also)Band 8+

    "Not only did the study confirm the hypothesis, but it also revealed unexpected patterns."

  • both...and  |  either...or  |  neither...nor

    "Neither the government nor the private sector has addressed this adequately."

  • The + comparative...the + comparativeBand 8+

    "The more research is conducted, the clearer the picture becomes."

10Discourse Markers

Signal logical relationships between sentences and paragraphs. Essential for Coherence & Cohesion Band 7+. Do not overuse — one per paragraph is sufficient.

  • Addition

    furthermore, moreover, in addition (to this), additionally, what is more, equally

  • Contrast

    however, nevertheless, nonetheless, on the other hand, by contrast, conversely, that said, even so

  • Cause / Effect

    consequently, therefore, thus, hence, as a result, for this reason, accordingly, it follows that

  • Concession

    admittedly, granted, while it is true that, it must be acknowledged that, despite this, even so

  • Exemplification

    for example, for instance, to illustrate, such as, namely, specifically, as evidenced by

  • Clarification

    in other words, that is to say, to put it another way, to be more precise, more specifically

  • Ordering

    firstly / first, secondly, thirdly, finally, subsequently, prior to this, thereafter, simultaneously

  • Conclusion

    in conclusion, to conclude, on balance, overall, in summary, to summarise, ultimately

IELTS note

Avoid mechanical use: "Firstly... Secondly... Thirdly..." signals formula writing. Vary your cohesive devices — use pronouns, nominalisations, and synonyms alongside discourse markers.

11Sentence Structure

Band 9 requires a wide range of structures used accurately. Monotonous structure — even if correct — limits your Grammatical Range score.

  • Simpleone independent clause

    "The population is growing rapidly."

  • Compoundindependent + coordinator + independent

    "The population is growing, yet resources are being depleted."

  • Complexmain clause + subordinate clause

    "Although the population is growing, resources remain adequate."

  • Compound-complex2 independent + ≥1 subordinateBand 8+

    "Although the population is growing, resources remain adequate, and the government has pledged to address future demands."

  • Left-branching (fronted clause)Band 8+

    Subordinate clause before main clause — sophisticated, varied rhythm.

    "Given the available evidence, one can reasonably conclude that..."

  • Embedded clausesBand 8+

    A relative or non-defining clause inserted mid-sentence.

    "The policy, which had been under development for three years, finally passed."

  • Errors to avoid

    Run-on sentences (comma splices), sentence fragments, over-long sentences that lose grammatical control.

12Reported Speech

Used when citing research, opinions, and arguments. Reporting verb choice signals your relationship to the claim — neutral, sceptical, or supportive.

  • Tense Backshift
  • Pres. Simple → Past Simple

    "She said [that] the results were inconclusive."

  • Pres. Perfect → Past Perfect

    "They noted [that] significant progress had been made."

  • will → would  |  can → could  |  may → might  |  must → had to

    "The report stated that the trend would continue into the next decade."

  • Reporting Verbs by Function
  • Neutral

    say, state, report, note, mention, observe, write, indicate

  • Argue / Claim

    argue, claim, contend, maintain, assert, allege, posit

  • Suggest / Recommend

    suggest, propose, recommend, urge, advise, advocate

  • Acknowledge / Concede

    acknowledge, admit, concede, recognise, accept, grant

  • Emphasise

    stress, emphasise, highlight, underline, point out, underscore

  • Reported Questions
  • Yes/No questions

    Use whether or if; statement word order (no inversion).

    "She asked whether the data had been verified."

  • Wh- questions

    Wh-word + statement word order.

    "The report questioned why the trend had reversed." (NOT: "why had the trend reversed")

13Comparatives & Superlatives

Beyond basic -er/-est: double comparatives, as...as constructions, and formal comparative phrases are Band 7+ markers.

  • Regular comparative

    Short: adj + -er + than  |  Long: more + adj + than

    "more significant than," "higher than," "considerably greater than"

  • Regular superlative

    Short: the + adj + -est  |  Long: the most + adj

    "the most effective solution," "the highest rate," "the least significant factor"

  • Irregular forms

    good/better/best  |  bad/worse/worst  |  far/further/furthest  |  little/less/least  |  many/more/most

  • Double comparativeBand 8+

    The + comparative..., the + comparative — expresses proportional relationship.

    "The greater the investment, the higher the long-term returns."

  • As...as constructions

    Equality, proportional, or emphatic comparisons.

    "twice as many as" / "not as straightforward as it might appear" / "As significant as this trend is, it is not the only factor."

  • Formal comparative phrases

    compared to/with  |  in comparison to/with  |  relative to  |  in relation to  |  in contrast to

  • Intensified comparatives

    Avoid "much more" in formal writing — use precise adverbs.

    considerably higher  |  substantially greater  |  significantly lower  |  markedly different

14Quantifiers

Quantifier choice signals register. Formal quantifiers — not "a lot of" — are expected in Task 2 writing.

  • With countable nouns

    many, few, a few, several, a number of, numerous, a significant number of, the majority of, a minority of

  • With uncountable nouns

    much, little, a little, a great deal of, a considerable amount of, a substantial amount of

  • With both

    all, some, any, most, enough, no, a range of, a variety of, the bulk of, the vast majority of

  • Few vs A few  /  Little vs A little

    Without article = negative implication. With article = positive (some exists).

    "Few countries have succeeded" (almost none) vs "A few countries have succeeded" (some have).

  • Informal — avoid in academic writing

    ✗ a lot of, lots of, tons of, heaps of, loads of → ✓ numerous, a considerable number of, a large proportion of

15Prepositions

Preposition errors are very visible in IELTS writing. Academic collocations must be memorised as fixed phrases.

  • Time
  • at / on / in / by / during / over / since

    at: specific points  |  on: days/dates  |  in: periods/years  |  by: deadline  |  over: across a span  |  since: from a past point

    "at the turn of the century," "in the 21st century," "over the past decade," "by 2030," "since the 1990s"

  • Place
  • at / in / on

    at: specific location  |  in: enclosed space / city / country  |  on: surface / coast / border

  • Academic Collocations
  • Framing & scope

    in terms of  |  with regard to  |  with respect to  |  in relation to  |  in light of  |  in the context of

  • Cause & response

    as a result of  |  due to  |  owing to  |  as a consequence of  |  in response to

  • Position & alignment

    in favour of  |  in support of  |  on behalf of  |  regardless of  |  in accordance with  |  in line with

  • Comparison

    in contrast to  |  compared to/with  |  in addition to  |  as opposed to  |  as distinct from

16Adjectives & Adverbs

Choosing precise adverbs over "very" and "really" is an immediate Band 7+ signal. Stance adverbs (arguably, evidently) add academic voice.

  • Adjective order (OSASCOMP)

    Opinion → Size → Age → Shape → Colour → Origin → Material → Purpose

    "a significant recent economic shift" / "a remarkable new environmental approach"

  • Attributive vs predicative

    Attributive: before noun. Predicative: after linking verb. Some adjectives only predicative.

    "a significant impact" vs "The impact is significant."  |  Only predicative: afraid, asleep, aware, alike, alone

  • Precise intensifiers (formal)

    Replace "very/really" with adverbs that carry exact degrees.

    considerably, substantially, significantly, markedly, notably, remarkably, overwhelmingly, predominantly

  • Hedging adverbs

    Signal cautious claims — essential in academic writing.

    relatively, comparatively, somewhat, rather, largely, broadly, moderately, to some extent

  • Stance adverbsBand 8+

    Sentence-initial adverbs signal your epistemic position on the claim.

    Certainty: clearly, evidently, undoubtedly, unquestionably  |  Probability: arguably, presumably, conceivably  |  Surprise: remarkably, interestingly, notably

  • Adverb placement

    Sentence-initial: "Significantly, the data reveals..."  |  Mid-position: "The study clearly demonstrates..."  |  End: manner/time/place

17Gerunds vs Infinitives

Many verb + gerund/infinitive patterns are fixed collocations. The verbs with a meaning change (remember, stop, try) are high-frequency error points.

  • Verbs + gerund only

    avoid, consider, deny, enjoy, finish, mention, mind, practise, suggest, involve, recommend, justify, risk, admit, delay, resist, acknowledge

  • Verbs + infinitive only

    agree, decide, expect, fail, hope, intend, manage, plan, promise, refuse, seem, tend, wish, afford, appear, claim, pretend

  • Verbs + either (same meaning)

    begin, start, continue, prefer, like, hate, love, cease, attempt, propose — no difference in meaning

  • Verbs + either (different meaning)

    These are a direct Lexical Resource test point.

    remember + V-ing (recall past) vs remember + to V (future task)
    stop + V-ing (cease) vs stop + to V (interrupt for purpose)
    try + V-ing (experiment) vs try + to V (attempt)
    regret + V-ing (past regret) vs regret + to V (formal apology)

  • After adjectives (infinitive)

    "It is essential to consider..." / "It is worth noting..." / "It is possible to argue..."

  • As subject (prefer gerund in academic)

    "Developing renewable energy sources is a long-term priority." / "Understanding the root causes is crucial."

18Participle Phrases

Participle phrases reduce wordiness and create sophisticated sentence structure. Dangling participles are a Band-capping error.

  • Present participle — post-nominal

    Replaces an active relative clause.

    "countries experiencing rapid growth" (= that are experiencing)

  • Present participle — fronted adverbialBand 8+

    Subject of the main clause must also be the implied subject of the participle.

    "Considering the available evidence, one can reasonably conclude that..."

  • Perfect participle — prior actionBand 8+

    Having + V₃ = completed before main verb.

    "Having examined the data, the researchers published their findings."

  • Past participle — post-nominal

    Replaces a passive relative clause.

    "the policies implemented in the 1990s" (= that were implemented)

  • Past participle — frontedBand 8+

    "Influenced by economic pressures, governments have consistently prioritised short-term gains."

  • Dangling participle — common error

    ✗ "Looking at the data, a clear trend can be seen." (Who is looking? Not "a trend.")
    ✓ "Looking at the data, researchers can observe a clear trend."

19Noun Clauses

Noun clauses embed propositions within sentences and are essential for citing evidence and hedging claims in academic writing.

  • As subject (that / wh / whether)

    "What the data reveals is significant." / "That education levels have risen is encouraging." / "Whether this is sustainable remains uncertain."

  • As object

    "Research confirms that the trend is accelerating." / "The study questions whether the methodology is valid."

  • After impersonal itBand 8+

    "It is evident that significant changes have occurred." / "It has been argued that..." / "It remains unclear whether..."

  • Appositive that-clause (after nouns)

    Explains the content of the noun it follows.

    "The claim that the earth is warming is now incontrovertible." / "The fact that unemployment has risen is concerning."

  • After prepositions

    "There is debate about whether this policy is effective." / "Questions have been raised about how the data was collected."

20Adverbial Clauses

Adverbial clauses specify when, why, how, under what conditions, and despite what something occurs — essential for constructing nuanced academic arguments.

  • Time

    when, while, as, before, after, since, until, once, as soon as, by the time, the moment, whenever

    "Once the policy was introduced, the number of cases declined sharply."

  • Reason

    because, since, as, given that, seeing that, now that, in view of the fact that

    "Given that resources are limited, careful prioritisation is essential."

  • Purpose

    so that, in order that, in order to, so as to

    "In order to address this effectively, governments must cooperate internationally."

  • Concession

    although, though, even though, while, whereas, despite the fact that, even if, much as

    "Much as one might wish to dismiss this evidence, it remains compelling."

  • Result

    so...that, such...that, enough...to, too...to

    "Such is the scale of the problem that immediate action is required."

  • Condition

    if, unless, as long as, provided that, on condition that, assuming that

    "Provided that adequate funding is secured, the project will proceed on schedule."

  • Manner

    as, as if, as though, in the way (that)

    "The data behaved exactly as the model had predicted."

21Subject–Verb Agreement

Agreement errors in complex noun phrases are a reliable Band 6 marker. Quantifier + of constructions are the most commonly tested.

  • The number of vs A number of

    "The number of students is increasing." (singular) vs "A number of students are applying." (plural)

  • Quantifier + of + noun

    Verb agrees with the noun after 'of' (singular or plural).

    "The majority of the population supports..." (uncountable → singular) / "The majority of people support..." (plural → plural)

  • Collective nouns (British English)

    Can take singular or plural — stay consistent throughout your text.

    "The government is/are considering..." / "The committee has/have reached a decision."

  • Indefinite pronouns (always singular)

    "Everyone has completed the task." / "Each of the factors contributes to the outcome." / "Neither of the approaches is effective."

  • Either...or / Neither...nor

    Verb agrees with the nearest subject.

    "Neither the government nor the universities have addressed this." / "Neither the universities nor the government has addressed this."

  • Inverted sentences (There is/are)

    "There is a significant gap between..." (singular) / "There are several explanations for..." (plural)

22Parallelism

Parallel structure is expected at Band 8+. Its absence in lists and correlative conjunctions is a clear grammatical error, not a style preference.

  • In lists

    All items must share the same grammatical form.

    ✓ "to educate, empower, and engage communities" (three infinitives)
    ✗ "to educate, empowering, and community engagement"

  • In comparisons

    "Learning a language is as challenging as mastering a musical instrument." (gerund = gerund)

  • With correlative conjunctions

    Both sides of the conjunction must be grammatically parallel.

    "Not only did the policy fail, but it also created new problems." / "Both the social implications and the economic consequences must be considered."

  • In complex sentences

    Parallel subordinate clauses require consistent structure.

    "The report found that unemployment had risen and [that] living standards had fallen."

23Ellipsis & Substitution

Avoiding repetition through ellipsis and substitution is a Band 8+ cohesion skill. It makes writing feel fluent, not laboured.

  • Ellipsis — omitting recoverable elements
  • VP ellipsis

    "Some countries have implemented the policy; others have not [implemented it]."

  • Comparative ellipsis

    "The results were better than expected [results were]." / "as much as possible [is achievable]"

  • Infinitive ellipsis

    "She wanted to postpone it, but she didn't want to [postpone it]." / "if you need to [do so]"

  • Substitution — replacing with a pro-form
  • do so (formal)

    "The government pledged to act, and it did so immediately."

  • so / not

    "I believe so." / "It appears not." / "If so, further research is needed."

  • one / ones

    "The original hypothesis was less convincing than the revised one."

  • such (formal)Band 8+

    "Such measures have proven effective in other contexts." / "In such circumstances, intervention is justified."

24Inversion

Emphatic inversion is one of the clearest Band 9 markers. Use it for genuine emphasis — not as a mechanical formula to impress an examiner.

  • Emphatic Inversion — negative/restrictive adverbial fronted
  • Never / Rarely / SeldomBand 9

    "Never before has such rapid progress been made." / "Rarely do researchers encounter such consistent results."

  • Not only...but alsoBand 9

    "Not only did the study confirm the hypothesis, but it also revealed unexpected patterns."

  • Only when / Only after / Only byBand 9

    "Only when the results were published did the full extent of the problem become clear."

  • No sooner...than / Hardly / ScarcelyBand 9

    "No sooner had the policy been introduced than criticism emerged." / "Hardly had the government acted when conditions worsened."

  • Under no circumstances / In no wayBand 9

    "Under no circumstances should this information be disclosed to the public."

  • Conditional Inversion — formal if-free conditionals
  • Were...to (2nd conditional)Band 9

    "Were the policy to be implemented, the benefits would be significant." (= If the policy were implemented...)

  • Had...done (3rd conditional)Band 9

    "Had the government acted sooner, the crisis could have been averted." (= If the government had acted...)

  • Should...arise (1st conditional)Band 9

    "Should the need arise, additional resources will be provided." (= If the need arises...)

  • So / Such Inversion
  • So + adj / Such + noun phraseBand 9

    "So significant were the findings that the study was immediately replicated." / "Such was the scale of the crisis that intervention became unavoidable."

25Hypothetical Language

Hypothetical structures express wishes, regrets, preferences, and unreal conditions. They demonstrate range and nuance — key at Band 8+.

  • Wish + Past Simplepresent/future hypothesis

    "I wish the government invested more heavily in public education."

  • Wish + Past Perfectpast regret

    "Many wish the warnings had been heeded at an earlier stage."

  • Wish + Woulddesire for change / frustration

    "I wish the media would report on this issue more responsibly."

  • If onlystronger emotional force than wish

    "If only more resources were available for this research." / "If only the evidence had been taken seriously at the outset."

  • Would rather + Past Simplepresent/future preferenceBand 8+

    "I would rather the government focused on prevention than on treating symptoms."

  • Would rather + Past Perfectpast preference / regretBand 8+

    "I would rather the decision had been made at an earlier stage."

  • It is (high) time + Past SimpleBand 8+

    "It is high time governments took this issue seriously." / "It is time for a fundamental rethinking of the approach."

  • As if / As though + Past Simple/PerfectBand 8+

    "Politicians behave as though the problem does not exist." / "The data is presented as if the conclusion were already established."

  • Suppose / Supposing + Past Simple

    "Suppose the government were to implement this policy — what would the consequences be?"