So much of the web is based around written content that it’s important for anyone who works online to have a good grasp of language, including grammar and spelling. But it’s not always easy to find reputable sources that can teach us these things if we didn’t learn them in school (or retain them for long after). Below are over thirty great resources for learning more about grammar, vocabulary, copywriting, and more. If you have more resources you’ve found helpful, please share them in the comments!

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Grammar Resources

The resources included here will help you perfect your punctuation and refine your word usage. Some are very practical and down-to-earth while others inject a fair dose of humor into the learning process.

When to Use I.E. in a Sentence

This is a fantastic comic from The Oatmeal that explains exactly how and when to use i.e. in a sentence, complete with angry gorilla.

How to Use a Semicolon

The semicolon is probably the single-most misused punctuation mark out there. This comic from The Oatmeal will show you how to properly use them.

10 Words You Need to Stop Misspelling

This is another great comic from The Oatmeal that talks about 10 commons words a lot of people misspell, and how to remember the proper spellings.

How to Use an Apostrophe

This comic from The Oatmeal talks about how to use apostrophes correctly. After the semicolon, it’s probably the most misused punctuation mark out there.

Five Grammatical Errors that Make You Look Dumb

This post from Copyblogger covers five very common grammatical errors that make you look less intelligent than you really are.

A Ten Minute Tour of Complex Sentences: Phrases, Clauses and What They Do

This article from the University of Chicago discusses the different parts of complex sentences and how to craft them.

Schoolhouse Rock Lyrics

This site includes the lyrics for all the grammar songs from the classic Schoolhouse Rock cartoons.

Plagiarism Checker

When you are working on your paper, you should make sure not to plagiarise and use tools like this to make sure your paper is unique before submitting.

Grammar Girl

The Grammar Girl blog posts tips on a variety of grammar topics, in easy-to-understand language. Podcast version of their articles are also available.

GrammarBook.com

This site has a pretty thorough listing of rules related to punctuation and grammar, organized by subject.

English Practice

This website has a wide array of information on the basics of English grammar and language, as well as more advanced topics. Sections on common mistakes, creative writing, business writing, and more are all included.

The Importance of Correct Punctuation

This short example is one of the best supporting documents for the importance of correct punctuation.

Comma

This brief article from Writing English covers everything you need to know about proper comma usage.

The Tongue Untied Blog

This blog covers all the basics of grammar, and includes posts on things like subject verb agreement, matching pronoun cases, and using which vs. that.

Six Common Punctuation Errors that Bedevil Bloggers



Vocabulary Resources

Given the chance, most of us would likely want to expand our vocabularies. The sites here can help you do just that.

Pleonasms

Pleonasms are redundant or repetitious statements (like “frozen ice” or “dark night”). This page offers a pretty substantial list of those kinds of statements.

Wordsmyth

Wordsmyth is an online dictionary and thesaurus that includes a variety of different dictionaries (beginner’s and children’s among them) and other tools, including an anagram solver, reverse search, glossary maker, and crossword solver.

Thesaurus.com

Thesaurus.com, part of Dictionary.com, is one of the most complete online thesauri available for free.

Visual Thesaurus

Visual Thesaurus is an app that shows mind-map-style word associations based on any word you enter. You can run a limited number of searches for free, but it is a subscription-based service.

Coolest Words

Coolest Words is a site that features definitions of the coolest-sounding words around. While not the most practical resource, it is educational and a lot of fun to look through.

WordThink

The WordThink website offers a word of the day, as well as a list of favorite words, and an archive of words of the day.

The WordsWorth Compendium Word Lists

These handy word lists are broken down by type and use. There are lists of adverbs (broken down based on sub-categories), action words, and terms related to specific things (including obscure topics like dental implant terms or creativity techniques).

Copywriting Resources

Designers are often asked to fill in as copywriters for their clients. And even if they never have to write copy for a client, they likely have their own projects that need copy. Here are some great resources for learning how to write effective, persuasive copy.

Copyblogger

Copyblogger is probably the best-known blog about copywriting for the web, and includes a huge archive of useful copywriting articles.

2 Pieces of Bad Writing Advice—And What to Do Instead

This article talks about the reasoning behind a couple of commonly-heard writing tips, and the stylistic results they aim to achieve.

The Copywriter Underground

The Copywriter Underground offers up some great tweet recaps with tons of resources, as well as some original articles about copywriting and content.

Writing for the Web

This page lists all of Jakob Nielsen’s web writing articles in one place. Included are pieces on writing style, passive voice, and microcontent.

100 Greatest Headlines Ever Written

The best part about this article is that not only does it include 100 fantastic headlines, but also what it is about them that works.

Fuel Your Writing

While not strictly a copywriting resource, the Fuel Your Writing blog includes a lot of great general writing and business writing articles. Check out their advertising and marketing category for the most promising ones.

More Language Resources

Here are a few more resources related to language that didn’t fit neatly in any of the categories already covered.

The 3 Most Common Uses of Irony

This comic from The Oatmeal talks about the three common types of irony, how to properly use them, and why a lot of the things we think are “ironic”, really aren’t.

24 Things You Might Be Saying Wrong

This article covers 24 common phrases you might be saying or using incorrectly. Included are things like “could care less” vs. “couldn’t care less” and “different than” vs. “different from”.

20 Killer Words and 13 Words that Kill

This brief article talks about twenty of the best words to use in persuasive copywriting and thirteen words to avoid.

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