Language/English/Grammar/Beside-and-Besides
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Beside and Besides in English
Beside means “next to”.
E.g. • She sits beside me in the office.
Besides means “other than” or “apart from”.
E.g.
• Besides enjoying cooking, I like reading a book when I’m free.
After mastering this lesson, these related pages might interest you: Contractions, Irregular Verbs, PRONOUNS & "Native of" Vs. "Native to".
Sources[edit | edit source]
Videos[edit | edit source]
The difference between 'Beside' and 'Besides' - English Grammar ...[edit | edit source]
Beside and besides in a sentence - How to use English grammar ...[edit | edit source]
Beside vs Besides: English In A Minute - YouTube[edit | edit source]
Other Lessons[edit | edit source]
- ADJECTIVES
- Mass noun
- Possible Positions of Adverbs in a Sentence
- Was and Were
- ‘Differ with’ and ‘Differ from’
- REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS
- CONJUNCTIONS → Addition
- Quantifiers
- How Some pointers when using Adjectives
- Subject Verb Agreement