andreea_aca's avatar
andreea_aca

Aug. 17, 2025

0
Raising a 2 years old child

Hi

I am a mom for almost 2 years and my todller is very energetic. The most of the time I feel that I lose my patience. I am tryind to learn how to be a more understandable parent

Corrections (3)
Correction Settings
Choose how corrections are organized

Only show inserted text
Word-level diffs are planned for a future update.

The most of the time I feel that I lose my patience.

Raising a 2 years old child


Raising a 2 years old child Raising a 2 year old child

It’s weird now that I think about it but you would say “2 year old” because you’re using it in more of a noun form with “child” (opposed to if you were saying that your child was 2 years old or something like that)

Raising a 2 years oTwo-Year-Old cChild Raising a Two-Year-Old Child

Raising a 2 -years -old child Raising a 2-year-old child

Hi I am a mom for almost 2 years and my todller is very energetic.


Hi I am, I have been a mom for almost 2 years and my todldler is very energetic. Hi, I have been a mom for almost 2 years and my toddler is very energetic.

This first thing is a little nitpicky but typically when you format something like you have here, you would put a comma after the greeting (“hi” in this case). Because you’re specifying a period of time (with “for almost 2 years”), you wouldn’t use “I am…” here. Since you’re also still a mom, you would use “I have been”.

Hi I am, I have been a mom for almost 2two years, and my todldler is very energetic. Hi, I have been a mom for almost two years, and my toddler is very energetic.

Hi I am I have been a mom for almost 2 years and my todldler is very energetic. Hi I have been a mom for almost 2 years and my toddler is very energetic.

The most of the time I feel that I lose my patience.


The mosA lot of the time, I feel that I lose my patience. A lot of the time, I feel that I lose my patience.

You don’t need “the” before “most”. You could also say “the majority of the time…” and I feel like both of those options would be grammatically correct, but personally I feel that “a lot of the time” feels more natural.

The mMost of the time, I feel that I lose my patience. Most of the time, I feel that I lose my patience.

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

I am tryind to learn how to be a more understandable parent


I am tryindg to learn how to be a more understandableing parent. I am trying to learn how to be a more understanding parent.

“Understandable” would imply that you, as the parent, want to be understood by others. “Understanding” implies that you, as the parent, want to understand the child.

I am tryindg to learn how to be a more patient and understandableing parent. I am trying to learn how to be a more patient and understanding parent.

I am tryindg to learn how to be a more understandableing parent I am trying to learn how to be a more understanding parent

Understanding: someone who understands others Understandable: someone who is easily understood by others

You need LangCorrect Premium to access this feature.

Go Premium