About Grammist

Real people check every answer before it goes up.

Grammist started because most grammar sites bury a simple answer under a long history lesson. We wanted something you could check in the time it takes to send a text, written by people who actually know the rule, not just the search volume around it.

Below is the team behind the site and the standard every entry has to meet before we publish it.

Who writes this

Four editors, each responsible for the sections closest to their own background.

Maya Reyes, Founding Editor at Grammist

Maya Reyes

Founding Editor

Maya spent six years as a copyeditor at a regional newspaper before starting Grammist, which is where the “answer first” format came from: newsroom style guides don’t have room for a preamble.

She writes and reviews most of the word-pair and spelling entries, and has final say on anything that goes out under the Grammist name.

Word pairs and spelling
Daniel Cho, Linguistics Editor at Grammist

Daniel Cho

Linguistics Editor

Daniel holds a master’s degree in linguistics and taught university writing courses for four years before joining Grammist full time.

He handles the entries that need more than a style guide, cases where a rule has genuine exceptions, and he’s the one who tracks down where a word or idiom actually came from.

Idioms, phrases, word origins
Priya Anand, ESL and Learning Editor at Grammist

Priya Anand

ESL and Learning Editor

Priya is a certified TEFL instructor who taught English abroad for five years before moving into writing full time.

She writes with non-native speakers in mind first, which shapes how the site explains idioms, slang, and expressions that don’t translate literally.

Similes, metaphors, slang meanings
Owen Bennett, Style and Usage Editor at Grammist

Owen Bennett

Style and Usage Editor

Owen worked in corporate communications for eight years, writing and editing the emails, memos, and reports that actually get read by a manager under deadline.

He runs the professional phrasing section, focused on saying something firmly or politely without it reading like a template.

Professional phrasing and synonyms

How we check what we publish

The same four steps apply whether the entry took ten minutes to write or three days.

01

Every answer is checked against a source, not memory

A dictionary, a recognized style guide (AP, Chicago, or Oxford, depending on the entry), or in disputed cases, more than one source compared side by side.

02

A second editor reads it before it goes live

Whoever didn’t write the entry reads it for accuracy first and clarity second. If they can’t tell what the answer is within the first sentence, it gets rewritten.

03

Corrections are made the same day

If a reader points out an error, we fix it and note the change. We’d rather be corrected in public than leave something wrong online because it’s embarrassing.

04

Nothing is published unread by a person

We use tools to speed up research the same way any newsroom does, but a named editor above reads and approves every entry before it goes on the site.

Found something we got wrong?

Tell us and we’ll fix it. That’s not a formality, it’s the whole point of listing our names above.

Send a correction