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English Grammar

Improve your English grammar with fun and interactive grammar quizzes. Practice tenses, articles, prepositions, phrasal verbs, passive voice, conditionals, and more. These quizzes are designed for students, teachers, and English learners who want to test and strengthen their grammar knowledge while learning in an enjoyable way. Posts are sorted by newest first.

Why I Stopped Treating If And Whether Like Easy Interchangeable Words

Why I Stopped Treating If And Whether Like Easy Interchangeable Words

If the meaning is close enough to confuse you, but the sentence structure still wants one choice more than the other, this if vs whether guide helps learners who want more precise grammar decisions build better if-versus-whether choices. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

What To Do After You Realize Sentence Boundaries Are Where Your Writing Falls Apart

What To Do After You Realize Sentence Boundaries Are Where Your Writing Falls Apart

If you know the ideas belong together, but commas, periods, and conjunctions keep getting mixed, this sentence boundaries guide helps writers who want more stable grammar build better sentence-boundary control. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

This Is How You Create Better Habits For There Is And There Are

This Is How You Create Better Habits For There Is And There Are

If you start the sentence with there and then lose track of the real noun controlling the verb, this there is and there are guide helps learners who want cleaner basic sentence control build better there-is-and-there-are accuracy. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

This Is How You Build Better Accuracy With Reported Speech

This Is How You Build Better Accuracy With Reported Speech

If you understand the original quote, but the tense and pronoun changes still feel slippery when you report it, this reported speech guide helps learners who want more confident narrative grammar build better reported-speech accuracy. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

Stop Letting Pronoun Reference Turn Clear Sentences Into Fuzzy Ones

Stop Letting Pronoun Reference Turn Clear Sentences Into Fuzzy Ones

If you use the correct pronoun form, but the reader still cannot tell exactly who or what it refers to, this pronoun reference guide helps writers who want more readable sentences build better pronoun-reference clarity. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

Stop Guessing At Countable And Uncountable Nouns And Start Checking The Meaning

Stop Guessing At Countable And Uncountable Nouns And Start Checking The Meaning

If you memorize noun labels but still miss whether the sentence means units, material, or quantity in general, this countable and uncountable nouns guide helps learners who want fewer quantity mistakes build better countable-and-uncountable choices. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

Most Learners Miss This, So Much And Many Keep Getting Swapped

Most Learners Miss This, So Much And Many Keep Getting Swapped

If you remember that one goes with count and one with non-count, but the sentence pressure still makes you switch them, this much and many guide helps learners who want fewer quantity-word mistakes build cleaner much-and-many grammar. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

Do You Want To Use Gerunds And Infinitives Without Second-Guessing Every Verb

Do You Want To Use Gerunds And Infinitives Without Second-Guessing Every Verb

If you know the base verb, but not which structure sounds natural after it, this gerunds and infinitives guide helps learners who want smoother sentence building build better gerund-and-infinitive choices. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

A Note To Anyone Who Wants Cleaner Answers On Active And Passive Voice

A Note To Anyone Who Wants Cleaner Answers On Active And Passive Voice

If you can recognize the forms, but you still hesitate over which one fits the sentence purpose, this active and passive voice guide helps writers who want more intentional grammar choices build better active-and-passive decisions. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

7 Quick Ways To Stop Missing Subject-Verb Agreement In Everyday Sentences

7 Quick Ways To Stop Missing Subject-Verb Agreement In Everyday Sentences

If you hear the sentence as a whole and miss the real subject controlling the verb, this subject-verb agreement guide helps readers who want cleaner everyday grammar build better subject-verb agreement. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

7 Quick Ways To Read Comparative And Superlative Grammar More Clearly

7 Quick Ways To Read Comparative And Superlative Grammar More Clearly

If you know the forms in isolation, but the sentence comparison itself keeps getting read too loosely, this comparatives and superlatives guide helps learners who want cleaner comparison sentences build better comparative-and-superlative grammar. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

5 Lessons For Readers Who Keep Slipping On Relative Clauses

5 Lessons For Readers Who Keep Slipping On Relative Clauses

If you know who, which, that, and where separately, but the clause still feels unstable inside the sentence, this relative clauses guide helps learners who want more flexible grammar build better relative-clause control. It uses ten sentence-based examples to show where the grammar cue appears and how to make the next choice with more confidence.

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