Give the correct third-person singular form of the verb: "She (to go) to school every day."
"She goes to school every day."
Which time expression is most commonly used with Present Simple: "now" or "every day"? Explain briefly.
"every day" (Present Simple often describes habitual actions).
Form a yes/no question in Present Simple: "You speak English."
"Do you speak English?"
Make the sentence negative: "I play the guitar."
"I do not (don't) play the guitar."
Provide a short answer (Yes/No) to: "Do you like chocolate?"
"Yes, I do." or "No, I don't." (depending on student's answer)
Choose the correct sentence: "They (play / plays) soccer on weekends." Explain why.
"They play soccer on weekends." (Because plural subject "they" uses base verb.)
Fill in the blank with a suitable time expression: "She brushes her teeth ____." (choose from: usually, tonight, right now)
"usually" (Present Simple for routines).
Change to a Wh-question: "They go to the library." (ask Where)
"Where do they go?"
Make the sentence negative in third person singular: "She knows the answer."
"She does not (doesn't) know the answer."
Provide a short negative short answer for third-person singular: "Does she speak French?"
"No, she doesn't." or "Yes, she does."
Rewrite the sentence in Present Simple using the subject in parentheses: "_____ (my brother) watch TV after dinner."
"My brother watches TV after dinner."
Decide whether Present Simple is correct: "The train leaves at 9:00 AM tomorrow." Why?
Yes; Present Simple is used for scheduled events (timetables). Example: "The train leaves at 9:00 AM tomorrow."
Form a question with "How often": "She eats breakfast."
"How often does she eat breakfast?"
Correct this negative sentence: "He doesn't goes to school."
Correct: "He doesn't go to school."
Give a short answer pair (affirmative and negative) to: "Do they study math?"
Affirmative: "Yes, they do." Negative: "No, they don't."
Identify and correct the error: "He don't like broccoli."
Correct: "He doesn't like broccoli." (Use "doesn't" + base verb.)
Write a sentence in Present Simple using "always" and a verb of your choice.
Example: "She always studies before a test."
Make a Present Simple question for third-person singular: "Tom / like / pizza?"
"Does Tom like pizza?"
Explain why we use "do not" / "does not" in Present Simple negatives and give one example each.
Explanation: Use auxiliary "do/does" + "not" + base verb because Present Simple negative requires an auxiliary; examples: "I do not eat meat." "He does not eat meat."
Use a short answer with "does" and include the contracted negative: "Does he play the piano?"
Affirmative: "Yes, he does." Negative contracted: "No, he doesn't."
Provide the Present Simple form for a habitual action and explain subject-verb agreement for: "I / to have / three classes on Monday."
"I have three classes on Monday." Explanation: Use base verb with "I"; no -s form.
Explain when to use Present Simple for schedules and give two examples.
Use for timetables/schedules (e.g., "The store opens at 9 AM." "The concert starts at 7 PM.")
Convert to a negative question in Present Simple: "He works on Saturday." (ask: Doesn't he...?)
"Doesn't he work on Saturday?" (or "Does he not work on Saturday?")
Turn this statement into a negative about habits: "They watch TV every night." Use an adverb of frequency meaning "rarely."
"They rarely watch TV." or negative: "They don't watch TV often."
Explain how short answers differ for first/second person vs. third person, then give one example for each.
Explanation: Short answers repeat the auxiliary. For first/second person: "Do I need a pen?" — "Yes, you do." For third person: "Does she need a pen?" — "Yes, she does."