Perfect Tenses
Progressive Tenses
Punctuation
Spelling
Conditionals
100

This perfect tense is used to describe an action that happened at an unspecified time in the past.

What is the present perfect?

100

This progressive tense is used to describe an action happening right now.

What is the present progressive?

100

This punctuation mark ends most simple sentences.

What is a period?

100

Add the correct ending:
“walk → past tense”

What is “walked”?


100

This conditional describes real, possible future events and uses “will.”

What is the first conditional?


200

The present perfect uses this auxiliary verb in all its forms.

Have

200

Fill in the past progressive:
“They ___ (walk) to work when it began to rain.”

What is “were walking”?

200

This punctuation is needed for questions.

What is a question mark?


200

When a verb ends in -y after a consonant, you change the y to this before adding -es.

What is “i”?

200

Complete the zero conditional:
“If water reaches 100°C, it ___.”

What is “boils”?

300

Complete the sentence in present perfect:
“Maria ___ already ___ (to do) her homework.”

What is “has…done”?

300

This tense is formed with will be + verb-ing.

What is the future progressive?

300

This punctuation mark separates the if clause and result clause when the if clause is first in a sentence. 

What is a comma?


300

How do you spell the plural version of "box"?

What is “boxes”?

300

This conditional uses the structure “If + past simple, would + base verb.”

What is the second conditional?


400

This tense is formed using will have + been + gerund.

What is the present perfect progressive?


400

In the sentence “She has been studying for three hours,” this tense is being used.

What is the present perfect progressive?


400

Add/fix any missing punctuation or punctuation errors: What happens to water if you heat it to 100 degrees celsius

What happens to water if you heat it to 100 degrees celsius?
400

Spell the past tense of “stop”.

What is “stopped”

400

Identify the conditional:
“If you had studied, you would have passed.”

What is the third conditional?

500

Identify the error in this sentence:
“By the time you arrive, I will have ate already.”

What is using “ate” instead of “eaten” (the past participle)?

500

Identify the error:
“He was been waiting for you outside for an hour.”

What is using “was been” instead of “has been”?

500

Correct any errors if there are any: He wouldn't have missed the train, if he had left earlier.

No comma is needed. He wouldn't have missed the train if he had left earlier. 

500

Explain why the past tense of “plan” is “planned” but the past tense of “clean” is not “cleaned” with double n.

What is because “plan” has one vowel + single consonant, so you double it; “clean” has two vowels and a diphthong, so you do not double the consonant?

500

Correct the sentence:
“If see him I will tell him.”

What is “If I see him, I will tell him”?

Commas are required after the if clause of a sentence.

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