Grammar
Vocabulary
Idioms/Phrasal verbs
Everyday English
Fun facts about English
100

This tense is used for actions that were completed before another past action.

 past perfect tense

100

A word that means “able to speak two languages fluently.”

Bilingual

100

The meaning of “break the ice.”

“to start a conversation and make people comfortable”

100

The English word for “здравствуйте.”

Hello

100

 The most common letter in English.

E

200

The difference between “who” and “whom.”

Who” is used as a subject, while “whom” is used as an object.

200

The difference between “affect” and “effect.”

“Affect” is a verb meaning to influence, while “effect” is a noun meaning the result of an action.

200

 The meaning of “give up.”

 “to stop doing something”

200

A polite way to ask for something.

Please

200

The shortest complete sentence in English.

I am

300

The name of the verb form that ends in “-ing” and functions as a noun.

Gerund

300

A word that means the same as “happy.”

"joyful” or “cheerful”

300

 The meaning of “run out of” in “We ran out of sugar.”

“to have no more of something”

300

 The English phrase for “Как дела?”

How are you?

300

This is the most commonly used word in the English language.

The

400

The difference between “will” and “going to” for future actions.

“Will” is used for spontaneous decisions, promises, or predictions, while “going to” is used for planned actions and strong intentions.

400

 The opposite of “big.”

 “small”

400

The meaning of “hit the books.”

“to study hard”

400

A phrase used when you don’t understand something and need it repeated.

“Could you repeat that, please?”

400

The longest English word without a vowel (A, E, I, O, U).

 “rhythm”

500

The three degrees of comparison for the adjective “good.”

 “good, better, best”

500

A place where you borrow books.

Library

500

The meaning of “call it a day.”

“to stop working or doing an activity for the day”

500

The difference between “Can I help you?” and “May I help you?”

“Can I help you?” is more casual, while “May I help you?” is more polite and formal.

500

This is the only English word with three consecutive double letters.

Bookkeeper

M
e
n
u