VOCABULARY🫂
UK💂‍♂️ vs US🗽 English
Conditionals + Time clauses📝
Verbs and Prepositions🤔
Review Mix⭐⭐
100

If you have a good relationship with someone it means that you..

a) get along very good

b) get over very good

c)grow apart very good

a) get along very good

100

In the US, you might snack on a chocolate chip cookie, but in London, you’d dunk one of these in your tea.

biscuit

100

If you ____ (heat) water to 100 degrees, it ____ (boil)

heat, boils

100

Choose the verb+preposition that fits the most:

You and your friends decide to watch the same movie on Friday night. You all choose the same one.

agree on

100

Complete the sentence with the most suitable verb tense:

Sorry I'm late! ___ you ____ (wait) for a long time?

Have you been waiting for a long time?

200

At the beginning they had many things in common. After years, they were very different and didn’t connect anymore. They ______

grew apart

200

Americans call the season after summer "fall," but the British use this term.

autumn
200

In the second conditional, we use the present simple/future simple/past simple in the condition clause, and the future simple/would/would+participle in the result clause

Past simple / would

200

Your teacher suggests doing an extra writing exercise, and you accept the idea.

agree to

200

Complete the sentences with the correct form of the word:

It was ____ (care) of you to drop your phone into the pool. You should be more ___ (care)

careless // careful

300

A person in your family, like a cousin, aunt, or grandfather is a ...

Relative

300

If you are moving to London, you won’t be looking for an apartment; you'll be looking for a ...

flat

300

Which conditional (0,1,2,3) talks about something that is likely to happen in the future?


First conditional (Present Simple + Future Simple)

300

Your laptop stopped working because your brother spilled water on it, and you say it’s his fault.

blame (him) for (it)

300

Use the best verbal tense to complete the sentence:

___ you ____(repair) my drone by the weekend?

Will you have repaired my drone by the weekend?

400

What is the difference between the word "fiancé" and "engaged"?

A) “Fiancé” is the man a woman is going to marry; “engaged” describes two people who have promised to marry each other.
B) “Fiancé” describes two people who are promised to marry; “engaged” is the man a woman is going to marry.
C) “Fiancé” can sometimes refer to either partner in a couple, while “engaged” is an adjective describing the relationship status, not a person.

 A) “Fiancé” is the man a woman is going to marry; “engaged” describes two people who have promised to marry each other.

400

In New York, you walk on the sidewalk to avoid traffic; in the UK, you’d be walking on ..... instead.

pavement

400

Rewrite this sentence using a time clause:

Pat's fiancé will finish his exams and then tey'll get married. (as soon as)

As soon as Pat's fiancé finishes his exams, they'll get married // They'll get married as soon as Pat's fiancé finishes his exams.

400

A friend tells you some news about a new café opening in town. You just learned it.

hear about

400

What's the meaning of compulsory?

required by law or a rule; obligatory.

500

“They used to ______ very well, but they slowly ______. After the breakup, she needed time to ______ him because she had always ______ his love.”

get along / grow apart / get over / taken for granted

500

In the US, you stand in a line to buy a diaper for a baby; in the UK, you’d be in one of these to buy a nappy.

queue

500

Rewrite this sentence using a conditional sentence:

I will tell you my secret because I trust you (wouldn't)

I wouldn't tell you my secret if I didn't trust you // If I didn't trust you, I wouldn't tell you my secret. 

500

Someone mentions a famous author’s name, and you realize you know they exist but not much else.

hear of

500

What's the meaning of slums?

a squalid and overcrowded urban street or district inhabited by very poor people.

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