This tense tells what happens now or every day.
Present Tense
This tense tells what already happened yesterday or last week.
Past Tense
This word means every time: always / sometimes / never
always
These words tell how you do something (like quickly, slowly).
Adverbs of how
Say one sentence about what you do every day.
“I eat breakfast every day.” / “I go to school every day.”
Choose the correct verb: “She ___ to school.” (walk / walks / walked)
walks
Change to past tense: “I jump.”
I jumped
This word means not ever: always / sometimes / never
never
Choose the best adverb: “The turtle moves ____.” (quickly / slowly)
slowly
Use always / usually / often / sometimes / never in a sentence about yourself.
“I usually play after school.” / “I never eat candy at night.”
Fix this sentence: “He play soccer after school.”
He plays soccer after school.
Choose the correct verb: “Yesterday, we ___ to the park.” (go / went)
went
Put the adverb in the best place: “I brush my teeth ____.” (always)
“I always brush my teeth.”
Pick an adverb of how: happy / carefully / yesterday
carefully
Tell us one thing you did yesterday.
“Yesterday, I played with my friend.” / “I watched TV.”
Pick the correct sentence:
A) “They eats apples.” B) “They eat apples.”
B) “They eat apples.”
Fix this sentence: “She walk to the store yesterday.”
“She walked to the store yesterday.”
Choose the best adverb: “I eat cake on my birthday.” (always / usually / sometimes)
always
Add an adverb of how: “She read the book ____.”
Example: “quietly,” “carefully,” “smoothly,” “clearly”
Speak for 2 full sentences about your day using:
one time word (yesterday / today / every day)
one adverb (always, usually, often, slowly, carefully, etc.)
“Today, I carefully did my homework. I usually go to bed early.”
Make a present tense sentence using “do” and “homework.”
Example: “I do homework.” / “We do homework after school.”
Make a past tense sentence using “ate” or “saw.”
Example: “I ate noodles.” / “I saw a dog.”
Put these in order from most often → least often: never, sometimes, always, usually, often
always → usually → often → sometimes → never
Improve this sentence with an adverb of how: “He wrote his name.”
Example: “He wrote his name neatly.”
Task: Give a mini story with 3 sentences:
Start with “Yesterday…”
Use an adverb of how (quietly, quickly, carefully, slowly, nicely)
End with “I felt…” (happy, proud, tired, excited, nervous)
“Yesterday, I carefully built a tower. I played quietly with my friend. I felt proud.”