"She sings really ______ in the school choir."
good/ well
(well = adverb modifying the verb "sings")
This homophone trio fits here: "Put the books over _____ ; _____ going to the mall because _____ backpacks are heavy."
1. there = place
2. they're = they are
3. their = possessive
"She dances ______ in the TikTok video and gets lots of likes." (formed from "beautiful")
beautiful → beautifully; describes how she dances
Correct this common error: "She go to school by bus every day."
"She goes to school by bus every day."? (Fixes subject-verb agreement: third-person singular "goes" instead of "go")
"My best friend always post funny memes on Instagram every day."
"My best friend always posts funny memes on Instagram every day."? (Third-person singular subject "friend" needs verb "posts" with -s)
"That was a ______ movie! I enjoyed every minute."
Good/Well
good = adjective describing the noun "movie"
Choose the right one(s): "I want _____ go _____ the party, but I have _____ many chores!"
to, to, too
to = direction/infinitive; too = excessively/also
"The student answered the question ______ because he studied all night."
Options: careful / carefully / careful-ly
careful + ly carefully; adverb modifying "answered"
Fix the article mistake: "I saw movie last night with my friends on Netflix."
"I saw a movie last night with my friends on Netflix."? (or "the movie" if specific, but "a" fits best for indefinite)
Fix the agreement error: "The team are winning the championship because they practiced hard."
"The team is winning the championship because they practiced hard."? (Collective noun "team" is singular in American English when acting as one unit, so use "is")
Choose the correct one to say when you're sick: "I don't feel ______ today."
Good/ Well
well = adjective for health/condition after linking verbs like feel
"_____ phone is awesome, but _____ always late to class."
your = possessive; you're = you are
"He plays video games ______ , staying up late to win every match." (meaning with a lot of effort; no -ly needed)
exception: hard is both an adjective and an adverb; it describes how he plays.
Rearrange for correct question word order: "Where you are going after school today?"
"Where are you going after school today?"? (Inverts auxiliary "are" and subject "you" for proper question structure)
Choose the correct verb: "Everyone in my class _____ (want) to skip the last period on Friday."
wants? (Indefinite pronoun "everyone" is singular, so verb takes -s: "wants")
"He plays basketball very ______, but he's also a ______ teammate."
well modifies "plays" = adverb;
good describes "teammate" = adjective
"The cat chased _____ tail because _____ funny!"
its = possessive; it's = it is
"The teacher spoke ______ to the class during the test so no one would cheat." (form of quiet)
quiet → quietly; position after verb for manner
Correct the tense inconsistency: "Yesterday I play video games all night and now I feel tired."
"Yesterday I played video games all night and now I feel tired."? (Changes "play" to past simple "played" to match "yesterday"; keeps present "feel" for current state)
Correct this compound subject sentence: "Neither the teacher nor the students was happy about the pop quiz."
"Neither the teacher nor the students were happy about the pop quiz."? (In "neither...nor" constructions, the verb agrees with the closest subject: "students" is plural, so "were")
"The pizza tastes ______ , and you cook ______ !"
good after taste = adjective describing pizza;
well modifies cook = adverb
"We _____ the game! The score was three _____ zero, and now we're _____ tired to celebrate."
(not all the same word)
won, to, too
"My friend sings ______ , but she drives ______ when she's late for school!"
well = adverb from good, no -ly;
fast = adverb exception, no -ly; describes how she sings and drives
Fix the preposition and article errors: "My best friend is good in math and she helps me on homework."
"My best friend is good at math and she helps me with homework."?
(Changes "in" to "at" for skills/abilities; changes "on" to "with" for helping someone; common preposition swap ESL mistake)
Fix these two tricky agreement errors in one sentence: "None of the video games is fun anymore, and my favorite band are breaking up next month."
"None of the video games are fun anymore, and my favorite band is breaking up next month."?
(“None” can be plural when referring to countable items like "games" → "are"; band as a collective noun acting as one unit → "is")