Say a sentence: I / go / the beach / tomorrow.
I will go to the beach tomorrow.
Complete the sentence:
“You look sick. You ___ go to bed.”
should
Ask politely:
“I borrow your jacket?” (Use can, may, or could)
May / Could
Complete the sentence:
“I ___ (always) wake up at 7:00.”
I always wake up at 7:00.
Change to past simple: visit
visited
Make it negative: She will visit her parents.
She will not (won’t) visit her parents.
Choose “should” or “shouldn’t”:
“You have a fever. You ___ go outside.”
shouldn't
Make a question:
I wear a tie? (use “Should”)
Should I wear a tie?
Make the sentence negative:
“She goes to school by bus.”
She doesn’t go to school by bus.
Complete the sentence:
“Yesterday I ___ (eat) pizza.”
Yesterday I ate pizza.
Ask a question: you / study / tonight?
Will you study tonight?
Complete the sentence with have to / don’t have to:
“At the hospital you ___ wear a mask.”
have to
Choose the best modal for suggestion:
“___ I wear jeans to class?” (should / may / can)
Should I wear jeans to class?
Make a question:
you / eat breakfast every day?
Do you eat breakfast every day?
Make it negative:
“She watched a movie last night.”
She didn’t watch a movie last night.
Choose the correct option: I want ___ (to buy / buying) a new phone.
to buy
Choose the correct article:
“I need ___ appointment.” (a / an)
an
Make a question in the past tense:
he / wear a uniform / yesterday?
Did he wear a uniform yesterday?
Choose the correct option:
“Tom ___ brushes his teeth in the morning.” (never / ever)
never
Make a question:
you / go / to school yesterday?
Did you go to school yesterday?
Correct the mistake: He will to travel next month.
He will travel next month. (Remove “to”)
Correct the sentence:
“You shouldn’t to eat junk food.”
You shouldn’t eat junk food.
Should wear I a jacket?
Should I wear a jacket?
Correct the mistake:
He don’t play tennis on Mondays.
He doesn’t play tennis on Mondays.
Correct the mistake:
We did saw the doctor.
We did see the doctor. OR We saw the doctor.