Turn the following sentence into a question: "He reads books at night."
Does he read books at night?
Complete the question: "_______ (you / to see) that movie last week?"
Did you see that movie last week?"
Complete the sentence:
We _______ (not / to see) that movie yet.
haven’t seen
Which sentence is in the correct past form using an irregular verb?
a) She goed to the store.
b) She went to the store.
c) She goes to the store.
B) She went to the store
Choose the correct form of the verb: "John ____ (to play) football every weekend."
Plays
Change the sentence to a negative: "They finished their homework."
They didn’t finish their homework.
The sentence "I have been to Japan last year" is correct.
False, because "last year" specifies a time, which is incorrect for present perfect. Use "I went to Japan last year."
What’s the correct past form of the verb "to fly" in this sentence: "The bird _______ away."?
Flew
She _______ (not/know) how to drive yet.
Does not / doesn't know.
Which sentence is in the correct negative form?
a) He not watched the movie last night.
b) He didn’t watch the movie last night.
c) He no watch the movie last night.
b) He didn’t watch the movie last night.
Transform this sentence into a question: "They have learned Spanish."
Have they learned Spanish?
Underline the irregular verbs in this sentence:
"He has written the report, but he forgot to send it."
Written, forgot
When do we use the simple present tense? Name two situations.
For habitual actions and facts.
Change the following sentence into all three forms (affirmative, negative, interrogative): "He cook dinner last night."
Change the sentence to a question: "They have visited France."
Have they visited France?
Irregular verbs follow regular patterns like adding -ed to form the past tense.
False
Why do we say "He watches TV" but "They watch TV"?
For third-person singular subjects, we add -es to verbs ending in -ch, -sh, -s, -x, or -o.
Why is this sentence incorrect? "I didn't saw the movie."
"Saw" should be in the base form "see" because "did" is used to show the past.
Explain the difference between these two sentences:
The first sentence indicates that you are still living in New York, while the second indicates that the action is completed in the past.
Identify the irregular verb in this sentence and provide its base form:
"She drove to the beach last weekend."
Drove, base form: drive