Roots & Word Parts
Verb Tenses
Word Forms & Parts of Speech
Context Clues
Clauses and Sentence types
Sentence
basics
100

This ancient civilization gave English many of its prefixes and roots.

Greeks or Latin

100

This shows when an action happened (past, present, future).

Verb Tense
100

Person, place, or thing.

Noun

100

Hints in a sentence that help you understand an unknown word.

Context Clues

100

A clause that can stand alone as a complete sentence.

Independent clause

100

A new sentence always begins with this.

Capital Letter
200

The part added to the beginning of a word to change its meaning.

Prefix

200

Yesterday, the dog run to the park. (fix the verb tense)

Ran
200

Quickly, slowly, and happily are this part of speech.

Adverbs

200

After running all day, the athlete was exhausted. “Exhausted” most likely means this.

tired

200

A clause that depends on another clause.

Dependent clause

200

True or False: “my dog chased the cat.” is correctly capitalized.

false

300

This is the main part of word that carries its core meaning.

Root

300

By the time the movie ended, we finish our snacks. (Fix the verb tense)

had finished
300

The scientist made an important discovered in the lab.

discovery

300

The desert was barren, with no plants or water. “Barren” most likely means this.

empty or lifeless

300

Identify the sentence type: “She studied hard, and she passed her test.

Compound Sentence

300

A sentence generally follows this word order.

Subject + Verb + Object

400
Changing this part at the end of a word changes its meaning

Suffix

400

Right now, she clean her room

is cleaning

400

The teacher asked for a describing paragraph about the story.

descriptive

400

The boy was timid and spoke softly in class. “Timid” most likely means this.

shy 

400

Identify the sentence type: “Although it rained, the game continued, and fans stayed.”

Compound Complex Sentence

400

This part of a sentence does the action.

Subject

500

The root "Aqua" means what?

Water

500

Every morning, the students read their library books quietly. (fix the verb tense)

read or are reading

500

Reading every day can improve your read skills.

reading

500

The detective thought the suspect’s story was “dubious.” Dubious most likely means this.

doubtful or suspicious

500

Identify the sentence type: “The cat slept on the couch.”

Simple Sentence

500

This part of a sentence receives the action.

Object