Past Perfect Simple
The past perfect simple tense is used to talk about an action that was completed at a given point in the past before something else happened.
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The past perfect simple tense is used to talk about an action that was completed at a given point in the past before something else happened.
The past perfect continuous is used with an action or event that started in the past and continued until another action started.
The near future is used to make plans, predictions, and spontaneous decisions about the future at the time of speaking.
The future perfect simple is used with actions which, at a given point of time in the future, will be in the past or will have just finished.
Much and many are used to talk about quantities and numbers. Much indicates a large quantity, while many indicates a large number.
We use adverbs of frequency to specify how often we do things, and how often things happen. They always come before verbs but after be.
Parts of speech are word categories which perform different grammatical functions, depending on the word category they are assigned to.
Adjectives are words that modify nouns or pronouns. That is, they give us specific information about these nouns.
This is a passive voice exercise. Your job is to fill in the blanks with the correct answer from the list. The first one is done for you.
Conjunctions, prepositions, and interjections are parts of speech whose role is to connect the elements of a sentence.
There, their, and they’re are some of the words that are always confused in English despite being spelt differently.
Quantifiers are determiners that denote imprecision of quantity or number. We use them to give information about something.