Consider this: Sarah and Mike are discussing a sentence. Sarah says that Tom “quickly” ran to the store, while Mike believes Tom “store” ran to his destination. Who is using the adverb correctly?
A. Sarah (Quickly)
B. Mike (Store)

Random Topics:
Passive Voice, Modals of Deduction and First ConditionalUnreal ConditionalsAuxiliaries VerbSentence Structure and Pronoun AntecedentTime ExpressionsModal Verbs for SpeculationRelative Clauses and UsageSocial Media VocabularyComparativeTime PhrasesOther quiz:
Phrasal Verbs › ViewRun out of means….
A. Not having something or enough of something (we need to buy more of that…)
B. To do a lot of exercise and be worn out
C. To play a movie or a song in a play
Tenses › View
I leave home / run for the bus / and arrive to school / on time
A. I left home, ran for the bus and arrived to school on time.
B. I had left home, ran for the bus and had arrived to school on time.
Subject Verb Agreement › ViewThe flowers in the garden ______ quickly.
A. grow
B. grows
Vocabulary › View
(v) to look at something or someone for a long time without moving your eyes
A. stare
B. point
C. whistle
D. clap
