[ Grammar ]
He bought the house a few years ago. He still owns it.
A. He has bought the house for a few years.
B. He has had the house for a few years.
C. He is living in the house in a few years.
D. He lived in the house a year ago.

Random Topics:
Simple Past - Irregular VerbsSimple Present Tense with Adverb of FrequencyNoun PhrasesPast Perfect or Past Perfect ContinuousGrammar - help/have/let/makeParticipal PhrasesPast and Future TensesComparatives, Superlatives, and ModalsIndefinite and Intensive NounSentence Structure and Pronoun AntecedentOther quiz:
Grammar › View(You/go) to the party tomorrow, or do you have other plans?
A. You go
B. Will you go
C. You went
D. You will go
Phrasal Verb › View
Ignore her, she is just trying to _________________ her dancing skills.
A. show off
B. put off
C. cut off
D. call off
Grammar › ViewI’m not buying that. It’s ______ expensive
A. too
B. enough
C. too very
D. too much
Transitions › View
To show contradiction (opposite), use a transition like:
A. first, next, before, now, finally
B. as a result, because, since, so
C. since, while, like
D. however, but, although, conversely