She didn’t go to work for a week.
A. She has been unemployed for a week.
B. She was absent from work for a week.
C. She went to work a week ago.
D. She hasn’t been back to work yet.

Random Topics:
Adverbs, Prefixes, and SuffixesArticle the or zero article (-)Modal Auxiliaries and Similar ExpressionsPresent TenseIndefinite and Intensive NounPersonal pronouns + possessive adjectives + Introgative pronounsTenses and Verb FormsThere is, There are, Some, AnyGrammar RulesAdverbs and Adverbial PhrasesOther quiz:
Grammar › ViewI ________ it’s a a good idea to go there now.
A. think
B. am thinking
C. will think
D. thought
Noun Clauses with THAT › View
Differentiate the clauses: The fact THAT it rained surprised everyone.
A. The fact THAT it rained is a noun clause; surprised everyone is the main clause.
B. The fact THAT it rained is an adverbial clause; surprised everyone is a noun clause.
C. The fact THAT it rained is the main clause; surprised everyone is a noun clause.
D. The fact THAT it rained is a prepositional phrase; surprised everyone is a verb phrase.
Vocabulary › ViewThe correct meaning for complex is…
A. easy
B. strong
C. difficult
D. flash
Conjunction › View
I can read German, ________ I can’t speak it.
A. also
B. so
C. like
D. but
