greed or excess in eating, food or drink
A. eminent
B. fabricate
C. gluttony
D. irate
E. pilfer

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Adverbial Concession ClausesGrammar-Present Continuous-Sentence MakingGrammar for IELTSExpressing Obligation and ModalsSentence TypesVocab CheckingAdverbs of Time and PlaceFuture Perfect TenseShould and Shouldn'tModals of ProbabilityOther quiz:
Grammar › ViewWhich category is the following sentence: “We’re learning how to play lacrosse in PE.”
A. temporary event which is not finished
B. routine
C. general fact
D. future event
Tenses › View
Differentiate between present progressive and present perfect progressive tense with examples.
A. Present progressive tense describes an action currently happening (e.g., ‘I am eating’), while present perfect progressive tense describes an action that started in the past and is still ongoing (e.g., ‘I have been eating’).
B. Present progressive tense describes an action that happened in the past (e.g., ‘I was eating’)
C. Present progressive tense describes an action that will happen in the future (e.g., ‘I will be eating’)
D. Present perfect progressive tense describes an action that happened in the past and is now completed (e.g., ‘I had been eating’)
Present Tense › ViewWe____ in the museum.
A. are
B. is
C. do
D. am
Grammar › View
We have a good plan for tomorrow. We ___ watch a film at the cinema and eat pizza at the cafe nearby.
A. are going to
B. is going to
C. going to
