His brother-in-law _______ a factory 5 kilometres from town.
A. is having
B. having
C. have
D. has

Random Topics:
Grammar : Must (Necessity)Unless If First ConditionalCoordinate ConjunctionComplex SentencesDirect-Indirect SpeechGrammar - Be going toGrammar Present Perfect (ever never)Adverbs by TypeTenseQuantifiers & Modals of ObligationOther quiz:
Tenses › ViewWe ___ to this restaurant before; the food is amazing!
A. went
B. have gone
C. will go
D. are going
Modal Requests › View
Hey there! Can you help me with something fun? What’s the difference between ‘can’ and ‘could’ when making requests?
A. ‘Can’ is used for general requests, while ‘could’ is used for specific requests.
B. The difference is in the tense used, ‘can’ is present tense while ‘could’ is past tense.
C. ‘Can’ is used for requests to strangers, while ‘could’ is used for requests to friends.
D. The main difference is the level of formality. ‘Can’ is more informal and direct, while ‘could’ is more polite and formal.
Noun Phrases and Adverbials › ViewCreate an expanded noun phrase for “mountain”.
A. Mountain
B. The tall, snow-capped mountain
C. Snow-capped
D. The mountain
Conjunctions › View
Identify the conjunction in this sentence: She studied hard, so she passed the test.
A. or
B. and
C. but
D. so
