The minister _____ is responsible for education has just resigned.
A. Which
B. Who
C. What

Random Topics:
Present Simple/AffirmativeAnalogyGrammar and VocabularyClauses and GerundsPast Perfect & Past SimpleModal Verbs and ConditionalsCompound and Complex SentencesNoun Clauses with THATGrammar - Punctuation of SentencesPossessive AdjectivesOther quiz:
Tenses › ViewDifferentiate between past and present tense in the sentence: She will visit her grandmother last week.
A. She visits her grandmother last week.
B. She visited her grandmother last week.
C. She will visit her grandmother next week.
D. She will be visiting her grandmother last week.
Modal Requests › View
Hey there! How does the use of ‘can’ differ from ‘could’ when making requests?
A. ‘Can’ is more fun and friendly than ‘could’.
B. ‘Could’ is used for general requests, while ‘can’ is for specific requests.
C. ‘Can’ is more direct and casual, while ‘could’ is more polite and formal.
D. ‘Could’ is used for urgent requests, while ‘can’ is for casual requests.
Grammar › ViewIdentify the participle(s).
My mom cringes each time she hears the crashing cymbals and pounding drums coming from my bedroom.
A. crashing
B. pounding
C. crashing, pounding
Grammar › View
Is the group of words a sentence or a fragment?
James.
A. sentence
B. fragment
