Sunday is the day ………. which my family usually stay at home
A. during
B. at
C. in
D. on

Random Topics:
Grammar (either..or.. and neither..nor..)Paired ConjunctionSimple and Compound SentencesWho am I?Grammar - Nouns, Verbs, and AdjectivesModals, Phrasal Verbs, Gerunds and InfinitivesConjunctive AdverbPast ParticipleSimple Present and Present ContinuousVerb Moods and Vague PronounsOther quiz:
Tenses › View. Differentiate: What is the difference between ‘has eaten’ and ‘had eaten’?
A. ‘Has eaten’ indicates a future action while ‘had eaten’ indicates a present action.
B. ‘Has eaten’ refers to a recent action with present relevance, while ‘had eaten’ refers to a completed action before another past event.
C. ‘Has eaten’ is used for actions that will happen, and ‘had eaten’ is for ongoing actions.
D. ‘Has eaten’ refers to a past action with no relevance, while ‘had eaten’ indicates a future action.
Tenses › View
We are students.
A. Simple Present Tense
B. Simple Past Tense
C. Present Perfect Tense
D. Future Tense of Be Going To
Modal Verbs › ViewYou ____ not park here or you will be fined.
A. must
B. can
C. should
D. might
Modal Verb › View
There are plenty of eggs in the fridge. You …………… buy any.
A. mustn’t
B. needn’t
C. may not
D. should not
