Mr. Hardy . . . . . . sell his car. He needs money for his son’s treatment.
A. can
B. will
C. can’t
D. will not

Random Topics:
Relative Pronouns with PrepositionsTime ClauseGrammar-Verbs & Nouns Singular, Plural, GenderRelative Clauses with who and whichPresent Simple ProgressiveVerbs + Gerund or InfinitivePresent Perfect: for/sinceFood VocabularyComparatives and Past Perfect TenseInfinitives or GerundsOther quiz:
Modal Verbs › ViewDifferentiate between ‘can’ and ‘could’ in terms of expressing possibility.
A. ‘Can’ is used for future possibilities, while ‘could’ is used for present possibilities
B. Both ‘can’ and ‘could’ are used to express possibility, but ‘can’ is used for present or future possibilities, while ‘could’ is used for past or conditional possibilities.
C. ‘Could’ is used for future possibilities, while ‘can’ is used for past possibilities
D. Both ‘can’ and ‘could’ are used for past possibilities only
Grammar › View
It’s fourteen years since I last saw my uncle.
A. I saw my uncle when I was fourteen years old.
B. I haven’t seen my uncle for fourteen years.
C. I see my uncle once every fourteen years.
D. I didn’t see my uncle fourteen years ago.
Prepositions › ViewWe have a test ____ this afternoon.
A. in
B. on
C. at
D. x
Phrase vs Clause › View
Identify if this is a phrase or a clause.
The candy shop near the school
A. phrase
B. clause
