Ken and Tom play football …………….. Saturday afternoons.
A. in
B. on
C. at
D. into

Random Topics:
Habitual and Continuous TensesAdverb or AdjectiveGerund & ParticipleModal and Relative PhrasesOrder of AdjectivesMuch, many, a lot of, a few, a littleConjunctions and PrepositionQuantifiers & Modals of ObligationVerbs and Subject Verb AgreementReported speech (statements)Other 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.
Conditional Sentence › ViewIf you study hard, you ______ your exams.
A. could pass
B. would pass
C. will pass
D. would have pass
Grammar › View
Select the correct form of the verb in parentheses: She (run/ran) to catch the bus.
A. Run
B. Ran
