He broke his leg, so he couldn’t play football yesterday.
A. If he doesn’t break his leg, he will play football tomorrow.
B. If he didn’t break his leg, he would play football yesterday.
C. If he hadn’t broken his leg, he could have played football yesterday.
D. If he breaks his leg, he can’t play football.

Random Topics:
Grammar: Parts and PunctuationAsking & Giving OpinionPast and Future TensesModals of PredictionPossessive Adjectives & Possessive PronounsPast Simple & Past PerfectFamily VocabularyPresent Perfect Simple vs ContinuousNouns and VocabularyModals and TensesOther quiz:
Reported Speech › ViewOur teacher asked us, ‘What are you most worried about?’
A. Our teacher asked us what we were most worried about.
B. Our teacher asked us what we are most worried about.
C. Our teacher asked us what we was most worried about.
Tenses - Auxiliaries › View
Where ______ you go next summer? I’m still thinking.
A. are
B. will
C. have
D. do
Grammar › ViewHow should the following sentence be changed?
The baby cried loud because he was hungry.
_
A. change loud to more loud
B. change loud to loudly
C. change loud to loudest
D. no change is needed
Vocabulary › View
What is the meaning of the Latin prefix “sed” or “se”?
A. together
B. apart from
C. without
D. to speak
