I can’t talk right now — I ______ dinner for my family.
A. cook
B. am cooking
C. cooked
D. will cook

Random Topics:
Verbs with Prepositions and ConjunctionsAdverbsAdjectives-Comparison, SuperlativeNoun PhrasesHabitual and Continuous TensesTenses and Sentence CompletionModal Verbs and PermissionPresent Simple and Continuous TenseVocabulary & GrammarPast Tense vs Present Perfect TenseOther quiz:
Modal Verbs › ViewAnn is in the hospital. “Yes, I know. _________ her tomorrow.
A. I visit
B. I’m going to visit
C. I’ll visit
Past Simple › View
Rob ___ movie last night.
A. watches
B. watch
C. watched
Grammar › ViewWhat is the superlative form of the following adverb?
efficiently
A. (the) more efficiently
B. the most efficient
C. most efficiently
D. the more efficient
Adverbs and Time Expressions › View
Differentiate between ‘for’ and ‘since’ in terms of time expressions.
A. ‘For’ is used for specific dates; ‘since’ is used for general time periods.
B. ‘For’ and ‘since’ can be used interchangeably in all contexts.
C. ‘For’ indicates duration; ‘since’ indicates a starting point.
D. ‘For’ indicates a starting point; ‘since’ indicates duration.
