Which sentence correctly uses the present continuous?
A. She walks to school now.
B. She is walking to school now.
C. She walked to school now.
D. She will walk to school now.
E. She was walking to school now.
Select your answer:

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Nouns and Their FormsSentence Types and Conjunctionsa, an, the, zero articleModals and VocabularyModals and Past ModalsArticle the or zero article (-)Indefinite and Definite ArticlesComparative AdverbsPrepositions of Movement-ing form and the to-infinitiveOther quiz:
Future Tenses and Modals › ViewSelect the correct sentence: “You ______ (not have) to wear a uniform at this school.”
A. mustn’t
B. don’t have
C. shouldn’t
D. can’t
Vocabulary › View
London studied for the quiz, and he passed it with flying colors.
This sentence illustrates the following comma rule:
A. Commas are used to set off a speaker’s exact words from the rest of the sentence
B. A comma is used before a coordinating conjunction in a compound sentence
C. A comma is used to set off an appositive from the rest of the sentence
D. A comma is used to separate items in a series
