[ Grammar ]
I don’t have a car.
A. I wish I had a car.
B. I wish I had had a car.
C. I wish I have a car.

Random Topics:
Past ParticipleVOCAB & GRAMMARComparative AdjectiveConditionals and Modals of ProbabilityGrammar- Later/LatterPrepositional PhraseTypes of Sentence StructureSentence CompletionPrepositions of Time, Place, and MovementPresent and Past Simple PassiveOther quiz:
Grammar-Present Continuous-Sentence Making › ViewMake “Question”.
You do homework.
A. Are you doing homework?
B. You are doing homework?
C. Is you doing homework?
Future Tenses › View
What is the simple future tense used for?
A. The simple future tense is used to express actions that will occur in the future.
B. To indicate actions that are currently happening.
C. To express habitual actions in the present.
D. To describe actions that happened in the past.
