Grammar Quiz

[ Vocabulary ]

telegram

A. to say the opposite of something that someone else has said; to deny the truth

B. a message sent by telegraph and then delivered in written or printed form; sometimes referred to as a wire or cable

C. an official order given by a person with power or by a government

D. a person’s life story written by that person

Select your answer:
A  B  C  D  E 


Random Topics:

Future Tense and ConditionalsArticles and NounsAdjectives and VocabularyPassive SentenceCountable - UncountablePast Perfect SimpleVerb Tenses and Sentence StructureConjunctions in Complex SentencesGrammar Present Perfect (ever never)Speculation with Modal Verbs

Other quiz:

General Quiz › View

Which sentence is correct?

A. They go usually dancing on Fridays.

B. They usually go dancing on Fridays.

C. They dancing go usually on Fridays.


Comma › View

I would like lettuce cheese and tomatoes on my sandwich.

A. I would like lettuce cheese and tomatoes on my sandwich.
B. I would like, lettuce cheese, and tomatoes on my sandwich.
C. I would like lettuce, cheese, and tomatoes, on my sandwich.
D. I would like lettuce, cheese, and tomatoes on my sandwich.

Grammar › View

Which of the following sentences includes a prepositional phrase?

A. Moby is a robot.

B. Moby kicked the football.

C. Moby kicked the football between the goalposts.

D. Moby’s team made three points.


Adverb › View

We waited a long time for a train, but _____ one arrived.

A. finally

B. soon

C. at once

D. occasionally