He left for Paris _______ Sunday _____2:00 p.m.
A. in / on
B. on / in
C. at / at
D. on / at

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Modals of ObligationVerb AgreementPast Perfect & Past SimpleVerb Tenses (Progressive, Perfect)Tenses and QuestionsVerb 3 formsPronouns and QuantifiersTenses, Determiners & Subject Verb AgreementPresent/Past/Past ParticpleAuxiliary ModalOther quiz:
Present Perfect Tense › ViewDifferentiate between past simple and present perfect: ‘I ate breakfast’ (past simple) or ‘I have eaten breakfast’ (present perfect)?
A. The past simple ‘I ate breakfast’ refers to a specific time in the past, while the present perfect ‘I have eaten breakfast’ refers to an action completed at an unspecified time in the past.
B. The past simple ‘I ate breakfast’ refers to an ongoing action, while the present perfect ‘I have eaten breakfast’ refers to a completed action.
C. The past simple ‘I ate breakfast’ refers to a habitual action, while the present perfect ‘I have eaten breakfast’ refers to a one-time action.
D. The past simple ‘I ate breakfast’ refers to a future event, while the present perfect ‘I have eaten breakfast’ refers to a past event.
Mixed Tenses › View
Create a sentence using mixed tenses (past, present, and future).
A. I went to the store yesterday, I am buying groceries today, and I will cook dinner tomorrow.
B. I go to the store yesterday, I am buying groceries today, and I will cook dinner tomorrow.
C. I am going to the store yesterday, I bought groceries today, and I cook dinner tomorrow.
D. I will go to the store yesterday, I am buying groceries today, and I went to cook dinner tomorrow.