—– do you mean ?
A. who
B. what
C. which

Random Topics:
Prepositions and Preposition PhrasesGrammar & VocabularyHave as verb and auxiliaryPast Perfect and Past Perfect Continuous TenseVocabulary and Verb TensesModal Verbs of Certainty and PossibilityGrammar: was/wereArticles and DeterminersAll, Both, Neither, None, EitherOrder of AdjectivesOther quiz:
Grammar › ViewMy sister __________ to the same song the whole day. I’m so sick of it…
A. has been listening
B. have been listening
C. has listened
D. have listen
Subject Verb Agreement › View
Choose the sentence with the correct subject-verb agreement:
A. Neither the chair nor the sofa was comfortable.
B. Neither the chair nor the sofa were comfortable.
C. Neither the chair nor the sofa is comfortable.
D. Neither the chair nor the sofa be comfortable.
Exclamation › View________ beautifully you sing!
A. How
B. What
Modal and Auxiliary Verbs › View
Differentiate between a modal and auxiliary verb.
A. Modal verbs are always followed by a main verb, while auxiliary verbs can stand alone.
B. Modal verbs are used for forming questions, while auxiliary verbs are used for making statements.
C. Modal verbs express necessity, possibility, or permission, while auxiliary verbs are used to form tenses and voice.
D. Modal verbs express past actions, while auxiliary verbs express future actions.
