Charlie said, “Tom had an accident last week but he wasn’t injured.”
A. Charlie said that Tom had had an accident the previous week but he wasn’t injured.
B. Charlie said that Tom had an accident last week but he wasn’t injured.
C. Charlie said that Tom had an accident last week but he hadn’t been injured.
D. Charlie said that Tom had had an accident the previous week but he hadn’t been injured

Random Topics:
VocabularyArticle & PrepositionPast Tense vs Present Perfect TenseSpeculation with Modal VerbsArticleSimple Tenses in EnglishAdjective and AdverbModal, Causative Verb & Elliptical StructurePresent Simple QuestionsSimple Future TenseOther quiz:
Future Tenses › ViewWhen is Mary picking us up to take us to the airport?
A. 10 a.m.
B. 12 p.m.
C. 2 p.m.
D. 4 p.m.
Modals › View
Which sentence uses a modal verb to express a strong prediction?
A. It might snow tomorrow.
B. It could snow tomorrow.
C. It will snow tomorrow.
D. It should snow tomorrow.
Grammar › ViewThe sad, lonely bus riders sat in silence as they traveled through the city.
A. Correct
B. Incorrect
Grammar › View
I don’t like stories ____ have unhappy ending
A. Which
B. What
C. They
D. When
