Topics: Similes and Body Idioms
The needed to pull together. Then they could out on a great play.
A. waited in line
B. worked as a team
Select your answer:

Random Topics:
Pronoun-Verb AgreementGerunds in SentencesRelative Clauses with who and whichA(n), the, no articleSecond ConditionalsNo Excuse Words / Conjunction SODegrees of AdjectivesGrammar - must & have toVerbs & Phrasal VerbsInfinitive and GerundOther quiz:
Future Tenses › ViewWhat is the difference in meaning between “I will help you” and “I am going to help you”?
A. There is no difference in meaning.
B. “I will help you” expresses a spontaneous offer, while “I am going to help you” expresses a planned intention.
C. “I will help you” expresses a planned intention, while “I am going to help you” expresses a spontaneous offer.
D. “I will help you” is more formal than “I am going to help you.”
Grammar and Vocabulary › View
Choose the word or phrase that goes with meet.
A. newspapers
B. friends
C. home
