Choose the correct phrase to complete the teenager's dramatic excuse for being late.

"I would have been here on time, I swear! But while I was walking through the park, I _____ by a ridiculously aggressive squirrel!"

The correct answer is had my sandwich stolen.

This is an example of the adversative causative (or experiencer passive). When you experience a negative event caused by someone (or something) else, you use the structure: Subject + have/get + Object + Past Participle.

"Got stolen my sandwich" and "was stolen my sandwich" use incorrect word order. "Had stolen my sandwich" is the past perfect active voice, which would hilariously mean the teenager stole their own sandwich!

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Verb

If grammar feels overwhelming, the fix is almost always to focus on verbs first. They carry the action, the time, the mood, and the voice — a single verb form decides whether your sentence reads as past or present, fact or hypothetical, active or passive. Get verbs solid and the rest of grammar suddenly looks much smaller.

A verb expresses action, state, or occurrence — the engine of every English sentence. Most verbs have five forms (base, -s, past tense, past participle, -ing); be has eight; modal verbs have fewer. Verbs carry tense, aspect, mood, and voice.

Passive voice

If your writing has been called "weak" or "evasive" — Mistakes were made, It was decided that... — you've hit the passive voice's main pitfall. Used deliberately, the passive is precise and useful: it foregrounds the action when the doer doesn't matter. Used by default, it makes prose feel like nobody's responsible for anything.

The passive voice is formed with be + past participle and turns the object into the subject: The chef cooked the mealThe meal was cooked (by the chef). Useful when the action matters more than the doer; overused, it makes writing feel evasive.

Participle

If you've ever written I should have went and been corrected to should have gone — you've hit the past participle's main rule. The participle isn't an exotic form; it's the workhorse that builds perfect tenses, passive voice, and dozens of common adjectives. Get the irregular ones automatic and your tenses fall into place.

A participle is a verb form acting as an adjective or adverb. The present participle is the -ing form (running, sitting); the past participle is -ed (regular: walked) or irregular (broken, gone, written). Participles build perfect tenses, progressive tenses, and the passive.

Word Order

If your first language has flexible word order — Russian, Latin, German, Japanese — English can feel rigid. You can't just rearrange words for emphasis the way you would at home; the grammar tracks position, not just inflection. Get the order wrong and the sentence either changes meaning or stops making sense.

Word order is the sequence of words in a sentence. English is an SVO language — subject, verb, object. The order of adjectives and modifiers in a noun phrase also follows fixed patterns. Get this right and your English instantly sounds more natural.

Object

If you've ever written I gave and felt the sentence was unfinished, or written She arrived the airport (it should be at the airport) — you've felt the rules around objects. Different verbs demand different object structures, and English is fussy about which preposition (if any) joins the object to the verb. Getting it right is the difference between sounding fluent and sounding translated.

In grammar, an object is the entity a verb acts on. Three types: direct object (Sam fed the dogs), indirect object (She sent him a present), prepositional object (She waited for Lucy).

C1 | Advanced

If you've ever sat through a lecture in English, written a complaint letter, or argued a point in a meeting and come out feeling actually understood — not just tolerated — you've felt what C1 looks like. The level matters because it's where most universities, certifications, and skilled-work environments draw their language line.

C1 is the advanced level in the CEFR framework, demanding fluent and flexible language: inversion for emphasis, mixed and advanced conditionals, formal subjunctive, cleft sentences, and complex nominal phrases — all used appropriately across registers.

Difficulty: Hard

If easy and medium questions are clicking but you still feel exposed in real conversation or formal writing, you've outgrown the basics. Hard material is where the gaps you didn't know you had show up: the distractor that "sounds right", the rule that interacts with another rule, the case where context changes the answer. It's where genuine fluency is built.

The Hard difficulty tag marks upper-intermediate to advanced challenges — typically B2 and above. Interacting rules, edge cases, plausible distractors, and contexts that require genuine understanding rather than surface pattern-matching.