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Select correct articles.
You will need _________________________ double _________________________ money to buy this.

The money in the sentence is some particular amount of money. With fractions article is used after the fraction word like double.

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Article

If you speak a language without articles — Russian, Japanese, Polish, Korean, Mandarin — articles in English are probably the single most stubborn topic you face. The rules feel small but the wrong choice (I went to the home instead of I went home) immediately marks you as non-native. Mastering articles is the highest-leverage move you can make for sounding natural.

Articles are a small group of determinativesa, an, the, plus the zero article (no article at all) — that signal whether a noun is specific or general. The choice depends on the listener's knowledge, the noun type, and idiomatic context.

Noun

If you've ever frozen mid-sentence wondering whether to say an information or some information, child or children, they or them — you've hit the core of how English uses nouns. Nail this down and articles, plurals, possessives, and pronoun choice all stop feeling like guesswork.

A noun is a word that names something: a person, place, thing, idea, action, or quality. Nouns are the building blocks every other part of speech bolts onto. Spot one in a sentence and you can usually predict the article, the verb form, and the pronouns that follow.

Phrase

If you've ever read a long sentence in English and felt lost in the middle, you've hit a sentence with too many phrases stacked together. Learning to spot phrases — on the table, the man with the hat, very quickly — turns dense prose into something you can parse: each phrase is one chunk of meaning, not a string of unrelated words.

A phrase is a group of words functioning as a single unit in a sentence, without a subject + verb pair (which would make it a clause). Types include noun phrase (the red car), verb phrase (has been running), prepositional phrase (on the table), and adjective/adverb phrases.

Determiner

If you speak a language without articles or demonstratives — Mandarin, Russian, Polish, Japanese, Korean — determiners are likely the most stubborn topic in your English. The rules feel small but the wrong choice (I went to home instead of I went home) immediately marks you as non-native. Mastering determiners is the highest-leverage move you can make for sounding natural.

A determiner comes before a noun to clarify which one, how many, or whose. Categories include articles (a/the), demonstratives (this/that), possessives (my/your), and quantifiers (some/many).

A2 | Elementary | Pre-intermediate

If you can order coffee, ask for directions, and tell someone what you did yesterday — but struggle the moment the conversation drifts into anything abstract — you're operating at A2. Knowing this matters: A2 is the level where most learners plateau because they reach for B2 material too early and burn out. Stay here and your foundations get unbreakable.

A2 is the elementary level in the CEFR framework, covering routine communication and the first wave of real grammar: past simple and continuous, present perfect, basic modal verbs, first conditional, and common verb-pattern rules.

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.