30%

Help Detective Clueless complete his rather disappointing crime scene report by dragging the correct words into the blanks.

The safe was completely empty, so I found nothing inside it.

The suspect ran away very fast, and now he is nowhere to be seen.

I knocked loudly on all the doors in the hallway, but sadly nobody answered.

The safe was completely empty, so I found nothing inside it.

Use nothing when you are talking about zero objects or things.

The suspect ran away very fast, and now he is nowhere to be seen.

Use nowhere when you are talking about zero places or locations.

I knocked loudly on all the doors in the hallway, but sadly nobody answered.

Use nobody when you are talking about zero people.

To ChallengesPreviousNext

Pronoun

Pronoun vs noun: nouns name explicitly (Sarah, the book). Pronouns substitute and point back (she, it). Pronouns are a closed class (you can't invent new ones easily), while nouns are open (new ones appear constantly). The main complication: pronouns still carry case marking that nouns have lost.

A pronoun replaces a noun or noun phrase. Types: personal, demonstrative, relative, interrogative, reflexive, indefinite.

Diagnostic: every pronoun must have a clear antecedent (the noun it replaces). If the reader can't tell which noun a pronoun refers to → ambiguity error.

Negation

Single vs double negatives: standard English uses ONE negative per clause (I don't see anything or I see nothing). Double negatives (I don't see nothing) are grammatical in many languages and some English dialects, but are non-standard in written/formal English. This is the #1 negation trap for speakers of Spanish, Russian, and French.

Negation = not after auxiliary/modal, or do-support. Negative words (never, nobody, nothing) negate alone without adding not.

Diagnostic: count the negatives in the clause. More than one? → double negative. Fix by replacing one with a positive (anything, anyone, ever).

Adverb

Adverb vs adjective: adjectives describe things; adverbs describe actions, qualities, or degrees. The mix-up usually happens after action verbs — she sings beautiful (wrong) vs she sings beautifully (right).

An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb: incredibly fast, she spoke softly, we go often.

Diagnostic: ask what word is this describing? If it's a verb (an action) → adverb. If it's a noun (a thing) → adjective. Exception: linking verbs (be, seem, taste) take adjectives, not adverbs.

A1 | Elementary | Beginners

A1 vs A2: A1 covers isolated survival phrases (Where is…?, I am…, How much?). A2 handles connected sentences about familiar routines and simple past events. If you can manage short fixed phrases but not string together original sentences about your day, you're still A1.

A1 is the entry level of the CEFR: greetings, introductions, numbers, basic present tense, and core function words.

Diagnostic: can you describe yesterday using past tense? No → A1. Yes → you're moving into A2.

Easy

Easy vs Medium vs Hard: Easy = one rule, obvious answer, A1A2. Medium = one rule but realistic distractors, A2B1. Hard = interacting rules, edge cases, B2+. Start Easy to check you have the basics before moving up.

The Easy tag filters for single-rule, short-sentence, common-vocabulary challenges designed for beginners or for anyone wanting a confidence check on fundamentals.

Diagnostic: if you get Easy questions wrong, stay here — your foundations need work. If they feel trivial, move to Medium.