Help the frantic driver complete their sentence.
I have searched the entire house for my car keys. I've looked under the sofa, in the kitchen, and even in the microwave, but they are ___ to be found!
The correct answer is nowhere.
We use nowhere to talk about an absence of places or locations. The phrase "nowhere to be found" is a common way to say that you cannot find an item in any location.
Negation
If your native language uses double negatives (I don't see nothing) — like Russian, Spanish, or French — you've probably been told this is wrong in English and not been entirely sure what the fix is. Standard English uses one negative per clause: either I saw nothing or I didn't see anything, never both. Once you internalise that single rule, your written English clears up a lot.
Negation in English uses not after an auxiliary or modal verb: I am not going. Without an auxiliary, you add do-support (I do not go). Negative words like never and nobody already negate the clause — adding not on top creates non-standard double negatives.
Adverb
If you've ever written she sings beautiful when you meant beautifully, you've hit the most common adverb mistake. The fix sounds small, but it's the kind of detail that signals fluency at a glance — and once you see the pattern, you stop second-guessing it.
An adverb modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb, telling you how, when, where, how often, or to what degree: she sings beautifully, unbelievably fast, we go there often. Most form with -ly (quick → quickly), but a stubborn group don't change shape at all: fast, well, hard, late.
Pronoun
If you've ever paused before who vs whom, its vs it's, or me vs I — you've felt how much weight pronouns carry in English. They're tiny words but they're case-sensitive (I vs me), context-dependent, and one of the few places where everyday English still trips careful speakers. Get the common patterns right and you instantly sound more careful.
A pronoun is a closed class of small words that replace nouns or noun phrases. Types: personal (I, you, he…), demonstrative (this, that), relative (who, which), interrogative (who?, what?), reflexive (myself), and indefinite (everyone, nobody).
Idiom
If you've ever heard a native speaker say that's a piece of cake and wondered what cake had to do with anything — you've met your first idiom. English films, songs, and casual chat are full of these fixed expressions, and missing them leaves the meaning slightly off-kilter. Learning idioms in chunks is the fastest way to stop sounding overly formal.
An idiom is a fixed phrase whose meaning isn't built from its individual words. Kick the bucket (= to die), spill the beans (= reveal a secret), break a leg (= good luck). They have to be memorised as whole units; word-by-word translation almost always misleads.
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: Easy
If a textbook leaves you confused, sometimes the issue isn't the topic — it's that the practice material is layered with extra complications. Filtering by Easy strips that away. You get one rule at a time, in plain everyday language, with no trick questions. It's how you make a shaky foundation solid before stacking more on top.
The Easy difficulty tag marks beginner-level questions and challenges — typically A1 or early A2. Single-rule focus, short sentences, common vocabulary, one clear correct answer.