64%

Complete the angry traveler's online review by dragging the correctly spelled compound nouns into the blanks.

The hotel room was a disaster! I found a half-eaten bowl of ice cream under the bed, and the bathroom was completely out of toothpaste.

The hotel room was a disaster! I found a half-eaten bowl of ice cream under the bed...

"Ice cream" is an open compound noun, meaning it is written as two separate words despite functioning as a single idea.

...and the bathroom was completely out of toothpaste.

"Toothpaste" is a closed compound noun, meaning the two original words have merged into one single word with no spaces or hyphens.

To ChallengesPreviousNext

Noun

Noun vs verb: the two core word classes. Nouns name things; verbs describe actions/states. Many English words can be both (run, play, cook, work) — only the sentence slot tells you which role it's playing. The run was exhausting (noun) vs I run every day (verb).

A noun names an entity. It interacts with articles, determiners, forms plurals, and controls verb agreement and pronoun choice.

Diagnostic: can you put the/a before it or pluralise it? → noun. Does it describe an action with tense? → verb. Can it do both? → check the sentence context.

English Grammar Basics

Basics vs intermediate/advanced grammar: if you're unsure whether to study articles or conditionals, tense basics or reported speech — you need to check whether your foundations are solid first. Basics covers everything up to A2.

English Grammar Basics groups the core building blocks: nouns, verbs, adjectives, prepositions, present/past tenses, questions, and negation.

Diagnostic: if you still hesitate over she don't vs she doesn't, or a vs an — start here. Master these and intermediate topics stop feeling random.

Vocabulary

Vocabulary vs grammar: grammar is the system of rules for combining words. Vocabulary is the stock of words themselves. You can have perfect grammar and still sound limited if your word stock is narrow (good instead of outstanding/remarkable/decent). Most fluency-feel above B1 comes from vocabulary breadth, not grammar complexity.

Vocabulary = word-focused learning: words, collocations, phrasal verbs, idioms, across CEFR A1C2.

Diagnostic: can you express the idea but it sounds "flat" or overly simple? → vocabulary issue. Can't construct the sentence at all? → grammar issue.

Humor

Humor vs serious practice: both teach the same rules. The difference is engagement — funny material keeps you coming back and creates stronger memory hooks. If dry drills bore you into quitting, humorous practice is more effective because you actually do it.

The Humor tag filters for entertaining practice: silly contexts, wordplay, absurd examples — all testing real grammar rules underneath.

Diagnostic: if you find yourself dreading practice → try filtering by Humor. If you're preparing for a formal exam and want serious register → filter it out.

B1 | Intermediate

B1 vs B2: B1 handles standard everyday communication and simple opinions. B2 handles abstract topics, sustained arguments, and nuanced register. If you can chat about your life but struggle to debate an issue or write a formal essay, you're B1.

B1 is the intermediate CEFR level: independent handling of familiar topics, second conditional, basic passive, reported speech, and linking words for cause and contrast.

Diagnostic: can you read a newspaper article on a familiar topic and summarise the argument? Comfortably → B2. Struggle with abstractions → still B1.

Medium

Medium vs Easy: Easy has one obviously correct answer and clearly wrong distractors. Medium has one correct answer but plausible distractors — you need to actually know the rule, not just guess from sound.

The Medium tag filters for A2B1 challenges with realistic difficulty: one rule per question, plausible alternatives, everyday contexts.

Diagnostic: if you're scoring 90%+ on Easy, move here. If you're below 60% on Medium, go back to Easy for that topic. Target 70–80% accuracy for maximum learning.