The correct answers are We don't have any truffles left! and We have no truffles left!
To express zero quantity with a noun, you can use a negative verb with any (
don't have any truffles) OR a positive verb with no (have no truffles).
"None" is a pronoun and cannot be used directly in front of a noun (so "none truffles" is incorrect). Using "don't" and "no" together creates an incorrect double negative.
Negation
- ✅ I don't see anything. — ❌ I don't see nothing. (double negative in standard English)
- ✅ She never goes out. — never already negates (no doesn't needed)
- ✅ He doesn't like coffee. — do-support for negation
- ✅ Nobody came. — negative subject (no auxiliary needed)
Negation uses not after an auxiliary/modal, or do-support when there's no auxiliary. One negative per clause in standard English — never, nobody, nothing already negate without adding not.
Rule: one negative element per clause. I don't see anything or I see nothing — never both together in standard English.
Determiner
- ✅ The cat sat on a mat. — articles as determiners
- ✅ My sister has three dogs. — possessive + numeral as determiners
- ❌ I went to the home. — wrong (idiomatic: I went home — no determiner)
- ❌ She is a good student. ✅ vs She is good student. ❌ — missing determiner
A determiner sits before a noun to specify which, how many, or whose. Types include articles, demonstratives, possessives, and quantifiers.
Rule: most singular countable nouns in English require a determiner — a cat, the cat, my cat, this cat. Dropping it (cat sat on mat) breaks the sentence.
Pronoun
- ✅ between you and me — ❌ between you and I (objective case after preposition)
- ✅ its colour — ❌ it's colour (it's = it is)
- ✅ She did it herself. — reflexive pronoun
- ✅ The person who called… — relative pronoun
Pronouns replace nouns: personal (I/me/my), demonstrative (this/that), relative (who/which/that), interrogative (who?/what?), reflexive (myself), indefinite (everyone/nobody). They carry case that nouns have lost.
Trap: pronouns are where English case still matters: I vs me, who vs whom, its vs it's. Get these wrong and it's instantly noticeable.
Countable and uncountable
- ✅ some advice — ❌ an advice / advices (uncountable → no article, no plural)
- ✅ a piece of furniture — ❌ a furniture / furnitures
- ✅ How much water? — ❌ How many water? (uncountable → much)
- ✅ fewer people — ❌ less people (countable plural → fewer)
English nouns are either countable (take a/an, form plurals, use many/few) or uncountable (no plural, use much/little). The choice is partly arbitrary and must be memorised.
Test: can you put a number in front? Three chairs → countable. Three furnitures ❌ → uncountable. Use a unit phrase instead: three pieces of furniture.
Present tense
- I work here. — simple present (habit/permanent)
- I am working now. — present progressive (happening right now)
- I have lived here for 10 years. — present perfect (started past, still true)
- I have been waiting for an hour. — present perfect progressive (duration up to now)
Four present tense forms: simple (habits/facts), progressive (now/temporary), perfect (past → present relevance), perfect progressive (ongoing duration). Each encodes a different relationship between the action and the present moment.
Trap: "I am living here for 10 years" ❌ — started in the past + still true = present PERFECT (have lived/have been living), not progressive.
A1 | Elementary | Beginners
- ✅ My name is Anna. — present simple of be
- ✅ Where is the station? — basic *wh-*question
- ✅ I have two brothers. — possession with have
- ✅ She likes coffee. — third-person -s
These are A1 sentences — the starting level of the CEFR framework. At A1 you can introduce yourself, ask and answer simple personal questions, and handle basic everyday transactions using present tense, be/have/do, and core vocabulary.
If you can say these but freeze at normal speaking speed, you're solidly A1 — and that's exactly where to start.
Medium
- If I were you, I would apologise. — one rule (second conditional), but distractors like was tempt you
- Answers require active thought, not instant pattern recognition
- Vocabulary and context are realistic, not artificially simplified
- Usually tests one rule, but the wrong answers are plausible
Medium marks middle-difficulty challenges: A2–B1, one rule tested, but with realistic distractors that require genuine understanding.
Use "Medium" when Easy feels too obvious but Hard feels overwhelming. This is where most productive learning happens — the sweet spot of difficulty.