Help the master chef shout the correct command to his kitchen staff.

"We need the secret soup recipe right now. Please give ___ immediately!"

The correct answer is it to us.

When a sentence has a direct object pronoun (like it) and a prepositional phrase showing who receives it (like to us), the correct order is Direct Object + Preposition + Indirect Object Pronoun. "We" is a subject pronoun and cannot follow a preposition.

To ChallengesPrevious

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.

Word order

English (SVO) vs other patterns: English relies on word ORDER to show who does what (Dog bites manMan bites dog). Inflected languages (Latin, Russian, German) use case endings and can scramble order freely. In English, changing order changes meaning or requires special constructions (inversion, cleft sentences).

Word order = how English marks grammatical relationships. SVO is the default; fixed adjective order; adverb placement varies by type.

Diagnostic: does your sentence sound "off" even though all word forms are correct? → probably a word order issue. Try moving the element back to default SVO position.

Object

Object vs subject: the subject does the action; the object receives it. The cat (subject) chased the mouse (object). In English, word order (SVO) determines which is which — subject before verb, object after.

An object is the entity a verb acts upon: direct (I read the book), indirect (I gave her a book), or prepositional (I waited for him).

Diagnostic: ask "[verb] what/whom?" after the verb. The answer is the direct object. Ask "to/for whom?" for the indirect object. After a preposition? Prepositional object.

Imperative mood

Imperative vs declarative: declarative states facts (The door is closed.). Imperative gives commands (Close the door.). The difference: imperatives have no stated subject and use the bare verb. Socially, bare imperatives can sound rude — politeness strategies (Could you close the door?) are often preferred.

The imperative mood = bare verb, no subject, for commands/instructions/requests. Negated with don't. Softened with please or modal questions.

Diagnostic: is the subject missing and the verb in base form? → imperative. Is there a stated subject + tense? → declarative or other mood.

Preposition

Preposition vs particle: same words (in, on, up, off), different jobs. A preposition links to a noun (look at the book). A particle changes verb meaning without a noun (give up = quit). Test: is there a noun/pronoun after it forming a prepositional phrase? → preposition. Does it change the verb's meaning? → particle in a phrasal verb.

A preposition = small word connecting a noun to the sentence (time, place, manner, relationship). Choice is idiomatic per verb/adjective combination.

Diagnostic: struggling with which preposition to use? It's almost never about logic — look up the specific verb/adjective + preposition combination.

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.

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.