Help the clumsy magician fix his rehearsal notes so he doesn't ruin the show tonight! Drag the correct phrases into the blanks.
The white rabbit is very fast. When it jumps out of the hat, you must catch it quickly!
My magic wand is fragile. Please be careful and do not sit on it again.
The audience loves the card trick. Remember to smile and look at them when you reveal the Queen of Hearts.
The white rabbit is very fast. When it jumps out of the hat, you must catch it quickly!
In a basic English sentence, the object pronoun ("it") always comes directly after the main verb ("catch").
My magic wand is fragile. Please be careful and do not sit on it again.
When using a verb with a preposition (like "sit on"), the object pronoun goes after the preposition.
The audience loves the card trick. Remember to smile and look at them when you reveal the Queen of Hearts.
"Audience" is treated as a group here ("them"). The pronoun must follow the preposition "at" (look at them).
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).
Word Order
If your first language has flexible word order — Russian, Latin, German, Japanese — English can feel rigid. You can't just rearrange words for emphasis the way you would at home; the grammar tracks position, not just inflection. Get the order wrong and the sentence either changes meaning or stops making sense.
Word order is the sequence of words in a sentence. English is an SVO language — subject, verb, object. The order of adjectives and modifiers in a noun phrase also follows fixed patterns. Get this right and your English instantly sounds more natural.
Preposition
If you've ever written I'm interested on you (should be in) or I'm good on football (should be at) — you've hit prepositions' main pitfall. Their choice is mostly idiomatic, not logical, and rarely matches what your native language does. Memorising the right preposition for each common verb and adjective is what stops your speech from sounding subtly off.
A preposition is a small word linking a noun or noun phrase to other parts of the sentence: in, on, at, to, from, with. Marks time, place, manner, or abstract relationships. Choice is largely idiomatic, especially in fixed combinations (depend on, good at, afraid of).
Object
If you've ever written I gave and felt the sentence was unfinished, or written She arrived the airport (it should be at the airport) — you've felt the rules around objects. Different verbs demand different object structures, and English is fussy about which preposition (if any) joins the object to the verb. Getting it right is the difference between sounding fluent and sounding translated.
In grammar, an object is the entity a verb acts on. Three types: direct object (Sam fed the dogs), indirect object (She sent him a present), prepositional object (She waited for Lucy).
Verb
If grammar feels overwhelming, the fix is almost always to focus on verbs first. They carry the action, the time, the mood, and the voice — a single verb form decides whether your sentence reads as past or present, fact or hypothetical, active or passive. Get verbs solid and the rest of grammar suddenly looks much smaller.
A verb expresses action, state, or occurrence — the engine of every English sentence. Most verbs have five forms (base, -s, past tense, past participle, -ing); be has eight; modal verbs have fewer. Verbs carry tense, aspect, mood, and voice.
A1 | Elementary | Beginners
If you can say your name, ask Where is the toilet?, and read a simple bus sign — but freeze when someone speaks at normal speed — you're at A1. That's not a problem to fix; it's the level where most learners actually live for a while, and recognising it lets you pick the right material instead of drowning in advanced grammar that wasn't meant for you yet.
A1 is the starting level of the CEFR framework, covering basic everyday communication: greetings, introductions, simple personal questions, present-tense forms of be/have/do, and core determiners and prepositions.
Difficulty: Medium
If easy questions feel too obvious but hard questions leave you guessing, you're probably ready for Medium — the level where most real learning happens. It pushes just enough to expose the rules you don't quite have yet, without burying you in edge cases. This is where steady fluency is built, one well-aimed challenge at a time.
The Medium difficulty tag marks middle-range challenges — typically A2 to B1. One rule per question, realistic distractors, and contexts that require active thought rather than instant recognition.