Help the exhausted college student complain about her roommate's morning routine by choosing the correct verb.
Every morning at 5:00 AM, my roommate ______ the blender to make a kale and garlic smoothie.
The correct answer is uses.
We use the Present Simple to talk about habits and routines. Because "my roommate" is a third-person singular subject (he/she), we must add an "-s" to the base verb "use."
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.
Simple tense
- ✅ I go to work every day. — present simple (habit)
- ✅ She went home yesterday. — past simple (completed action)
- ✅ I will call you later. — future simple (promise/decision)
- ✅ Water boils at 100°C. — present simple (general truth)
The simple aspect is the default, unmarked verb form. Present simple = habits, facts, schedules. Past simple = completed actions. Future simple = predictions, promises, decisions. No auxiliary needed (except will for future and do for questions/negatives).
Rule: if the action is a fact, habit, completed event, or scheduled future — and you don't need to emphasise it being in-progress or connected to now → simple tense.
Habits and Routines
- ✅ I always get up at 7. — ❌ I get up always at 7. (adverb before main verb)
- ✅ She usually walks to work. — present simple for current habit
- ✅ I used to smoke. — past habit (no longer true)
- ✅ He would always bring flowers. — would for repeated past actions
Habits and routines use present simple + frequency adverbs for current habits, and used to / would for past habits. Adverb placement: before the main verb, after be.
Rule: frequency adverbs (always, usually, often, sometimes, never) go BEFORE the main verb but AFTER be: She always eats breakfast vs She is always hungry.
Humor
- "I before E, except after C" — weird, right? — playful self-contradiction
- Grammar joke: A panda eats, shoots, and leaves. — comma changes everything
- Silly contexts make rules memorable: the sillier the sentence, the harder it is to forget
- Entertainment is a learning strategy, not a distraction
Humor marks practice material that's deliberately entertaining. The grammar is real; the packaging is playful. Designed to boost engagement and make rules stick through association.
Why it works: memory anchors to emotion. A funny example of comma misuse is remembered longer than a dry rule statement.
A2 | Elementary | Pre-intermediate
- ✅ I went to the cinema yesterday. — past simple
- ✅ I have visited Paris twice. — present perfect (life experience)
- ✅ If it rains, I'll take an umbrella. — first conditional
- ✅ You should see a doctor. — modal for advice
These patterns are A2 — the second CEFR level. At A2 you move past survival phrases into real grammar: past tenses, the present perfect, basic conditionals, and modals for advice/obligation.
Marker: if you can describe yesterday and give simple advice, but struggle with abstractions or nuance, you're at A2.
Easy
- She is a teacher. — one verb form, one rule
- I have two cats. — basic possession, short sentence
- He doesn't like coffee. — simple negation with do-support
- Only one answer is clearly correct; distractors are obviously wrong.
Easy marks beginner-level challenges: A1–early A2, one rule at a time, everyday vocabulary, no trick questions.
Use "Easy" when you want to build confidence on a specific rule without interference from other grammar or tricky contexts.