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Complete the observant barista's thought process during the morning rush.

"Those three students in the corner ___ definitely pretending to study while actually watching cat videos."

The correct answer is are.

"Those three students" is a plural subject (they), which requires the plural verb "are" in the present tense.

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Be

The verb be is the most irregular and most-used verb in English. It has eight formsbe, am, is, are, being, was, were, been — more than any other English verb. It works as both a main verb (linking a subject to a complement: She is a doctor) and an auxiliary (forming the progressive tenses I am working and the passive voice It was written).

Almost every sentence you'll ever speak or write uses some form of be. Master its irregular forms early — am/is/are/was/were/been — and the rest of English grammar gets dramatically easier.

Present tense

The present tense in English has four forms: simple present (I work) for habits, general truths, and stative descriptions; present progressive (I am working) for actions happening right now or temporary situations; present perfect (I have worked) for past actions with present relevance; and present perfect progressive (I have been working) for ongoing actions continuing into the present.

The simple/progressive distinction is one of the trickiest jumps for learners — I work in Paris (habitual) and I'm working in Paris (temporary, right now) feel almost identical but signal different things. Pick wrong and your meaning subtly shifts.

Grammatical number

Grammatical number is the singular vs plural distinction marked on nouns, pronouns, and verbs. Most English nouns add -s or -es to form plurals (book → books, box → boxes), but a handful keep older patterns: child → children, foot → feet, mouse → mice, sheep → sheep. Pronouns swap forms entirely (I → we, he → they).

Number governs subject-verb agreement: He goes but They go. Mismatching subject and verb (The team are/is winning) is one of the most common slips in writing — and one that catches the attention of any careful reader.

A1 | Elementary | Beginners

A1 is the starting level of the CEFR framework — the entry point into English. At A1 you can introduce yourself, ask and answer simple personal questions, recognise common signs and instructions, and have short slow-paced conversations on very familiar topics.

Grammatically, A1 covers the building blocks: present-tense forms of be, have, and do; basic word order; simple questions; and the most common determiners, pronouns, and prepositions. Knowing your level matters — A1 material teaches the foundations every later level builds on, while a B1 textbook will overwhelm you. Start here and progress is fast.

Difficulty: Easy

The Easy difficulty tag marks questions and challenges aimed at beginners — typically A1 or early A2 level. Expect single-rule focus, short sentences, common everyday vocabulary, and one clear correct answer. Distractors usually rule themselves out quickly.

Filter by Easy when you're rebuilding fundamentals, warming up before harder material, or testing whether you've truly internalised a basic rule before moving on. Easy doesn't mean trivial — it means the rule itself is unambiguous and the context doesn't pile on extra complications.