8%

Choose the correct word to complete the wildlife documentary narration.

The two acrobatic squirrels built a tiny catapult to launch ____ directly into the "squirrel-proof" bird feeder.

The correct answer is themselves.

We use the reflexive pronoun themselves because the subject ("The two acrobatic squirrels") is performing the action upon that exact same group. "Theirselves" is not a grammatically correct word in standard English.

To ChallengesNext

Pronoun

A pronoun is a small, closed class of words that stands in for a noun or noun phrase. The main types: personal (I, you, he, she, it, we, they) plus their object (me, him) and possessive (my, mine) forms; demonstrative (this, that); relative (who, which, that); interrogative (who, what); and reflexive (myself, yourself).

Pronouns are how English avoids endlessly repeating names. The catch: their meaning depends entirely on context, so unclear pronoun reference (Tom told Mike that he was wrong — who's he?) is one of the most common writing problems.

Noun and pronoun

The Noun and pronoun tag groups topics that span both nouns (words naming people, places, things, ideas) and pronouns (small set of words that stand in for nouns: I, you, he, they, it, this, who). Together they're the largest open class and the smallest closed class in English — and they sit in exactly the same syntactic slots.

Topics here include plurals, possessives, articles, agreement, grammatical case, and the interaction of pronouns with their antecedents. The most common writing problems — vague reference, agreement errors, who/whom confusion — all live here.

English Grammar Basics

The English Grammar Basics tag marks quizzes and explainers covering the foundations of English grammar — nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, tenses, voice, mood, and basic sentence structure.

If you're starting out or rebuilding from scratch, this is the tag to follow: every challenge under it is designed to land the core rules without burying you in exceptions. Get the basics solid here and the more advanced topics — conditionals, reported speech, inversion — stop looking like a wall of new rules and start looking like extensions of what you already know.

Humor

The Humor tag marks questions and challenges where the author has tried — subjectively, deliberately — to make the practice itself entertaining. Expect characters, scenarios, and storylines that play with absurdity: zombies, alien tourists, a chef's disaster, a roommate's complaint. The grammar rule is real; the wrapping isn't.

Humor matters because grammar drills are forgettable. Tying a rule to a story your brain wants to keep makes it stick. Filter by Humor when motivation is what you're short on, not study time.

B1 | Intermediate

B1 is the intermediate level in the CEFR framework — the point where you stop relying on memorised phrases and start handling everyday English independently. At B1 you can describe experiences, explain opinions, and follow most clear standard speech on familiar topics like work, travel, and hobbies.

Grammatically, B1 means combining tenses with precision, building complex sentences, and starting to use passive voice, modal verbs for necessity and possibility, and verb patterns (gerund vs. infinitive). Knowing your level shapes what you study next: pushing too far ahead frustrates you; staying below your level wastes time.

Difficulty: Medium

The Medium difficulty tag marks questions and challenges in the middle of the difficulty range — typically suitable for A2 to B1 learners. Expect a single rule with realistic distractors, longer sentences, and contexts where you have to think before answering rather than reading off the obvious choice.

Filter by Medium when you're past the absolute basics and ready to consolidate. It's the level where most lasting progress happens — easy enough that you can finish without exhausting concentration, hard enough that getting it right means you've actually understood.