B: No. I have _________________________ idea.
The correct answer is "B: No. I have no idea", which uses "no" to indicate a complete lack of knowledge about the accident.
Determinative
- the — determinative (word class: article)
- this — determinative (word class: demonstrative)
- my — determinative (word class: possessive)
- some — determinative (word class: quantifier)
All four are determinatives — a part-of-speech category. When they sit before a noun and specify which/how many, they're functioning as determiners (a syntactic role).
Key distinction: determinative = what the word is (its class). Determiner = what job it's doing in the sentence. Same word, two different labels at two levels of analysis.
Negation
- ✅ I don't see anything. — ❌ I don't see nothing. (double negative in standard English)
- ✅ She never goes out. — never already negates (no doesn't needed)
- ✅ He doesn't like coffee. — do-support for negation
- ✅ Nobody came. — negative subject (no auxiliary needed)
Negation uses not after an auxiliary/modal, or do-support when there's no auxiliary. One negative per clause in standard English — never, nobody, nothing already negate without adding not.
Rule: one negative element per clause. I don't see anything or I see nothing — never both together in standard English.
Determiner
- ✅ The cat sat on a mat. — articles as determiners
- ✅ My sister has three dogs. — possessive + numeral as determiners
- ❌ I went to the home. — wrong (idiomatic: I went home — no determiner)
- ❌ She is a good student. ✅ vs She is good student. ❌ — missing determiner
A determiner sits before a noun to specify which, how many, or whose. Types include articles, demonstratives, possessives, and quantifiers.
Rule: most singular countable nouns in English require a determiner — a cat, the cat, my cat, this cat. Dropping it (cat sat on mat) breaks the sentence.
A1 | Elementary | Beginners
- ✅ My name is Anna. — present simple of be
- ✅ Where is the station? — basic *wh-*question
- ✅ I have two brothers. — possession with have
- ✅ She likes coffee. — third-person -s
These are A1 sentences — the starting level of the CEFR framework. At A1 you can introduce yourself, ask and answer simple personal questions, and handle basic everyday transactions using present tense, be/have/do, and core vocabulary.
If you can say these but freeze at normal speaking speed, you're solidly A1 — and that's exactly where to start.
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.