Choose the correct negative form of the following sentence in the future perfect tense: "He will have finished the project by the end of the week."
Answers:
The original sentence is in the future perfect tense. To form a negative sentence in the future perfect tense, use "Will + not (won't) + have + past participle of the verb." The correct answer is "He will not have finished the project by the end of the week."
Verb
Verb vs noun vs adjective: nouns name things. Adjectives describe. Verbs express what happens or what IS. The test: can it take tense (walked, will walk)? Can it take -ing? Can it follow to as an infinitive (to walk)? Yes to any → verb. English often converts freely between classes (run = noun or verb), so context decides.
A verb = action/state/occurrence word. 5 forms (base, -s, past, past participle, -ing). Carries tense, aspect, mood, voice. The one required element in every sentence.
Diagnostic: does it change for tense (walk → walked)? Can you put to before it (to walk)? Does it take -ing (walking)? → verb.
Future tense
Will vs going to: the most confused future pair. Will = spontaneous decisions and predictions (I'll have the fish; It will rain). Going to = pre-existing plans and evidence-based predictions (I'm going to study law; Look at those clouds — it's going to rain). Swap them and you sound either impulsive or weirdly formal.
English encodes future time through will, be going to, present continuous (arrangements), and present simple (schedules) — each with different implications.
Diagnostic: is the decision happening right now? → will. Was it already planned? → going to. Is it a confirmed arrangement with another person? → present continuous.
Perfect tense
Present perfect vs simple past: I lost my keys (past: specific time, done). I have lost my keys (perfect: result matters NOW — I still don't have them). The perfect always connects past action to present relevance. If the time is specified (yesterday, in 2010) → simple past. If the result matters now → present perfect.
The perfect aspect = have + past participle. Marks completion relative to a time point. Three forms: present/past/future perfect.
Diagnostic: does the sentence mention a specific finished time (yesterday, last year, in 1999)? → simple past. Is it about the result/relevance NOW? → present perfect.
Negation
Single vs double negatives: standard English uses ONE negative per clause (I don't see anything or I see nothing). Double negatives (I don't see nothing) are grammatical in many languages and some English dialects, but are non-standard in written/formal English. This is the #1 negation trap for speakers of Spanish, Russian, and French.
Negation = not after auxiliary/modal, or do-support. Negative words (never, nobody, nothing) negate alone without adding not.
Diagnostic: count the negatives in the clause. More than one? → double negative. Fix by replacing one with a positive (anything, anyone, ever).
B1 | Intermediate
B1 vs B2: B1 handles standard everyday communication and simple opinions. B2 handles abstract topics, sustained arguments, and nuanced register. If you can chat about your life but struggle to debate an issue or write a formal essay, you're B1.
B1 is the intermediate CEFR level: independent handling of familiar topics, second conditional, basic passive, reported speech, and linking words for cause and contrast.
Diagnostic: can you read a newspaper article on a familiar topic and summarise the argument? Comfortably → B2. Struggle with abstractions → still B1.
Easy
Easy vs Medium vs Hard: Easy = one rule, obvious answer, A1–A2. Medium = one rule but realistic distractors, A2–B1. Hard = interacting rules, edge cases, B2+. Start Easy to check you have the basics before moving up.
The Easy tag filters for single-rule, short-sentence, common-vocabulary challenges designed for beginners or for anyone wanting a confidence check on fundamentals.
Diagnostic: if you get Easy questions wrong, stay here — your foundations need work. If they feel trivial, move to Medium.