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Choose the passive voice form of the following sentence: "They make cars in this factory."

Answers:

To transform the present simple sentence into passive voice, use the auxiliary verb "are" and the past participle "made." The subject becomes "cars," and the verb "to make" changes to "are made."

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Passive voice

Active vs passive: active puts the doer first (The dog bit the man). Passive puts the receiver first (The man was bitten by the dog). Neither is inherently wrong — choice depends on what you want to foreground. Scientific/formal writing uses passive deliberately; vague writing uses it accidentally.

Passive voice = be + past participle. Promotes the object to subject. Good for foregrounding the action/result; bad when it hides who's responsible.

Diagnostic: who's doing the action? If unnamed and that matters → bad passive. If unnamed because it's obvious or irrelevant (The building was constructed in 1920) → good passive.

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.

Present tense

Simple present vs present progressive: simple present = habits, routines, permanent facts (I work here). Present progressive = right now, temporary, changing (I'm working from home today). The most common confusion: using progressive for habits (I'm working here ❌ for permanent job) or simple for right-now (I work now ❌ for current activity).

The present tense has four forms: simple, progressive, perfect, perfect progressive — each relating the action to "now" differently.

Diagnostic: is it a habit/permanent fact? → simple. Happening right now? → progressive. Started in past but still relevant? → perfect. Ongoing duration up to now? → perfect progressive.

Simple tense

Simple vs progressive vs perfect: simple = "just the fact" (I work). Progressive = "ongoing right now" (I am working). Perfect = "connected to a reference time" (I have worked). Simple is the default — use it unless you have a reason to add progressive or perfect meaning.

The simple aspect = unmarked form. Habits, facts, completed events, scheduled future. The starting point for all tense learning.

Diagnostic: do you need to signal "ongoing" (progressive) or "relevant to now" (perfect)? No? → simple is correct. Most sentences use simple tense — it's the unmarked default.

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, A1A2. Medium = one rule but realistic distractors, A2B1. 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.