Choose the correct negative form for the following passive sentence: "The cake is being made."
Answers:
The original sentence is in the present continuous tense in the passive voice. To form a negative sentence in the present continuous tense, use the auxiliary verb "is" followed by "not" (contracted to "isn't") and the present participle of the verb.
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.
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).
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.
Progressive tense
Progressive vs simple: I work in London (permanent job) vs I am working in London (temporary assignment). Simple = fact/habit/permanent. Progressive = ongoing/temporary/in-progress. Same verb, different aspect, different meaning. The choice isn't about grammar preference — it changes what you're communicating.
The progressive = be + -ing. Marks ongoing/temporary actions. Stative verbs resist it.
Diagnostic: is the action happening RIGHT NOW and likely to stop? → progressive. Is it a general truth, habit, or scheduled event? → simple. Is the verb stative (know, own, believe)? → simple (even if happening now).
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.
B2 | Upper Intermediate
B2 vs C1: B2 means effective communication on complex topics with some effort. C1 means effortless fluency with precise register control. If you can argue a point but still reach for words and make structural slips under pressure, you're B2.
B2 is the upper-intermediate CEFR level: mixed conditionals, complex passives, reported speech with backshift, participle clauses, and sustained written argument.
Diagnostic: does your writing read as "competent non-native" or "could be native"? The former → B2. The latter → C1.
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.