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Complete the sci-fi author's manuscript by choosing the logically and grammatically correct continuation to avoid a "dangling participle."

Realizing the time machine was completely out of fuel, ____.

The correct answer is Professor Higgins frantically searched his pockets for spare plutonium.

When a sentence begins with a participle clause (Realizing...), the subject of the main clause must be the person or thing doing the action of the participle. Professor Higgins is the one who "realized," so he must be the subject of the main clause. The other options incorrectly make "a feeling," "the control panels," or "it" the subject, creating a dangling modifier.

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Participle

If you've ever written I should have went and been corrected to should have gone — you've hit the past participle's main rule. The participle isn't an exotic form; it's the workhorse that builds perfect tenses, passive voice, and dozens of common adjectives. Get the irregular ones automatic and your tenses fall into place.

A participle is a verb form acting as an adjective or adverb. The present participle is the -ing form (running, sitting); the past participle is -ed (regular: walked) or irregular (broken, gone, written). Participles build perfect tenses, progressive tenses, and the passive.

Clause

If you've ever been told your sentence is a "run-on" or that you've used a comma where there should be a semicolon — you've hit the limits of writing without seeing clauses. Get this concept solid and most punctuation problems quietly disappear: you can finally tell a complete thought from a fragment without guessing.

A clause is a grammatical unit built around a verb, usually with a subject and a predicate. Independent clauses stand alone (I missed the bus); dependent clauses can't (Because I overslept). Combine them and you build complex sentences.

Subject

If you've ever written The list of items are wrong (should be is wrong) — you've hit the subject-agreement trap. The subject is list, not items, and the verb has to agree with it. Long sentences with prepositional phrases between the subject and verb are where this most often goes wrong, and getting it right is what stops careful readers from flagging your writing.

The subject is the part of a sentence or clause that says who or what the sentence is about. Typically a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase before the verb, controlling the verb's number and person.

Sentence

If your writing has been called "choppy" or "monotonous", the issue is usually sentence variety — not vocabulary. English readers expect a mix of short and long, simple and complex sentences. Even the same content reads completely differently depending on how you stitch the clauses together.

A sentence is the largest grammatical unit, made of one or more clauses. Four structural types: simple (one independent clause), compound (two+ independents joined), complex (independent + dependent), compound-complex (multiple of each). Ends with period, question mark, or exclamation mark.

B2 | Upper Intermediate

If a university admissions team or visa office has ever asked you for an English test score, B2 is probably the level they had in mind. It's the threshold where your English stops being a constraint and starts being a tool — and the line between B1 and B2 is often the line between "stuck in beginner classes" and "ready to study or work in English."

B2 is the upper-intermediate level in the CEFR framework, demanding flexible control of mixed conditionals, passive voice across tenses, reported speech with backshifting, and participle clauses.

Difficulty: Hard

If easy and medium questions are clicking but you still feel exposed in real conversation or formal writing, you've outgrown the basics. Hard material is where the gaps you didn't know you had show up: the distractor that "sounds right", the rule that interacts with another rule, the case where context changes the answer. It's where genuine fluency is built.

The Hard difficulty tag marks upper-intermediate to advanced challenges — typically B2 and above. Interacting rules, edge cases, plausible distractors, and contexts that require genuine understanding rather than surface pattern-matching.