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A chaotic wizard has dropped his collection of wands on the floor! Help him identify the dangerous one by choosing the grammatically correct sentence.

The correct answer is The wand that sparks purple magic is completely out of control!

This is a defining relative clause because it tells us exactly which wand is dangerous out of all the wands on the floor. Defining relative clauses do not use commas.

  • "The wand, that..." is incorrect because we never use "that" in a non-defining clause (with commas).
  • "The wand which... magic, is..." is incorrect because it uses a single comma, which wrongly separates the subject from its verb.
  • "who" is only used for people, not magical objects!
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Relative clause

If you've ever paused over who vs whom vs that vs which — or wondered whether a comma belongs before who — you've hit the relative-clause puzzle. English makes meaning depend on whether the clause is essential information or just extra; one missing comma can flip the meaning of the whole sentence.

A relative clause is a dependent clause modifying a noun, introduced by a relative pronoun (who, whom, whose, which, that) or relative adverb (where, when, why). Restrictive relatives are essential and unmarked; non-restrictive are extra information and set off with commas.

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.

Punctuation

If your writing keeps coming back marked up with red — comma here, period there, semicolon nowhere — you're missing the small set of rules that govern English punctuation. There are roughly a dozen marks, and once each one's job is clear (a period for full stops, a comma for short pauses, a semicolon for closely linked independent clauses), the noise drops dramatically.

Punctuation is the set of marks (periods, commas, colons, semicolons, question marks, apostrophes, quotation marks, dashes) that signal sentence structure and rhythm to the reader.

Comma

If you've ever been told your writing has "too many commas" or "not enough" — and weren't sure which one you were guilty of — you've hit the most fiddly punctuation mark in English. The good news: there are only a handful of comma rules, and once you know them, the everyday cases stop being guesswork.

The comma ( , ) separates parts of a sentence: items in a list (apples, pears, and figs), non-essential information (My brother, a doctor, called), and clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction (I went home, and she stayed). Used well, it controls the rhythm of your prose.

Pronoun

If you've ever paused before who vs whom, its vs it's, or me vs I — you've felt how much weight pronouns carry in English. They're tiny words but they're case-sensitive (I vs me), context-dependent, and one of the few places where everyday English still trips careful speakers. Get the common patterns right and you instantly sound more careful.

A pronoun is a closed class of small words that replace nouns or noun phrases. Types: personal (I, you, he…), demonstrative (this, that), relative (who, which), interrogative (who?, what?), reflexive (myself), and indefinite (everyone, nobody).

B1 | Intermediate

If you can hold a conversation about your weekend, explain why you're late, and follow a short news story without panicking — but still feel lost in fast or technical English — you're probably operating at B1. Knowing this matters: study material at the wrong level either bores you or burns you out, and B1 is the typical target for travel, casual work, and most everyday social English.

B1 is the intermediate level in the CEFR framework, where you handle everyday English independently and start combining ideas with complex sentences, passive voice, and modal verbs.

Difficulty: Medium

If easy questions feel too obvious but hard questions leave you guessing, you're probably ready for Medium — the level where most real learning happens. It pushes just enough to expose the rules you don't quite have yet, without burying you in edge cases. This is where steady fluency is built, one well-aimed challenge at a time.

The Medium difficulty tag marks middle-range challenges — typically A2 to B1. One rule per question, realistic distractors, and contexts that require active thought rather than instant recognition.