77%
Complete the party planner's checklist for a surprise birthday party.
"First, we need to _________________________ some plans for the decorations. Then, I will go to the supermarket and _________________________ the shopping. Next, we can _________________________ a delicious chocolate cake. Finally, when the birthday girl arrives, try not to _________________________ too much noise before we yell 'Surprise!'"

make some plans do the shopping make a delicious cake make too much noise

Use make when constructing, planning, or producing sounds (make plans, make a cake, make noise).

Use do for routine tasks and errands (do the shopping).

To ChallengesPreviousNext

Verb

  • walk → walk / walks / walked / walked / walking (5 forms, regular)
  • go → go / goes / went / gone / going (5 forms, irregular)
  • be → am/is/are/was/were/be/being/been (8 forms)
  • can → can / could (modal: only 2 forms, no -s, no -ing)

A verb is the one word class every English sentence requires. Carries tense (when), aspect (duration), mood (attitude), and voice (active/passive). Regular verbs add -ed; ~200 irregular verbs have unpredictable past forms.

Key insight: fix your verbs and most grammar problems disappear. Wrong tense, wrong agreement, wrong form — verb errors account for the majority of grammatical mistakes.

Collocations

  • make a decision — ❌ do a decision
  • strong coffee — ❌ powerful coffee
  • heavy rain — ❌ strong rain
  • highly unlikely — ❌ very unlikely (grammatical, but less natural)

Collocations are word pairs that English habitually puts together. Both options may be grammatically valid, but one sounds native and the other doesn't.

Pattern: there's no logic to predict them — you make decisions but do homework, you have strong coffee but heavy rain. They must be learned as chunks, not deduced from rules.

A2 | Elementary | Pre-intermediate

  • I went to the cinema yesterday. — past simple
  • I have visited Paris twice. — present perfect (life experience)
  • If it rains, I'll take an umbrella. — first conditional
  • You should see a doctor. — modal for advice

These patterns are A2 — the second CEFR level. At A2 you move past survival phrases into real grammar: past tenses, the present perfect, basic conditionals, and modals for advice/obligation.

Marker: if you can describe yesterday and give simple advice, but struggle with abstractions or nuance, you're at A2.

Easy

  • She is a teacher. — one verb form, one rule
  • I have two cats. — basic possession, short sentence
  • He doesn't like coffee. — simple negation with do-support
  • Only one answer is clearly correct; distractors are obviously wrong.

Easy marks beginner-level challenges: A1–early A2, one rule at a time, everyday vocabulary, no trick questions.

Use "Easy" when you want to build confidence on a specific rule without interference from other grammar or tricky contexts.