11%
Select the correct construction.
You'd better _________________________ or you won't make the team next season.

After the construction you'd better, like the modal verb you should, we can only use the infinitive form: get.

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Modal verb

  • She can swim. — ❌ She can to swim. (modal + bare infinitive, no to)
  • You must leave now. — strong obligation
  • It might rain. — possibility (~50%)
  • He should apologise. — advice/recommendation

Modal verbs (can, could, may, might, must, shall, should, will, would) are auxiliaries expressing ability, permission, possibility, obligation, or speculation. Always + bare infinitive. Never inflected (she can, not she cans).

Rule: modals never take to after them, never add -s for third person, and can't combine directly (must can ❌ — use must be able to).

Auxiliary verb

  • Do you know? — ❌ Know you? (English requires do-support for questions)
  • She has finished. — ❌ She finished has. (auxiliary before main verb)
  • They are leaving. — ❌ They leaving. (progressive needs be)
  • He doesn't smoke. — ❌ He smokes not. (negation needs do)

Auxiliary verbs (be, have, do, and the modals) combine with main verbs to build questions, negatives, tenses, aspects, and passive voice.

Pattern: if you need to ask a question, negate, or stack tense/aspect — you need an auxiliary. The main verb carries meaning; the auxiliary carries grammar.

Idiom

  • It's raining cats and dogs. — means "raining heavily" (not literal animals)
  • Break a leg! — means "good luck" (not an injury wish)
  • Spill the beans — means "reveal a secret"
  • Kick the bucket — means "to die" (no actual bucket involved)

Idioms are fixed phrases whose meaning can't be guessed from the individual words. They must be memorised as complete units — word-by-word translation from another language almost always fails.

Pattern: if a phrase is literally absurd but everyone uses it with a specific meaning → it's an idiom. Learn it as a chunk, not as individual words.

C1 | Advanced

  • Not only did she finish early, but she also helped others. — inversion for emphasis
  • It is the process that matters, not the result. — cleft sentence
  • I insist that he be present. — formal subjunctive
  • Were I to disagree, I would say so. — inverted conditional

These are C1 structures — the CEFR advanced level. At C1 you control inversion, cleft sentences, subjunctive forms, and register-switching fluently across formal and informal contexts.

Marker: if you can restructure a sentence for rhetorical effect without hesitation, you're C1.

Hard

  • Had she not intervened, the situation would have escalated. — inverted conditional
  • All distractors are grammatically plausible in other contexts
  • Multiple rules interact (e.g., tense + aspect + modality)
  • Context determines the answer — no single "rule" is enough

Hard marks upper-intermediate to advanced challenges: B2+, interacting rules, edge cases, plausible distractors, and contexts where pattern-matching fails.

Use "Hard" when Easy/Medium feel trivial and you want to test whether you actually understand a rule versus just recognising surface patterns.