Select the correct construction.
The team is improving but there's still a lot of training _________________________ before the season starts.

After the present simple form there's, we can only follow to with the infinitive: to do.

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Auxiliary verb

Auxiliary vs main verb: a main verb carries the action (run, eat, think); an auxiliary verb carries the grammar — tense, negation, questions, aspect, voice. In She has been eating, eating is the main verb; has and been are auxiliaries.

The English auxiliaries are be, have, do (primary) and the modal verbs (can, will, must…). They always precede the main verb.

Diagnostic: can the word stand alone as the only verb in the sentence and still carry action? Yes → main verb. No → auxiliary.

Modal verb

Must vs should vs might: the most confused modal trio. Must = strong obligation/near-certainty. Should = advice/expectation. Might = possibility. Getting these wrong changes the force of your statement: You must see a doctor (urgent) vs You should see a doctor (advice) vs You might need a doctor (maybe).

Modal verbs are auxiliaries that encode modality: ability (can), permission (may), necessity (must), advice (should), possibility (might), future (will).

Diagnostic: what meaning are you adding? Obligation → must/have to. Advice → should. Possibility → might/could. Ability → can. Future → will.

Conditional sentence

Second vs third conditional: second = unreal present/future (If I had money, I would buy it — but I don't have money now). Third = unreal past (If I had studied, I would have passed — but I didn't study). The most common confusion: using second when you mean third, making your timeline unclear.

A conditional sentence = if-clause + consequence clause. Five patterns (zero, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, mixed) each encode a specific time and probability.

Diagnostic: is the hypothetical about now or then? Now → second conditional. A past event that didn't happen → third conditional.

Idiom

Idiom vs collocation: both are fixed expressions, but idioms are opaque — the meaning is hidden (kick the bucket ≠ literally kicking). Collocations are transparent — the meaning is clear (heavy rain = a lot of rain). Collocations sound wrong if you swap words; idioms make no sense if you translate literally.

An idiom is a fixed phrase whose meaning can't be derived from its parts. They must be learned whole — and they're everywhere in casual and native English.

Diagnostic: does the literal meaning make sense? Yes → probably a collocation. No (absurd or unrelated) → idiom.

C1 | Advanced

C1 vs C2: C1 means fluent and flexible use with occasional gaps in very unfamiliar domains. C2 means native-like command of idiom, irony, and register across any subject. If you can handle advanced grammar but still miss cultural nuance or very rare idioms, you're C1.

C1 is the advanced CEFR level: inversion, cleft sentences, subjunctive mood, advanced conditionals, and precise register control in professional and academic contexts.

Diagnostic: can you write persuasively in different registers and catch subtle irony? Consistently → C2. Sometimes → C1.

Hard

Hard vs Medium: Medium tests one rule with realistic distractors. Hard tests interacting rules, edge cases, or context-dependent answers where multiple options seem correct until you think deeply. If you're scoring 80%+ on Medium, try Hard to find your real gaps.

The Hard tag filters for B2+ challenges with layered difficulty: rule interactions, subtle distractors, and contexts that demand genuine grammatical reasoning.

Diagnostic: if Hard questions feel impossible, drop to Medium and master the individual rules first. Hard assumes you already know each rule — it tests whether you can apply them together.