Grammar Quiz Test Your English Skills
True / False
True / False
True / False
True / False
True / False
Intermediate English Grammar Traps That Cost the Most Points
Intermediate learners often understand the rule but miss the sentence structure that triggers it. Use the checks below to slow down and choose based on grammar signals, not the “sound” of the sentence.
1) Subject verb agreement fooled by “extra” nouns
The verb must agree with the head subject, not a noun inside a prepositional phrase or relative clause. In The list of items, the subject is list, so use is, not are. When you see of, with, along with, or as well as, circle the true subject first.
2) Tense errors from missing time anchors
Many wrong answers come from mixing past simple and present perfect. Use past simple with a finished time word like yesterday or in 2021. Use present perfect with an unfinished period like this week or with life experience when no time is given.
3) Articles: guessing instead of checking countability and specificity
A and an need a singular countable noun. Advice, information, and homework are typically uncountable in standard English, so you usually need some or a rephrase. Use the when the listener can identify the thing, because it is unique, previously mentioned, or defined by a clause.
4) Pronouns: unclear reference and case
Pronoun questions often test two things: antecedent clarity and case. If it, this, or they could point to more than one noun, rewrite mentally using the noun and see if the meaning stays stable. For case, remove extra words in a compound subject or object and test the pronoun alone: for him (not for he), she and I (not her and me as subjects).
5) Sentence boundaries: fragments, run-ons, and comma splices
Look for a dependent clause starting with because, although, when, or if that is incorrectly punctuated as a complete sentence. For run-ons and comma splices, confirm you have two independent clauses, then fix with a period, a coordinating conjunction, or a correct dependent structure.
Credible Grammar References and Practice Sets (Free)
Use these sources to review the exact rule behind a missed question, then do targeted practice on the same structure.
- British Council: English grammar reference: Clear explanations with examples across key intermediate topics like articles, verb forms, and conditionals.
- Cambridge Dictionary: English Grammar Today: Usage-focused guidance with examples that reflect real modern English.
- Purdue OWL: Grammar: Practical rule summaries for writing, including common error types that show up in quizzes.
- UNC Writing Center: Fragments and run-ons: A clause-based explanation of sentence boundaries with concrete correction options.
- University of Michigan Sweetland: Fragments, comma splices, run-ons: Quick definitions and examples that help you diagnose punctuation errors by clause type.
English Grammar Quiz Guidance for Intermediate Learners
Why do grammar quiz questions feel ambiguous, even when I know the rule?
Many items are built around a hidden structure, like a long subject with extra nouns, or two clauses that look like one sentence. Before picking an answer, identify the subject and main verb, then label each clause as dependent or independent. The correct choice usually becomes obvious after that structural check.
What is the fastest way to fix subject verb agreement mistakes?
Find the head subject and ignore everything attached to it. Prepositional phrases (of, with, in) and interrupting phrases (along with, as well as) do not change the subject’s number. In questions with either and neither, agreement depends on the construction and the nearest subject in certain paired patterns.
When should I use present perfect instead of past simple?
Use past simple with a finished time reference, like last night, in 2020, or two minutes ago. Use present perfect for an unfinished period that includes now, like this week, or for life experience when no specific time is stated. If the sentence includes both a finished time word and present perfect, treat it as a red flag.
Why do I keep missing article questions (a, an, the, no article)?
Article choice is mostly about noun type and shared context. First ask if the noun is countable in standard English. Many abstract nouns are uncountable, so a is impossible. Then ask if the listener can identify which specific thing you mean. If yes, the is often correct, especially with defining phrases like the book that you lent me.
Is “who” versus “whom” still tested, and how do I choose quickly?
It still appears in formal grammar questions. Use who as a subject form and whom as an object form. A quick test is replacement: if you can replace it with he or she, use who. If you can replace it with him or her, use whom. Watch for prepositions like to and with, which often signal an object.
How can I turn quiz results into a study plan that actually improves accuracy?
Group misses by rule type, not by question order. Create three buckets: verb system (tense, modals, agreement), noun phrase system (articles, countability, pronouns), and sentence structure (clauses, punctuation, modifiers). For each bucket, write one correct example and one incorrect example in your own words, then do five targeted practice items from a reliable reference.
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