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I'm thinking one of bidens DEI hire put this together
An excellent selection of some very common idioms. But I suspect many test takers would benefit from a brief explanation of their meanings.
20/20 - some of the answers are repeated in the options/ choices
Question: #6: Syntax error. Are you asking about the price? If so, then "How much are those oranges?" Are you asking "How many oranges are there?"
Mission 😂
++ "Juan" is of course capitalized. Also, "spoke" was misspelled. ++ As the question is phrased, either answer B or D could be correct. Also, the correct possessive spelling would be " grandparents' " . house." ++ "All students [plural] must obey... " ++ Either a semicolon after landslide, or capitalize "you." ++ "We will definitely look into the matter," Note the comma after "matter", and the use of quotation marks to indicate the actual words spoken.
One is wrong. Two words have two correct answers each
I scored 15/15
One answer is wrong. Check
I scored 10/10
subjAct ???
as poor as a church-mouse
Does always takes the auxiliary verb have
All answers were correct, except one
++ Should read: "I have been working for two HOURS" plural. ++ Should read: "She DIED [or HAD DIED] before her husband came." ++ Note: The pronoun "I" and its contractions are always capitalized. ++ "It has been/had been raining..." Either is correct. "Has been" if after five hours it is still raining; "had been" if after five hours it is now no longer raining. ++ Capitalize all proper names -- "Sam."
Excellent choice of very common idioms, but what was missing was any explanation of these expressions, or any sentence examples. One minor point, in question 20 "it's" is a contraction, and thus requires an apostrophy.
Did you mean to say 'TIRED of writing"? ++ "Headgear" is written as one word. ++ "John" is capitalized. ++ "Can I speak TO you?" And of course the pronoun. "I" and its contractions are always capitalized. ++ "We go TO music classss ON weekends." ++ "IN the garden" if we wish to imply that she is actually within the garden itself, rather than at the garden's general location.
Yes ,mission is the correct one
My score was 20 out of 20
Missed2 I quest your answers on 2 of the question
The correct phrasing would be: ++ "Whose books are those?" ++ "play into the bank" or "pay into the bank"? ++ "The books ARE on the shelf."
My score was 25 out of 25
All answers were correct. Mission is the correct spelling.
He came or he has come How he come?
You are doing good job.. Better to remove water marks in your video because you tube monitization issues may happen
++ Answer B, "ARE in the class," also grammatically correct. ++ "I DIDN'T see you when you were leaving," ++ "The weather WAS quite dull today" also correct, if the statement is being made late in the day. ++ Syntax error. There would be two correct possibilities: "YOU haven't done your work." OR "We haven't done OUR work." ++ "... getting out OF [not "off"] bed." ++ "It happened quite often." also correct. Also, "quite" misspelled.
For this being an English test you should know how to spell
this is crap. you dont know anything. if this is an american thing, the americans bastardised the english language. thats why your ignorant.
1. Kangaroo. None of the choices is correct. 2. Again, hippopotamus, none of the choices is correct. 8. Avarice.
The phrase is "Better safe than sorry."
Question: #3: The word is spelled "stubborn". #11: The word is spelled "crop". #12: The expression us "Cross that bridge..." #17: The words are spelled "knuckles" and "elbows". Also, it's "on [not over] the knuckles."
These are not right
Scored 18/20
this is rubbish. you have no clue of the english language. disgrace.
Practice makes perfect
Question: #1: Capitalize "June" #8: The expression is "Actions speak louder than words." #14: I believe the intended word was "lofty." #19: In American English, B would be the correct answer. #20: Answer D also grammatically correct. #21: "because of your help." #22: The correct phrasing would be "He came by car." #25: Answer C also correct.
Rome wasn´t built in a day
I think this Is the right saying, too👍
At 0:50, why is the sentence "he does not has a cat at home". It is completely grammatically incorrect. We must use "have" for this sentence.
Thanks for your grammar I got 20 out of 25
Respectfully, a few comments. ++ "had" a printer also correct. ++ "have a cat" is correct; "has" is incorrect. ++ "have fruit" (only one type of fruit) is correct. ++ "I played cricket when I was 15." Also, note: the pronoun "I" and its contractions are always capltalized, regardless of where they appear in the sentence.
Obrigado..!!
All answers were correct, except one.
They have finished their work,you should be more careful!!so, you should not write the pronoun of the singular speaker i,it should be written as (I)!!
I have many objections about many controversial answers,for example:No3:why did we say:She is pulling my leg??instead of she is pulling my hair??,this is number one,number two:How and why did we say about question No6:they stayed in (at)the party at 9:pm/Note that(in) is available in the middle of the sentence,and there is a mistake,the last controversial thing is how many time did you write 23/25?,so the last answer should be solved as following:the patient has been examined by the doctor,as a passive voice sentence!!!these are my objections about these controversial answers,and my hottest greetings and respects with hottest compliments sent to you!!!
Enjoyed, I got 20/20😊
3 wrong except all is right of mine.
I always hate my forced x criminal husband who was not eligible for me
kzread.info/dash/bejne/naKnppiinNrNlaw.htmlsi=4yr2fvukiGUupA62
From my 50-year old experience in teaching English, it's not a good exercise to present a correct spelling together with wrong spellings. The wrong spellings might be stamped and rooted in the learner's memory and can hardly be erased.
Good,19/20