No One Can Score a Perfect 11/11 In This Basic Grammar Drill

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Almost no one can score at perfect 11/11 in this basic grammar drill, can you at least pass the quiz by scoring 7 or more? It will test your mastery of the English language in a fun and challenging grammar drill. Try it out to find out!

Can You Score Pass This Basic Grammar Drill

 

Results

Congratulations You Passed!

Grammar Drill Passed

You have successfully demonstrated your mastery of the fundamental concepts of grammar. From sentence structure and punctuation to different parts of speech, you have a great understanding of important grammar aspects.

Sorry You Failed this Grammar Test

Failed Grammar Drill

You have failed to show that you understand the fundamental concepts of grammar. You probably read the questions too fast, or have not paid enough attention to the right choices. Try it again, maybe you’ll pass it this time with a little bit of review.

#1. Fill in the blank with the correct conjunction: “I wanted to go out __________ it was raining.”

#2. Select the proper pronoun: “Maria and __________ went to the store.”

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#3. Choose the sentence with correct comma usage:

#4. Which sentence is grammatically correct?

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#5. Which sentence is written in the passive voice?

#6. Which punctuation is missing? “Cant wait to see you!”

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#7. Select the adverbs in the following sentence: “He speaks very clearly.”

Select all that apply:

#8. Identify the adjective in this sentence: “The tall man walked quickly.”

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#9. What type of word is ‘under’ in the sentence “The cat hid under the table”?

#10. Which word is a noun in the following sentence? “The dog barked loudly at the stranger.”

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#11. Choose the correct form of the verb: “She ____________ a lot of books.”

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About the Quiz

The quiz above is just a fun and engaging way to assess your grammar skills through a simple test. It includes parts of speech, punctuation, and sentence structure. Passing the exam means you have demonstrated your mastery of fundamental aspects of grammar in the English language.

Related: No One Can Get 100% In This General Knowledge Test From 1935

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Christian Ashford

Christian Ashford is a writer and researcher at Webpreneurships.com, a tech, information, and media company dedicated to publishing educational, informational, and curiosity-driven content. With a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science degree and experience in academic research, he combines technical expertise with a passion for exploring knowledge about the world and beyond. For over 13 years, Christian has researched, written, and edited hundreds of articles on science, history, business, technology, human origins, and more.

9 thoughts on “No One Can Score a Perfect 11/11 In This Basic Grammar Drill”

  1. You need to check your markscheme. “Very” is never an adverb. It is a modifier of an adjective or adverb. The adverb in that sentence is “ clearly”

    Reply
  2. Very is a modifier, but since it modifies an adverb, it too becomes an adverb: therefore, very and clearly are both adverbs. If you diagrammed that sentence, clearly would be under speaks as an adverb, but very would be under clearly also as an adverb.

    Reply
  3. I was under the apparently mistaken impression that 11/11 equals 100%. Since all 11 answers were correct as marked by YOU, how did I manage to get 10/11? New math, perhaps?

    Reply

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