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English Grammar Essentials Quiz

Test your medium-level understanding of common English grammar rules from English Corner, focusing on negation, verb usage, and comparatives.

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Sing with Hanna!
Sing with Hanna!
Published March 24, 2026

Quiz Questions & Answers

Review every prompt, the correct responses, and helpful context to prep for your own run-through.

Question 1: Which sentence correctly uses negation for a third-person singular subject in the present simple tense?

She not likes apples.

She do not like apples.

She don't like apples.

She doesn't like apples.

Question 2: In expressing agreement, which option follows the rule for stative verbs that aren't used in the continuous form?

I am agree with the plan.

I agree with the plan.

I am agreeing with the plan.

I agreeing with the plan.

Question 3: For comparing heights, which sentence applies the correct comparative form for a one-syllable adjective?

He is most tall than his brother.

He taller more than his brother.

He is taller than his brother.

He is more taller than his brother.

Question 4: Why is 'She don't like coffee' considered a common grammar myth that it's acceptable in all informal speech?

It's fine in dialects but not standard English.

Negation always uses 'do not' fully.

It's incorrect due to subject-verb agreement requiring 'doesn't' for 'she'.

It's correct because 'don't' works for everyone.

Question 5: In a scenario where you're discussing opinions, which response correctly applies the verb 'agree' without unnecessary auxiliary forms?

Yes, I am agreeing too.

Yes, agreeing with you.

Yes, I am agree too.

Yes, I agree too.

Question 6: What is the consequence of using 'more taller' in a comparison, and which corrected version avoids it?

It's emphatic; keep 'more taller'.

It sounds advanced; use 'most taller'.

Comparisons need 'more' always; use 'more tall'.

It creates redundancy; use 'taller'.

Question 7: To define the rule from the material, how should negation work for subjects like 'he' or 'she' in present simple?

Use 'don't' for all subjects.

Use 'does nots' for emphasis.

Use 'doesn't' for third-person singular.

Omit the auxiliary entirely.

Question 8: Evaluating a sentence in a story: 'The boy is more taller than the tree.' Which revision busts the myth that 'more' enhances all comparisons?

The boy more tall than the tree.

The boy is taller than the tree.

The boy is taller more than the tree.

The boy is most taller than the tree.

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