@Englishtiip 👉 “The book is leaning against the wall.”
“Against” is used when something is touching and supported by another surface.
Example:-
•“He stood against the door.”
The correct answer is: B) against ✅
Quick tip:
•Lean against = supported by something
•Not on/at/with ❌
@ShaykhSulaiman That footage is definitely getting a lot of attention because people usually associate Iranian missile launches with underground mountain bases.
👉 “I will help you after I finish my work.”
•After after/when/before, we use the present simple tense for future time.
Example:-
•“I’ll go out when I finish my homework.”
The correct answer is: A) finish ✅
Quick tip:
•Future sentence + time word (after/when/before) → present simple
•Not “will finish” ❌
👉 “I will help you after I finish my work.”
•In time clauses with after, when, before, we use present simple (not future).
Example:-
•“I’ll call you when I reach home.”
The correct answer is: A) finish ✅
Quick tip:
•After/when/before + present simple (even for future meaning)
@Englishgr4u 👉 “She suggested trying a different approach.”
Explanation:
•After suggest, we use verb + ing (gerund).
Example:-
•“He suggested going early.”
•“They suggested taking a break.”
The correct answer is: B) trying ✅
Quick tip:
•Suggest + verb-ing
•Not “to + verb” ❌
👉 “Seldom am I angry.”
When a sentence starts with a negative adverb (like seldom, rarely, never), we use inversion (verb comes before the subject).
Example:-
•“Never have I seen this.”
•“Rarely do they go out.”
The correct answer is: A) am ✅
Quick tip:
•Seldom/Rarely/Never + auxiliary verb + subject