1. Grammar in Use. Choose the correct answer. 1. They ... John yesterday.
A) met
B) have met
C) meeted
D) has met
2. If you ___ tickets we ___ Paris.
A) will buy / shall visit
B) bought / visit
C) buys / visited
D) buy / shall visit
3. Mary ... Paris for London in 2013.
A) has left
B) have left
C) left
D) leaved
4. The bag is not … for me to buy.
A) enough cheap
B) cheap enough
C) too cheap
D) cheap too
5. I haven’t done it ... .
A) yet
B) already
C) just
D) since
6. You put … in your soup. Sorry, I won’t eat it.
A) enough onions
B) onions enough
C) too onions
D) too many onions
7. She’s ... the letter. She ... it yesterday.
A) wrote / wrote
B) written / written
C) wrote / written
D) written / wrote
8. If my friend ___ to our town next year I ___ him the sights of the city.
A) shall come / show
B) comes / shall show
C) has come / is showing
D) is coming / will show
A) met
B) have met
C) meeted
D) has met
The correct answer is A) met. This is because the sentence is in the past simple tense, and "met" is the correct past form of the verb "to meet".
2. If you ___ tickets we ___ Paris.
A) will buy / shall visit
B) bought / visit
C) buys / visited
D) buy / shall visit
The correct answer is D) buy / shall visit. This is a conditional sentence in the second conditional form, which expresses a hypothetical situation. The correct structure is "If + subject + present simple verb, subject + shall/will + base form of the verb". Therefore, "buy" and "shall visit" are the correct choices.
3. Mary ... Paris for London in 2013.
A) has left
B) have left
C) left
D) leaved
The correct answer is C) left. This is because the sentence is in the past simple tense, and "left" is the correct past form of the verb "to leave".
4. The bag is not … for me to buy.
A) enough cheap
B) cheap enough
C) too cheap
D) cheap too
The correct answer is B) cheap enough. This is because the adjective "cheap" should be followed by the word "enough" to indicate sufficiency. The correct word order is "adjective + enough".
5. I haven’t done it ... .
A) yet
B) already
C) just
D) since
The correct answer is A) yet. This word is used to indicate that an action has not happened up to the present moment.
6. You put … in your soup. Sorry, I won’t eat it.
A) enough onions
B) onions enough
C) too onions
D) too many onions
The correct answer is D) too many onions. "Too many" is used to indicate an excessive amount of something. In this case, there are more onions than desired in the soup.
7. She’s ... the letter. She ... it yesterday.
A) wrote / wrote
B) written / written
C) wrote / written
D) written / wrote
The correct answer is C) wrote / written. This is because the first action is in the present simple tense (she's = she is) and the second action is in the past simple tense (wrote). The verb "to write" follows the pattern "write/writes/wrote/written".
8. If my friend ___ to our town next year I ___ him the sights of the city.
A) shall come / show
B) comes / shall show
C) has come / is showing
D) is coming / will show
The correct answer is B) comes / shall show. This is a conditional sentence in the first conditional form, which expresses a possible future situation. The correct structure is "If + subject + present simple verb, subject + shall/will + base form of the verb". Therefore, "comes" and "shall show" are the correct choices.