subject

Tenses

English Language

Tenses starts at 3 and continues till grade 10. QuestionsToday has an evolving set of questions to continuously challenge students so that their knowledge grows in Tenses. How you perform is determined by your score and the time you take. When you play a quiz, your answers are evaluated in concept instead of actual words and definitions used.
See sample questions for grade 7
Identify the tense: 'He will be working at 10 AM tomorrow.'
Identify the tense: 'I will have finished my work by 5 PM.'
Identify the tense: 'She had eaten before she arrived.'
Identify the tense: 'They are playing chess.'
Identify the tense: 'We will have been living here for five years by next month.'
Which tense is used for a habitual action?
Which tense is used to describe a completed action in the past?
Which tense is used to describe an action that was completed before another action in the past?
Choose the correct past tense form of the verb 'run': (1) runned (2) ran (3) running (4) runs
Which of the following is the correct past perfect continuous tense? (1) She had been working. (2) She has been working. (3) She will have been working. (4) She is working.
Which of the following is the correct present perfect tense form of 'go'? (1) went (2) gone (3) have gone (4) going
Which of the following is the correct simple past tense form of 'eat'? (1) eated (2) ate (3) eaten (4) eating
Choose the correct form: He ______ (sleep) when the phone rang.
Choose the correct form: I ______ (finish) my homework before you arrived.
Choose the correct form: She ______ (write) a letter when I called her.
Choose the correct form: They ______ (travel) to Paris next week.
True or False: 'I will be eating dinner at 7 PM' is in the future continuous tense.
True or False: The future perfect tense is used to show that an action will be completed before a certain time in the future.
True or False: The present perfect tense is used to describe an action that happened at an unspecified time before now.
True or False: The sentence 'He is eating lunch now' is in the present simple tense.