Grammar Exercises
Browse 12,851+ interactive grammar questions across 52 topic hubs. Filter by CEFR level and jump straight to the right practice.
A1 Grammar Topics
13 topics match A1. Exact-level hubs appear first, then broader ranges.
Verb To Be
11 exercises and 220 questions focused on Verb To Be, for A1 learners.
There Is / There Are Exercises
Master there is / there are with 100 practice questions across 5 beginner-friendly exercises
Verb To Have
4 exercises and 80 questions focused on Verb To Have, for A1-A2 learners.
Possessives
9 exercises and 180 questions focused on Possessives, for A1-B1 learners.
Present Simple
Learn how to use the present simple tense for habits, routines, and general truths
Pronouns
8 exercises and 160 questions focused on Pronouns, for A1-B1 learners.
-ed vs -ing Adjectives
Practise adjectives like bored and boring, interested and interesting, excited and exciting. Learn when -ed describes a feeling and when -ing describes the cause.
Articles
12 exercises and 240 questions focused on Articles, for A1-B2 learners.
Past Simple
Learn how to talk about completed actions in the past using the past simple tense
Present Continuous
14 exercises and 285 questions focused on Present Continuous, for A1-B2 learners.
Quantifiers
14 exercises and 285 questions focused on Quantifiers, for A1-B2 learners.
Subject Verb Agreement
16 exercises and 320 questions focused on Subject Verb Agreement, for A1-B2 learners.
Wh- Question Words & Question Order Exercises
Master question formation with who, what, where, when, why, how, which, and whose. Practise correct word order for yes/no questions, wh-questions, subject questions, and embedded questions.
Need help choosing a level?
Take the free 30-question level test, get a CEFR estimate, then come back here with a clearer starting point.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I filter grammar exercises by level?
Yes. Use the A1-C2 chips above to narrow the topic list to grammar hubs that include practice for that level.
Why do some topics appear in more than one level?
Many grammar areas stretch across multiple CEFR bands. A topic may start with simpler forms at A2 and then expand into more advanced uses at B1 or B2.
What should I do if I do not know my level?
Start with the level test. It gives you a quick CEFR estimate and makes it easier to choose the right grammar practice without guessing.