HomeGrammarPresent Simple ExercisesPresent Simple Exercise Types Demo

Present Simple Exercise Types Demo

A1-A2 Level

This page lets you try five different exercise formats for learning the present simple: multiple choice, cloze (fill the gap in a text), matching, word ordering, and error correction. Each format practises the same grammar rules in a different way, which helps your brain learn and remember the patterns more effectively. Trying all five types helps you discover which format works best for your learning style.

Multiple choice builds recognition — you see the correct form alongside wrong ones and learn to tell the difference. Cloze exercises test your grammar in connected text. Matching trains quick thinking by linking questions to answers. Word ordering helps you understand English sentence structure. Error correction develops your proofreading skills by asking you to find and fix mistakes. Research shows that using different exercise types leads to better long-term learning than repeating just one type. This demo gives you a taste of each format so you can focus your practice on the areas where you need the most help.

Quick Rule

present simple: positive + negative + question forms across all exercise types

  • 1.She ___ (play) tennis every Saturday. → plays (fill the gap — third person)
  • 2.Do / Does they live in Spain? → Do (multiple choice — they needs Do)
  • 3.he / always / is / late → He is always late. (word ordering — adverb after be)
  • 4.✗ She don't eat meat. → ✓ She doesn't eat meat. (error correction)
  • 5.Where does he work? → In a hospital. (matching — place answer)
HomeGrammarPresent Simple Demo

Present Simple: Exercise Types

Practise present simple with 5 different exercise formats

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Choose Exercise Type

Multiple Choice

Select the correct answer from 4 options

Present Simple Key Points

Third Person Singular

He/She/It + verb + s/es

works, goes, watches

Questions

Do/Does + subject + base verb?

Does she work? Do they live...?

Negatives

Subject + don't/doesn't + base verb

She doesn't like... (NOT doesn't likes)