Sharpen your English grammar with quick, focused quizzes on rules, usage, and common errors. Practice parts of speech, sentence structure, and punctuation so you can write and speak more clearly and confidently.

Sharpen your grammar by choosing the correct verb tense and aspect in real sentences. This mixed-difficulty quiz helps you spot time cues, match actions to context, and avoid common tense-aspect mix-ups. Pick how many questions you want and play at your own pace.

Test your grammar instincts by spotting parts of speech inside real sentences. You’ll identify nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, and interjections in context. Choose your preferred question count and a difficulty level to match your current skill.

Sharpen your grammar skills by spotting the subject and predicate in a wide mix of sentences. You’ll practice identifying who or what the sentence is about and what is being said about it. Choose your preferred question count and difficulty, then learn from patterns across easy, medium, and tricky examples.
There are 3 quizzes with 466 questions total.
No. Each question has 4 options and there is no timer, so you can work at your own pace.
They focus on core rules and common errors, including parts of speech, sentence structure, punctuation, and usage.
Yes. The category includes a mix of difficulty and question counts, so you can progress from basics to more challenging sets.
Take a quiz, review any missed rules, then retake similar questions to reinforce patterns and reduce repeated mistakes.
These Grammar quizzes help you spot and fix common mistakes in everyday English, from agreement and tense consistency to punctuation and word choice.
You’ll also build confidence with parts of speech, sentence structure, and standard usage that comes up in school, exams, and professional writing.
Each question is multiple-choice with 4 options, and there’s no timer—so you can focus on accuracy and learning from patterns.
Quizzes vary in length and difficulty across the category, letting you start with fundamentals and move toward more mixed, exam-style questions as you improve.
English grammar has been shaped by centuries of change, including strong influences from Latin, French, and Germanic roots—one reason “rules” sometimes have exceptions and competing style preferences.