Choose the correct form: ‘Look! The children ___ in the rain.’
Choose an option to check your answer.
The action is happening at the moment of speaking.
The present continuous tense is therefore required.
Practice NET English questions with answers and explanations.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The action is happening at the moment of speaking.
The present continuous tense is therefore required.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The waiting continued for a period before a past event.
The past perfect continuous emphasizes the duration.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The sentence refers to life experience without a finished past time.
The present perfect connects the experience to the present.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The train's departure occurred before another completed past action.
The earlier past event takes the past perfect.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The sentence describes an action in progress at a specific past time.
The past continuous tense expresses this meaning.
Choose an option to check your answer.
'Since 2020' marks a starting point continuing to the present.
The present perfect is the standard tense for this duration.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The preparation was completed before the guests' arrival.
The past perfect shows this earlier completed past action.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The action will be in progress at a specified future time.
The future continuous tense expresses this situation.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The degree will be completed before a stated future deadline.
The future perfect is used for such completion.
Choose an option to check your answer.
'Yesterday' is a definite finished past time.
The simple past is required rather than the present perfect.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The temporary action happening today contrasts with a usual habit.
The present continuous expresses the temporary situation.
Choose an option to check your answer.
A habitual action is expressed with the simple present tense.
The third-person singular subject requires 'goes.'