This morning (Friday, November 8, 2024) I took your "25 Advanced English Grammar Test# quiz". My score? 25/25! SUPERB! Please keep these quizzes coming to me! Larry Carroll
@@EnglishMasterClassthe second and last mistake i Made is 21) "this is the first time I spoke to her". For me this is the first at least now means just clarifying time: yesterday , last month, 3 days ago. I thought so . I had no idea that "this is the first time" meant present perfect . Because "this is" already in the past (even if several second ago). I thought so🤔🤔😂😂
I’m from Japanese.interstingly, most of us; inclode me; can’t speak, write, listen in English. But sometimes we can correct the grammer mistakes. In japanese school, many time is spent for only studing English grammer.
21/25, four years british english in school, 1975-1979, school was not fun! 😂 10 years later I discovered Tolkien, Jordan, Sanderson and many others ❤.
Copilot, the AI by Microsoft, told me, 'This expression emphasizes the first experience from the past to the present,' and 'using "spoke" can seem a bit unnatural'
@@christinedanitha1262 About your question about the “present”, first could you draw a single horizontal line on a piece of paper? You can use the back of unnecessary paper. And please tentatively mark two dots on this line: one representing a past event (a) and one for the current moment (present) (b), as if they show a period from the past to the present. Case #21 in this video is based on the premise that the relationship between “her” and him (the man in Case #21) has been ongoing since they first met and talked. This is what I mean by the time period from dot a(PAST) to dot b(PRESENT) that I had you draw above. When we express something in the past tense, it means it's already over, like “I finished my homework.” But in the case of No. 21, it seems to mean he "spoke" with her “for the first time” within “the time period in which their relationship has been ongoing since they met." I think this concept is unique to English, which we don't even have in my native language, Japanese. Anyway, I guess it would the tense is focused on the time period, not the exact date of the action. Obviously, depending on how the sentence is made, it can be in the past tense. But in sentences starting with “This is the first time,” I was taught the clause right after it usually tends to be in the present perfect tense (according to a certain "A + I" told me). And in another context, the tense of some sentences can be present progressive, past progressive, or perfect progressive. Plus, in cases like “This is the first time” + S + have/has + V(+ O)~ + since/when/if, etc., the clause with "since" etc. is in the past tense or other tences. For example, “This is the first time I've experienced such a big earthquake, although I've been running my store every day since I opened it a year ago.”
I did all right except nr 16. But I think your answer Is wrong. I've never heard "you would better" on the contrary "you had better" - commonly shortened "you'd better" is the correct one
Fun anecdote: high school students from China only have about 3000-5000 words in size of vocabulary, but they can handle at least 20/25 of these questions😂
"This is the first I have spoken to her" could trip people up because it sounds unnatural. A native speaker is expecting to hear, "this is the first time I've spoken to her." The extra syllable sounds odd.
Hi there!!! You are doing a nice job however I don't really understand the sentence 21 !! It's bizarre !! This is the first time I have spoken to her why do you use the present perfect? As far as I'm concerned grammatically it's not accurate !! Please could you explain this to me ?? With all due respect!!
You could use "spoke" if a point of time in the past was mentioned : "I spoke to her last night." Now here it is still true that you spoke to her, but you don't mention when exactly that happened, so you use the present perfect "have spoken". I hope it helps, that's how it was taught at school. The same with " I have not seen this before." But: "I saw it in the newspaper last week."
The question about how grey/gray is written is unfair. I didn't learn English within an American system, so for me the correct way to spell it is grey. I am not supposed to know how Americans write the word.
I'm pumped I nailed 19 questions!🥰
From Japan.
Aw man, 19-25, I was expecting to get everything excellent😔. I am still struggling in English, but I am still learning. Greetings from Mexico.
Keep your chin up; I believe in your potential.
I wonder only one thing . Why 19-25?
@@денислюбченко-н9щ What do you mean?
@@Fernando-yt7ms where did you take this limit? 19-25
That’s not advanced.
During this afternoon (Tuesday, December 31, 2024) I re-took this quiz_ and again I acquired a perfect score! WHOOPEE!
Larry Carroll😃😇🤩🤓💋❤💘💯🙏👀👨🎤🚶♂🌳☘
Thank you so much !
All of these questions are too easy.
25/25, however I'm doubting this is the advanced level. Questions seem too easy for that.
Definitely not advanced. At all.
23/25. but it was a very easy test, maybe B1 level
Very useful quiz❤
This is an intermediate quiz. One or two questions were really advanced.
its easy level if we compare to regular ielts question 😅
This morning (Friday, November 8, 2024) I took your "25 Advanced English Grammar Test# quiz". My score? 25/25! SUPERB!
Please keep these quizzes coming to me! Larry Carroll
Excellent
To the the truth I don't believe that I can't say: I may not drink and drive. Because that makes good sense. 🤷🤔🤔@@EnglishMasterClass
@@EnglishMasterClassthe second and last mistake i Made is 21) "this is the first time I spoke to her". For me this is the first at least now means just clarifying time: yesterday , last month, 3 days ago. I thought so . I had no idea that "this is the first time" meant present perfect . Because "this is" already in the past (even if several second ago). I thought so🤔🤔😂😂
@@денислюбченко-н9щyou could say THAT WAS the 1st time I spoke... THIS IS is about the present, so you need a present verb form..
This is definitely NOT advanced.
18/25,
Taiwanese here
Is it really the advanced English grammar?
I think some questions are really basic.🤔
21/25 from Brazil!
My score is 23/25.
What mistakes?
I got 24/25, I am old now and English is my 3rd language.
18/25 not too bad but not good
20/25
I'm a native English speaker from America, and I didn't know the American spelling of "gray". 😂
Also, on #23, C could also be correct.
Thanks for watching!
I am from Uruguay, tried just the first ten questions and had 9 OK. Not bad for a senior citizen
20-25
I agree 25 but advanced
25-25 Exactly! 👌
21/25❤❤❤
23 out of 25
Where's the one on the thumbnail!?
Pay in cash
with cash also can be used
You can also pay cash or buy something cash.
#16 is subjective. ‘Should’ also works here based on experience. This, of course, is a much deeper subject that I’m not going to get into here.
I’m from Japanese.interstingly, most of us; inclode me; can’t speak, write, listen in English. But sometimes we can correct the grammer mistakes. In japanese school, many time is spent for only studing English grammer.
もしあなたが英語が今一つ上達しなくて、もっと英語を勉強したいならEpopというアプリがおすすめ💗
Androidが対応してるかは分からないけど・・・
あ、私は回しもんじゃないので誤解なく😅
最近私はそれでの勉強もやるようになって、簡潔な言い方を学んでいます😊(まだ1週間も経ってないがww)
ランキングやミッションもあって励みになりますよ♪
7 good.very difficult
Oops 21/25 that's pretty good for someone who just started learning English 💕💪
22/25🎉
On the thumbnail, all are equally acceptable, pay in cash, pay by cash, pay with cash are all correct.
In the US, we pay cash. 🤣
@DonnieChoi Very succinct of you 😉
20 out of 25 despite English is not my main language
21/25, four years british english in school, 1975-1979, school was not fun! 😂
10 years later I discovered Tolkien, Jordan, Sanderson and many others ❤.
The only one I got wrong was the American spelling of the word gray. Personally, I almost always spell it as grey.
@Asiansxsymbol A lot of Americans do now. When I was a little kid, no one did. It's not really a mistake.
20/25, I am a Korean
에혀 ㅂㅅ
Fluency warrior💪
I always pay with (someone else's) credit card. Its a best language-banking chemistry.
Can we use " should" in question 16?
Nope
❤❤❤
easy
3:30
21/25
Keep up the good work!
1:50 6) so sad
Advanced English Sentences??? Well I knew this already when I've learned English for one year
17/25, How miserable I am! Q:5,9,15,16,17,25 are my flase answers. Another 2 answers are lucky and they can't be counted in.
Stay positive; you'll improve next time.
@@EnglishMasterClass Thanks!
20} Help to forget vs. help forget, is there any difference?
In North America, help forget whereas help "TO" forget in Britain
No problem understanding it's like a spelling difference between Theater and Theatre
21-25
Well done!
One more thing !!! When is it relevant to the present tense ?? I mean the present perfect
What exactly do you mean?
20
😳
Made illegitimate use of the funds?? Can't believe i am the only one who didn't know it! The rest is super easy.
Why does the key of no. 21 isn't A. Spoke?
Copilot, the AI by Microsoft, told me, 'This expression emphasizes the first experience from the past to the present,' and 'using "spoke" can seem a bit unnatural'
@自然癒合-sizen-yugou How do we know that sentence is present? I apologize for asking questions again, as my English is not very good. 😓
@@christinedanitha1262
About your question about the “present”, first could you draw a single horizontal line on a piece of paper? You can use the back of unnecessary paper. And please tentatively mark two dots on this line: one representing a past event (a) and one for the current moment (present) (b), as if they show a period from the past to the present.
Case #21 in this video is based on the premise that the relationship between “her” and him (the man in Case #21) has been ongoing since they first met and talked. This is what I mean by the time period from dot a(PAST) to dot b(PRESENT) that I had you draw above.
When we express something in the past tense, it means it's already over, like “I finished my homework.” But in the case of No. 21, it seems to mean he "spoke" with her “for the first time” within “the time period in which their relationship has been ongoing since they met." I think this concept is unique to English, which we don't even have in my native language, Japanese. Anyway, I guess it would the tense is focused on the time period, not the exact date of the action.
Obviously, depending on how the sentence is made, it can be in the past tense. But in sentences starting with “This is the first time,” I was taught the clause right after it usually tends to be in the present perfect tense (according to a certain "A + I" told me). And in another context, the tense of some sentences can be present progressive, past progressive, or perfect progressive. Plus, in cases like “This is the first time” + S + have/has + V(+ O)~ + since/when/if, etc., the clause with "since" etc. is in the past tense or other tences.
For example, “This is the first time I've experienced such a big earthquake, although I've been running my store every day since I opened it a year ago.”
Ohh, wahh thankyou, that's very clear explanation 😅🙏
@@christinedanitha1262
What a relief! Plus it was a learning experience for me too.
Q15: Isn’t it spelled ”worshipping”?
22/25 correct. If it hadn’t been for my husband, my English level wouldn’t have improved that much. I’m grateful.
its not advanced level, max upper intermediate
Not even upper-intermidiate. Some of the questions were very basic.
19/25 😢
I did all right except nr 16. But I think your answer Is wrong. I've never heard "you would better" on the contrary "you had better" - commonly shortened "you'd better" is the correct one
"Would be better"
26th test: - You have drunk? - Do not drive
- You have not drunk? - Just drink.
Fun anecdote: high school students from China only have about 3000-5000 words in size of vocabulary, but they can handle at least 20/25 of these questions😂
Thank for watching!
Вызывает большие сомнения правильность выбора номер 16:had better but would rather. Других конструкций не знаю, а новых не нашла ☹️☹️
"This is the first I have spoken to her" could trip people up because it sounds unnatural. A native speaker is expecting to hear, "this is the first time I've spoken to her." The extra syllable sounds odd.
This is because it is natural to use contractions in spoken English.
Either this quiz is ineffably underwhelming or I'm simply too good 😂 (24/25)
High school test ?
The grammar in Q20 is wrong
Fairy tales "help develop"
you don't need "to", it is a bare infinitive not a to-infinitive
It's not wrong. American English drops the "to" but not standard English.
23/25
9 and 15 were incorrect
Hi there!!! You are doing a nice job however I don't really understand the sentence 21 !! It's bizarre !!
This is the first time I have spoken to her why do you use the present perfect? As far as I'm concerned grammatically it's not accurate !! Please could you explain this to me ?? With all due respect!!
You could use "spoke" if a point of time in the past was mentioned : "I spoke to her last night." Now here it is still true that you spoke to her, but you don't mention when exactly that happened, so you use the present perfect "have spoken". I hope it helps, that's how it was taught at school.
The same with " I have not seen this before." But: "I saw it in the newspaper last week."
Dammit What's the answer to the question in thumbnail?
This quiz was made by a foreigner?
Title correction: “Advanced English Grammar Test (Americans only)”
21/25 - India 🇮🇳
25/25, but I'm an English teacher.😊
22/25, i always had F and D grades in english class back in my middle school
Bravo!
😂
We're doomed. This is third grade.
Thank for watching!
아니 썸네일문제가 없노
Woman with black? If i like her, she MUST BE with me, not with that guy.
The question about how grey/gray is written is unfair. I didn't learn English within an American system, so for me the correct way to spell it is grey. I am not supposed to know how Americans write the word.
Click bait
Abaa
This is not English
It’s too bad for me, I've scored only 14/25
22/25
21/25
21/25.
22/25