Grammar Quiz
194 questions across 13 topics · Free
Practice English grammar with our adaptive multiple-choice quizzes. Get instant feedback on every answer plus a clear explanation of the rule. Available in all CEFR levels from A1 to C2.
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How to use Grammar Quiz to improve faster
Grammar Quiz is built around three principles that actually move the needle for ESL learners: instant feedback, focused topics, and spaced repetition. Here's how to get the most out of it.
Don't rush the explanations. When you get an answer wrong, the explanation is the most valuable part of the quiz — not the score. Read it carefully. The pattern you missed will likely come up again in your next quiz, and seeing it explained cements the rule in a way that just memorizing the correct answer never does.
Repeat the same quiz a few days later. Spaced repetition is one of the most reliable techniques in language learning. Take a quiz today, then come back in three or four days and try it again. Your score will likely improve, and the rules you struggled with the first time will feel more natural.
Pick the right level. If you're scoring above 90% consistently, the level is too easy — move up. If you're scoring below 50%, drop down a level. The sweet spot is around 60–80%: hard enough to challenge you, easy enough that you finish each quiz feeling like you learned something.
Start with topics you find difficult, not the ones you already know. The goal isn't to feel good about your current English — it's to make tomorrow's English better than today's.
What grammar topics we cover
Our Grammar Quiz collection covers the thirteen grammar areas that ESL learners struggle with most. Some are foundational — you'll meet them at A1 and revisit them through C2 with increasing complexity. Others are more advanced and only appear at higher levels.
Articles — the small words (a, an, the, or none) that English speakers use without thinking. If your native language doesn't have articles, this is often the hardest topic to master. We have quizzes from A2 onwards.
Verb tenses — past simple, present perfect, past continuous, and the dozens of subtle distinctions between them. Especially the past simple vs. present perfect distinction, which trips up learners well into C1.
Phrasal verbs — multi-word verbs whose meaning rarely matches the literal sum of their parts. There are hundreds in everyday English, and they're often the difference between sounding natural and sounding like a textbook.
Prepositions — in, on, at, of, for, by. Tiny words that change meaning entirely. Native speakers know them by feel; learners have to study the patterns.
Conditionals — "if I were", "if I had known", "if it rains tomorrow". The four main conditional structures express different relationships between condition and result.
Other topics in our quiz library: modals (can, could, should, must), passive voice, reported speech, relative clauses, comparatives and superlatives, gerunds and infinitives, quantifiers, and word order. Use the picker above to find your quiz by topic, theme, and CEFR level.
Frequently asked questions
Is Grammar Quiz free?
Yes, completely free. No account required, no credit card, no hidden upgrades. Every quiz is fully playable with feedback and explanations.
How long does each quiz take?
Each quiz has up to 15 questions and takes about 5 to 10 minutes, depending on how carefully you read the explanations.
Do I need an account to play?
No. We don't require accounts. Your progress (XP, best streaks) is stored locally in your browser, not on our servers.
Will the questions be the same each time?
No! Questions are randomly drawn from our question bank each session. Try Again gives you a different set of questions every time.
How often do you add new questions?
We're actively expanding the question bank. New topics, themes, and levels are added regularly. Check back weekly for new content.