StudyFiWiki
WikiWeb app
StudyFi

AI study materials for every student. Summaries, flashcards, tests, podcasts and mindmaps.

Study materials

  • Wiki
  • Web app
  • Sign up for free
  • About StudyFi

Legal

  • Terms of service
  • GDPR
  • Contact
Download on
App Store
Download on
Google Play
© 2026 StudyFi s.r.o.Built with AI for students
Wiki📚 English GrammarFuture Tense and Conditional SentencesKnowledge test

Test on Future Tense and Conditional Sentences

Master Future Tense & Conditional Sentences: A Guide

SummaryKnowledge testFlashcardsPodcastMindmap
Question 1 of 50%

Is it accurate that questions about future actions can be formed by starting the sentence with 'Will' followed by the subject?

Test: English grammar and exercises (Future will), English grammar — first conditional and time clauses

20 questions

Question 1: Is it accurate that questions about future actions can be formed by starting the sentence with 'Will' followed by the subject?

A. Ano

B. Ne

Explanation: Exercise 3 provides examples such as 'Will you ever live in another country?' and 'Will you go to college after school?', which show that questions about future actions can begin with 'Will' followed by the subject.

Question 2: Exercise 4 in the study materials involves matching completed answers, which use 'will', with questions from Exercise 3.

A. Ano

B. Ne

Explanation: The instructions for Exercise 4 explicitly state: 'Complete the answers. Use will and the verbs in the list. Then match them with the questions in Exercise 3.' This directly confirms that Exercise 4 requires matching answers using 'will' with questions from Exercise 3.

Question 3: Complete the answer using the correct future form based on the study materials provided:"Yes, I think so. But actually, I'm sure I ____________ married before I'm 30."

A. will get

B. won't get

C. will have

D. won't do

Explanation: According to Exercise 4 in the study materials, the correct completion for this sentence is 'won't get', using 'will' in the negative form with the verb 'get' from the provided list, to match the nuance 'I'm sure I won't get married before I'm 30'.

Question 4: Arrange the following words to form a grammatically correct question using 'will' for a future prediction: you / I / to / know / where / find / Will

A. Will I know where to find you?

B. Where will I know to find you?

C. I will know where to find you?

D. Will find you where to know I?

Explanation: The correct order for a 'will' question, as demonstrated in the study materials (e.g., 'Will you finish your homework soon?'), typically places 'Will' at the beginning, followed by the subject ('I'), and then the main verb ('know'). The dependent clause 'where to find you' follows this structure.

Question 5: In first conditional sentences used for future predictions, the 'if clause' contains 'will' or 'won't'.

A. Ano

B. Ne

Explanation: The study materials explicitly state: 'We use the simple present in the if clause and will / won't in the result clause. We never use will / won't in the if clause.' Therefore, the 'if clause' does not contain 'will' or 'won't'.

Other materials

SummaryKnowledge testFlashcardsPodcastMindmap
← Back to topic