Help the amateur chef summarize his disastrous attempt at making a five-tier wedding cake. Choose the correct phrase.
"I won't bore you with the tragic details of the collapsing frosting. ____ that we will be serving store-bought cupcakes instead."
The correct answer is Suffice it to say.
"Suffice it to say" is a fixed expression utilizing the subjunctive mood. It translates roughly to "let it be enough to say." Because it is a frozen subjunctive form, we do not conjugate the verb "suffice" with an -s or -ed ending.
Subjunctive mood
The subjunctive mood is the verb form English uses for hypothetical, counterfactual, or formal-recommendation contexts. The two main patterns are: the present subjunctive in that-clauses after verbs of recommendation/insistence (I suggest that he go, It's essential that she be informed), and the past subjunctive were in counterfactual conditionals (If I were you).
Most subjunctive forms in modern English look identical to the indicative — the visible signs are the missing third-person -s (he go, not he goes) and were with first/third-person singular (if I were). Easy to miss; a strong marker of careful, formal English when used.
Phrase
In grammar, a phrase is a group of words (sometimes a single word) that functions as a single unit in a sentence — but doesn't include a subject + verb pair the way a clause does. Common types: noun phrase (the old red car), verb phrase (has been running), prepositional phrase (on the table), adjective phrase (incredibly tired), adverb phrase (very quickly).
Phrases are the building blocks between individual words and full clauses. Recognising them helps you see how sentences hold together — and where you can break, expand, or rearrange them without losing meaning.
Verb mood
Verb mood is the verb form that signals the speaker's attitude toward the action — whether it's a fact, a command, a hypothetical, or a recommendation. English has four main moods: indicative for statements and questions about facts (She works here), imperative for commands and instructions (Sit down!), subjunctive for hypothetical or formal-recommendation contexts (If I were you; I suggest he go), and conditional for would/could constructions (I would go).
Most English sentences are indicative — that's the default. The other three moods are smaller categories, but each marks a specific shift in meaning that can't be expressed any other way.
Verb
A verb is a word that expresses an action, a state, or an occurrence — the engine of every English sentence. Most verbs have five forms: base (go), -s form (goes), past tense (went), past participle (gone), and -ing form (going). The verb be is the major exception with eight forms; modal verbs like can and must have fewer.
Verbs carry tense (when), aspect (how it unfolds), mood (the speaker's attitude), and voice (active vs passive). Mastering them is foundational — virtually every other grammar topic depends on getting verbs right.
Idiom
An idiom is a fixed expression whose meaning isn't predictable from the words it contains. Kick the bucket doesn't mean physically kicking a bucket — it means to die. Spill the beans means to reveal a secret. It's raining cats and dogs means it's pouring rain. The cultural meaning has fully replaced the literal one.
English is dense with idioms, and recognising them is the difference between feeling lost in a casual conversation and following along easily. They can't usually be translated word-for-word into other languages — they have to be learned as whole units, like vocabulary.
C1 | Advanced
C1 is the advanced level in the CEFR framework, sitting between B2 and C2. At C1 you stop translating in your head and start thinking in English — handling specialised articles outside your field, picking up implicit meaning, and writing structured arguments on complex topics.
Grammatically, C1 means natural use of inversion (Rarely have I seen…), mixed and advanced conditionals, subjunctive forms in formal contexts, and cleft sentences for emphasis. Most university programmes for non-native speakers and many professional certifications set C1 as their entry standard.
Difficulty: Hard
The Hard difficulty tag marks questions and challenges aimed at upper-intermediate to advanced learners — typically B2 and above. Expect interacting rules, edge cases, distractors that look right at first glance, and contexts where the surface meaning and the grammatical answer don't match.
Filter by Hard when you're past the basics and want material that genuinely tests your understanding. These questions catch the gaps your textbook didn't — register-sensitive choices, exception cases, mixed conditionals, the difference between would have been and had been.