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Complete the roommate's defense of their terrible furniture choice.

"I admit that the neon green velvet sofa is a crime against interior design. It is incredibly comfortable, _____."

The correct answer is though.

In conversational English, though can be used as an adverb at the very end of a sentence to mean "however." Although and even though are strictly conjunctions and must appear at the beginning of the clause they introduce; they cannot be placed at the end of a sentence.

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Adverb

An adverb modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb — adding information about how, when, where, how often, or to what degree something happens: she sings beautifully, unbelievably fast, we go there often. Many adverbs end in -ly, but plenty don't (well, fast, hard, almost).

Adverbs matter because they're how you add nuance without piling on extra clauses. Used well, a single adverb can sharpen a vague sentence (she answeredshe answered honestly), but misplace one and the meaning drifts in a way native speakers immediately notice.

Conjunction

A conjunction is a word that connects other words, phrases, or clauses. English has two main types: coordinating conjunctions join units of equal weight (and, but, or, so, yet, for, nor — the FANBOYS), while subordinating conjunctions introduce dependent clauses (because, although, if, when, while, since, unless).

Conjunctions are how you build compound and complex sentences instead of stacking short ones. The choice of conjunction signals the relationship between the ideas — addition, contrast, cause, condition, time — so picking the right one shapes the whole meaning.

Sentence and structures

The Sentence and structures tag is the umbrella for everything about how words combine in English: sentences, clauses, phrases, and the syntactic relations between them. Topics gathered here include word order, inversion, supplementation, coordination, negation, indirect speech, and deixis and anaphora.

Browse here when you're past parts-of-speech basics and want to understand how full sentences are assembled — the level where punctuation, comma rules, sentence variety, and clause linking all start making sense as one system.

Word Order

Word order is the sequence in which words appear in a sentence. English is fundamentally an SVO language — subject, verb, object (Kate loves Mark). The order of adjectives, adverbs, and modifiers within a noun phrase also follows fixed patterns (a small red wooden box, not a wooden red small box).

In English, word order carries grammatical meaning — change the order and you change the sentence. The dog bit the man and The man bit the dog differ only in word order, but the meaning flips entirely.

Sentence

A sentence is the largest grammatical unit in writing — one or more clauses expressing a complete thought, ending with a period, question mark, or exclamation mark. English sentences come in four structural types: simple (one independent clause), compound (two or more independent clauses joined), complex (independent + dependent clause), and compound-complex (multiple independent + dependent clauses).

Mastering sentence types is what lets you vary rhythm in writing. All-simple sentences read as choppy; all-complex sentences read as dense. Mixing them is what makes prose breathe.

Humor

The Humor tag marks questions and challenges where the author has tried — subjectively, deliberately — to make the practice itself entertaining. Expect characters, scenarios, and storylines that play with absurdity: zombies, alien tourists, a chef's disaster, a roommate's complaint. The grammar rule is real; the wrapping isn't.

Humor matters because grammar drills are forgettable. Tying a rule to a story your brain wants to keep makes it stick. Filter by Humor when motivation is what you're short on, not study time.

B2 | Upper Intermediate

B2 is the upper-intermediate level in the CEFR framework, sitting between B1 and C1. At B2 you can read editorials, follow most TED talks without subtitles, and hold extended conversations on abstract topics — including topics outside your everyday life.

Grammatically, B2 means flexible control of mixed conditionals, passive voice across tenses, reported speech with proper backshifting, and participle clauses. B2 is the standard target for university entrance exams (IELTS 5.5–6.5, TOEFL 87–109) and most skilled-migration thresholds — knowing whether you're there shapes your study plan.

Difficulty: Medium

The Medium difficulty tag marks questions and challenges in the middle of the difficulty range — typically suitable for A2 to B1 learners. Expect a single rule with realistic distractors, longer sentences, and contexts where you have to think before answering rather than reading off the obvious choice.

Filter by Medium when you're past the absolute basics and ready to consolidate. It's the level where most lasting progress happens — easy enough that you can finish without exhausting concentration, hard enough that getting it right means you've actually understood.