Complete the weary professor's feedback on a rather chaotic student essay by matching the adverbs to the right gaps.
While your first premise is a widely accepted fact in the scientific community, your final conclusion that time-traveling aliens built the pyramids is utterly ridiculous!
While your first premise is a widely accepted fact in the scientific community...
"Widely accepted" is a standard academic collocation meaning that many people agree with or recognize the fact.
...your final conclusion that time-traveling aliens built the pyramids is utterly ridiculous!
"Utterly" is an intensifier used with extreme adjectives (like ridiculous, impossible, or devastated) to mean "completely" or "absolutely."
Adverb
Adverb vs adjective: adjectives describe things; adverbs describe actions, qualities, or degrees. The mix-up usually happens after action verbs — she sings beautiful (wrong) vs she sings beautifully (right).
An adverb modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb: incredibly fast, she spoke softly, we go often.
Diagnostic: ask what word is this describing? If it's a verb (an action) → adverb. If it's a noun (a thing) → adjective. Exception: linking verbs (be, seem, taste) take adjectives, not adverbs.
Adjective
Adjective vs adverb: both describe things, but adjectives attach to nouns while adverbs attach to verbs. A quick answer (adjective → noun) vs answered quickly (adverb → verb).
An adjective modifies a noun or pronoun — telling you what kind, which one, or how many: a red car, something useful, three heavy boxes.
Diagnostic test: if the word describes a thing or person, use the adjective form. If it describes an action, you need the adverb (-ly) form instead.
Collocations
Collocation vs idiom: both are fixed expressions, but collocations are transparent (you can guess the meaning from the words: heavy rain = a lot of rain), while idioms are opaque (kick the bucket ≠ literally kick anything). Collocations are about which words pair naturally; idioms are about hidden meaning.
Collocations are habitual word combinations: make a decision, strong coffee, take a shower. Grammar allows alternatives, but fluency demands the conventional pairing.
Diagnostic: if the meaning is clear but the combination sounds "off" to native ears (do a mistake instead of make a mistake) — it's a collocation issue.
Vocabulary for B2/Upper Intermediate
B2 vs C1 vocabulary: B2 gives you precision within common topics. C1 adds low-frequency academic/professional vocabulary and full register sensitivity — knowing that commence is formal, start neutral, kick off informal, and choosing appropriately. The jump is from "precise" to "stylistically aware."
B2 vocabulary = ~4,000–6,000 words. Hedging, reporting verbs, idioms, figurative language, register-appropriate synonyms.
Diagnostic: can you write a formal essay with appropriate hedging and varied vocabulary? Yes → B2. Does your formal writing still sound slightly informal or your informal writing oddly stiff? → need C1 register control.
B2 | Upper Intermediate
B2 vs C1: B2 means effective communication on complex topics with some effort. C1 means effortless fluency with precise register control. If you can argue a point but still reach for words and make structural slips under pressure, you're B2.
B2 is the upper-intermediate CEFR level: mixed conditionals, complex passives, reported speech with backshift, participle clauses, and sustained written argument.
Diagnostic: does your writing read as "competent non-native" or "could be native"? The former → B2. The latter → C1.
Medium
Medium vs Easy: Easy has one obviously correct answer and clearly wrong distractors. Medium has one correct answer but plausible distractors — you need to actually know the rule, not just guess from sound.
The Medium tag filters for A2–B1 challenges with realistic difficulty: one rule per question, plausible alternatives, everyday contexts.
Diagnostic: if you're scoring 90%+ on Easy, move here. If you're below 60% on Medium, go back to Easy for that topic. Target 70–80% accuracy for maximum learning.