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Vocabulary 4th Bimester Exam Guide
Spelling 4th Bimester Exam Guide

Jeaopardy game

I wonder if you guys have ever seen a game show on the telly called "Jeopardy"...
well now you're going to get a chance to play it!

Choose an amount of money to bet by clicking on it, if you answer the question correctly you'll win the money (or points in this case)! If you answer incorrectly you'll lose the money.

Each column has a different type of question, so see which ones you're good at and stick to them.

Who can get the most money?!?!

Snakes and ladders game

In this game you have to answer correctly to get a chance to roll the dice. If you get one wrong just click on "continue".


Have fun!
Here is another quick quiz, this time testing Adjectives  ending in -ful and -less.

Go to this web page : - ful and - less quiz

Try it out! and comment on your score.

Who can get the best score the first time round?
Hi guys,
we've got a new quiz to test ourselves in
"countable and uncountable nouns".
 Visit this link: Countable vs. uncountable

Answer the quiz and check out how many you can get right!
 Here is a little refresher before you go:


Countable nouns are easy to recognize. They are things that we can count. For example: "pen". We can count pens. We can have one, two, three or more pens. Here are some more countable nouns:
  • dog, cat, animal, man, person
  • bottle, box, litre
  • coin, note, dollar
  • cup, plate, fork
  • table, chair, suitcase, bag
Countable nouns can be singular or plural:
  • My dog is playing.
  • My dogs are hungry.
We can use the indefinite article a/an with countable nouns:
  • A dog is an animal.
Uncountable nouns are substances, concepts etc that we cannot divide into separate elements. We cannot "count" them. For example, we cannot count "milk". We can count "bottles of milk" or "litres of milk", but we cannot count "milk" itself. Here are some more uncountable nouns:
  • music, art, love, happiness
  • advice, information, news
  • furniture, luggage
  • rice, sugar, butter, water
  • electricity, gas, power
  • money, currency
We usually treat uncountable nouns as singular. We use a singular verb. For example:
  • This news is very important.
  • Your luggage looks heavy.
We do not usually use the indefinite article a/an with uncountable nouns. We cannot say "an information" or "a music". But we can say a something of:
  • a piece of news
  • a bottle of water
  • a grain of rice
                                                                                        *Source: www.englishclub.com