A2

Each / Every / All Exercises PDFSet 2: All: Plural Nouns, Uncountable Nouns and All Of

20 questions·12 min·Answers included·Explanations included

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Preview: Questions

Fill in the blank with the correct option.

1.___ the students passed the exam.

a) Allb) Everyc) Eachd) Both

2.She spent ___ day studying for the test — from morning to evening.

a) everyb) eachc) muchd) all

3.___ of the milk has gone bad.

a) Everyb) Allc) Eachd) Whole

4.___ of us agree that the plan is good.

a) Everyb) Wholec) Alld) Much

5.I visit my grandmother almost ___ Sunday.

a) everyb) allc) eachd) a

... and 15 more questions in the PDF

Preview: Answers

1.All

2.all

3.All

4.All

5.every

... and 15 more answers in the PDF

Preview: Explanations

1."All"(a)

'All' is followed by 'the' + plural noun. 'All the students' refers to the entire group. 'Every' and 'each' need a singular noun ('every student').

2."all"(d)

'All day' means the whole day from start to finish — the entire duration. 'From morning to evening' confirms we mean the whole of one day, not a daily habit.

3."All"(b)

'All of the milk' — 'all of' is used before determiners (the, my, this, etc.) + noun. Milk is uncountable, so 'every' and 'each' cannot be used.

4."All"(c)

'All of us agree' — 'all of' + pronoun is the standard way to say 'everyone in our group'. 'Every' cannot be followed by 'of' directly.

5."every"(a)

'Almost every Sunday' — 'almost' can modify 'every' but not 'each'. This means 'on nearly all Sundays'. 'All Sunday' would mean the whole duration of one Sunday.

... and 15 more explanations in the PDF

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