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Indefinite Pronouns Exercises

Indefinite pronouns exercises with answers — practise somebody/someone, anybody/anyone, nobody/no one, everybody/everyone, something, anything, nothing, everything, somewhere, anywhere, nowhere, and everywhere through multiple choice and worksheet activities online. 60 questions covering some-/any-/no-/every- compounds, affirmative and negative sentence rules, offers and requests, adjective placement, double negatives, and any vs no vs none for A2–B1 learners. 3 exercise sets with 60 questions (A2 - B1 Level).

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A2Elementary
1

Some-, Any- and No- Compounds: Basic Rules

Indefinite Pronouns Exercises

A2·20 questions·12 min
2

Every- Compounds, Exceptions and Special Patterns

Indefinite Pronouns Exercises

A2·20 questions·15 min
Studies Link Bad Sleep to Cancer Risk
A2 ReadingNEW
126 words·1 min read

Studies Link Bad Sleep to Cancer Risk

Two big American studies say that bad sleep can raise cancer risk in young adults. The studies looked at over 18 million…

AudioVocabulary5 Exercises
Practice Reading
B1Intermediate

Any vs No vs None, Double Negatives and Mixed Practice

Indefinite Pronouns Exercises

B1·20 questions·15 min

There were ___ tickets left when we arrived. The concert was sold out.

Studies Link Bad Sleep to Under-50 Cancer
B1 ReadingNEW
216 words·2 min read

Studies Link Bad Sleep to Under-50 Cancer

Two large American studies say that bad sleep may raise the risk of cancer in adults under 50. The studies were shared a…

AudioVocabulary5 Exercises
Practice Reading

Why practice Indefinite Pronouns exercises?

These Indefinite Pronouns exercises help you master somebody, something, somewhere and all related forms step by step. Start with the core rule — use some- compounds in affirmative sentences, any- compounds in negatives and questions, and no- compounds with affirmative verbs to express negation — at A2 level. Then expand to every- compounds (everybody, everything, everywhere), learn important exceptions like using something in offers and anyone meaning 'it doesn't matter who', and practise special patterns such as something interesting (adjective after the pronoun) and somebody else. Finally, tackle B1-level challenges: the difference between any, no, and none, avoiding double negatives, and mixed practice across all four groups.