Search Exercises

Search for grammar exercises by topic, category, or keyword

There is / There are (Present) Exercises

There is / There are (there's / there are) grammar exercises with answers for English learners — practise affirmative, negative, and question forms online, master subject-verb agreement with singular, plural, and uncountable nouns, and build confidence with quantifiers like some, any, much, many, and a lot of. 5 exercise sets with 100 questions (Pre-A1 - A2 Level).

There is / There are (Present) exercises: choose your exercise set

Start with Multiple Choice to build confidence with There is / There are (Present) exercises, or try Worksheet to practice all questions on one page.

Prefer to read first? Learn There is / There are (Present)

A1Beginner
1

There is & There are: Affirmative

There is / There are (Present) Exercises

A1·20 questions·12 min
2

Negative & Questions: Isn't / Aren't / Is there? / Are there?

There is / There are (Present) Exercises

A1·20 questions·12 min
Paris Fire: People Leave Homes
A1 ReadingNEW
86 words·1 min read

Paris Fire: People Leave Homes

A big fire burned a forest near Paris. It started on Sunday afternoon. People had to leave about 900 homes. No one was h…

AudioVocabulary5 Exercises
Practice Reading
A2Elementary
3

Quantifiers: some, any, much, many, a lot of

There is / There are (Present) Exercises

A2·20 questions·15 min

Mixed Practice & There is vs. It is

There is / There are (Present) Exercises

A2·20 questions·15 min

___ a lot of noise outside. I can't sleep.

Paris Fire Makes People Leave Homes
A2 ReadingNEW
122 words·1 min read

Paris Fire Makes People Leave Homes

A big fire has burned a forest near Paris. It is the Fontainebleau forest. The fire started on Sunday afternoon. People …

AudioVocabulary5 Exercises
Practice Reading

Why practice There is / There are (Present) exercises?

These online grammar exercises help you master the 'there is / there are' structure from the ground up. Start with basic affirmative sentences at A1 level, including the contraction 'there's', then learn to make negatives and questions with isn't/aren't and Is there/Are there. At A2 level, you'll combine 'there is/are' with quantifiers like some, any, much, many, and a lot of, and learn to tell apart 'there is' and 'it is' — two structures that ESL learners often confuse.