Wish / If only – English Grammar Exercises for B2

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for B2 » Wish / If only – English Grammar Exercises for B2

Exercises:   123456789101112

A Tech Blogger is writing a review/making a video about a highly anticipated, expensive flagship smartphone that suffers from terrible battery life.

Choose the best option (A, B, C, or D) to complete each sentence.

1   “This phone costs $1,200 I really wish it ______ a better battery life to justify that premium price tag.”

     (A) has

     (B) lacked

     (C) had

     (D) having

2   “The standby drain is aggressive. If only the manufacturer ______ this issue in the next software patch.”

     (A) would fix

     (B) will fix

     (C) would ignore

     (D) would to fix

3   “The OLED screen is gorgeous, but I wish the phone ______ down so quickly when playing high-end mobile games.”

     (A) doesn’t heat

     (B) didn’t heated

     (C) wouldn’t cool

     (D) didn’t heat

4   “If only they ______ a fast charger in the box instead of forcing consumers to buy it separately.”

     (A) excluded

     (B) included

     (C) include

     (D) would including

5   “I wish the pre-installed background applications ______ my battery while the device is locked.”

     (A) would drain

     (B) won’t drain

     (C) wouldn’t drain

     (D) wouldn’t drained

6   “It’s frustrating to charge this twice a day. If only the physical battery capacity ______ larger than a measly 3000mAh.”

     (A) were

     (B) weren’t

     (C) is

     (D) be

7   “I genuinely wish the software developers ______ to the community’s feedback regarding this severe battery bug.”

     (A) would listened

     (B) will listen

     (C) would listen

     (D) wouldn’t listen

8   “If only the so-called ‘fast-charging’ feature ______ actually fast. It takes over two hours to reach 100%!”

     (A) wasn’t

     (B) is

     (C) was being

     (D) were

9   “I wish this flagship device ______ a more energy-efficient processor to preserve power.”

     (A) features

     (B) lacked

     (C) featured

     (D) would lacking

10   “If only my screen ______ to maximum brightness automatically every single time I unlock the phone.”

     (A) didn’t jump

     (B) hadn’t jump

     (C) didn’t drop

     (D) doesn’t jump

11   “The camera is phenomenal, but I wish it ______ the battery by 10% after recording just one 4K video.”

     (A) would consume

     (B) wouldn’t consume

     (C) won’t consume

     (D) wouldn’t consumed

12   “If only the tech giant ______ prioritizing extreme thinness over practical battery endurance.”

     (A) would to stop

     (B) would stop

     (C) wouldn’t stop

     (D) stops

13   “I really wish this premium phone ______ reverse wireless charging so I could charge my earbuds on the go.”

     (A) was supported

     (B) support

     (C) supported

     (D) blocked

14   “If only the brand ______ pushing bloatware updates that constantly run in the background.”

     (A) wouldn’t keeping

     (B) won’t keep

     (C) would keep

     (D) wouldn’t keep

15   “I wish I ______ to carry a heavy power bank with me everywhere I travel.”

     (A) didn’t have

     (B) don’t have

     (C) didn’t refuse

     (D) hadn’t have

16   “If only the ‘Ultra Battery Saver’ mode actually ______ a noticeable difference in daily usage.”

     (A) makes

     (B) made

     (C) ruined

     (D) had making

17   “I love the aesthetics, but I wish the back panel ______ made of pure glass, as it traps all the heat and ruins battery longevity.”

     (A) weren’t

     (B) isn’t

     (C) hadn’t be

     (D) were

18   “If only the company ______ a software update soon to address these thermal throttling issues.”

     (A) will release

     (B) would to release

     (C) would release

     (D) would delay

19   “I wish the operating system ______ so heavily reliant on constant cloud syncing.”

     (A) wasn’t be

     (B) were

     (C) weren’t

     (D) isn’t

20   “If only consumers ______ to sacrifice battery life for a slim and sleek phone design.”

     (A) don’t have

     (B) haven’t

     (C) didn’t have

     (D) had

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Wish + Past Simple (had) is used to express a desire for a present situation or feature to be different (wishing the phone had better battery).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) is a Common Mistake (using Present Simple); (D) is a Structural Error; (B) is a Meaning Trap (wishing it “lacked” battery life contradicts the review).

2  (A)

  • Why it is correct (Key): If only + someone + would + V is used to express a strong desire for someone (the manufacturer) to take a future action (fix the issue).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) is a Common Mistake (using Future Simple “will”); (D) is a Structural Error (adding “to” after would); (C) is a Meaning Trap (wishing they would “ignore” it is illogical).

3  (D)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Negative Past Simple expresses a wish that the phone currently did not behave this way (heating up).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) is a Common Mistake (Present Simple); (B) is a Structural Error (didn’t + past tense verb); (C) is a Meaning Trap.

4  (B)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Past Simple (included) reflects a wish for a feature that is currently missing from the box.
  • Distractor Analysis: (C) is a Common Mistake; (D) is a Structural Error; (A) is a Meaning Trap (wishing they “excluded” it).

5  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Wishing for an annoying, repeated action (apps draining battery) to stop. Wouldn’t + V is perfect for complaining about dynamic behaviors.
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) is a Common Mistake (won’t); (D) is a Structural Error; (A) is a Meaning Trap (wishing they would drain it).

6  (A)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Subjunctive were is used for unreal present states.
  • Distractor Analysis: (C) is a Common Mistake; (D) is a Structural Error (bare infinitive without auxiliary); (B) is a Meaning Trap.

7  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Urging the developers to change their current behavior and listen.
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) is a Common Mistake; (A) is a Structural Error; (D) is a Meaning Trap.

8  (D)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Subjunctive were expressing a wish contrary to the present fact (the charging is not fast).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) is a Common Mistake; (C) is a Structural Error; (A) is a Meaning Trap (wishing it wasn’t fast).

9  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Past Simple (featured) for a hypothetical present feature.
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) is a Common Mistake; (D) is a Structural Error; (B) is a Meaning Trap.

10  (A)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Negative Past Simple expressing a wish against a current annoying habit of the phone.
  • Distractor Analysis: (D) is a Common Mistake; (B) is a Structural Error; (C) is a Meaning Trap (wishing it “didn’t drop” implies wanting it to stay bright).

11  (B)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Complaining about a specific, annoying action the camera does (consuming battery).
  • Distractor Analysis: (C) is a Common Mistake; (D) is a Structural Error; (A) is a Meaning Trap.

12  (B)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Strongly urging the tech giant to cease a bad corporate habit.
  • Distractor Analysis: (D) is a Common Mistake; (A) is a Structural Error; (C) is a Meaning Trap (wishing they wouldn’t stop doing it).

13  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Past Simple (supported) indicating a wish for a missing present capability.
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) is a Common Mistake; (A) is a Structural Error (passive voice is incorrect here); (D) is a Meaning Trap.

14  (D)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Wishing the brand would stop an annoying recurring action (pushing bloatware).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) is a Common Mistake; (A) is a Structural Error; (C) is a Meaning Trap.

15  (A)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Expressing a wish against a current obligation (having to carry a power bank).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) is a Common Mistake; (D) is a Structural Error (“hadn’t have” is invalid); (C) is a Meaning Trap.

16  (B)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Past Simple (made) reflecting an unreal present outcome.
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) is a Common Mistake; (D) is a Structural Error; (C) is a Meaning Trap.

17  (A)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Subjunctive weren’t expressing a wish against the current design material.
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) is a Common Mistake; (C) is a Structural Error; (D) is a Meaning Trap.

18  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Urging the company to take a specific future action (release an update).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) is a Common Mistake (will); (B) is a Structural Error; (D) is a Meaning Trap (wishing they would “delay” the update).

19  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Subjunctive weren’t for an unreal present state of the operating system.
  • Distractor Analysis: (D) is a Common Mistake; (A) is a Structural Error; (B) is a Meaning Trap.

20  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): Negative Past Simple expressing a wish against a current reality for consumers.
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) is a Common Mistake; (B) is a Structural Error; (D) is a Meaning Trap.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER
  1. Two Ways to Review: When reviewing tech products, you will use two main structures. Use Wish + Past Simple to talk about hardware or built-in features you wish the phone currently had (e.g., I wish it had a bigger battery). Use Wish + would + Verb to complain about dynamic software behaviors or to demand that the manufacturer take action/release an update (e.g., I wish they would fix this bug).
  2. The “Will” Mistake: Even though you are talking about future updates (like a software patch), you cannot use “will” after wish/if only. A common B2 mistake is saying If only they will release an update. Always shift “will” to “would”.
  3. The Academic Subjunctive: When wishing a state were different (using the verb “to be”), use were instead of was for all subjects, even singular nouns like “the battery capacity” or “the back panel” (e.g., I wish the battery capacity were larger).
  4. Meaning Traps in Tech Contexts: Pay close attention to tech vocabulary. Examiners will often use correct grammar but insert a verb that completely contradicts a tech reviewer’s logic—such as wishing the phone lacked a processor, or wishing the company would ignore user feedback. Read the context carefully!

Exercises:   123456789101112

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