Present Simple (am/is/are, Do/Does) – Grammar Exercises for A1

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for A1 » Simple Present Tense – English Grammar Exercises for A1

Exercises:   123456789101112

You are walking down the street in your city. A foreign tourist stops you to ask for directions to the main train station. You explain the route step-by-step.

Read the conversation below and choose the best option (A, B, or C) to complete each blank.

Tourist:   Excuse me, (1) _____ you speak English?

              (A) Are

              (B) Do

              (C) Does

Local:   Yes, I (2) _____. How can I help you today?

              (A) do

              (B) am

              (C) are

Tourist:   I (3) _____ lost. Where is the main train station, please?

              (A) is

              (B) are

              (C) am

Local:   Don’t worry. It (4) _____ not very far from here.

              (A) is

              (B) does

              (C) are

Local:   First, you (5) _____ straight down this street for 200 meters.

              (A) go

              (B) goes

              (C) are go

Tourist:   (6) _____ I need to take a bus?

              (A) Am

              (B) Does

              (C) Do

Local:   No, you (7) _____. You can easily walk there.

              (A) don’t

              (B) aren’t

              (C) doesn’t

Local:   You (8) _____ past the big supermarket on your left.

              (A) walks

              (B) walk

              (C) are walk

Local:   The supermarket (9) _____ a large red sign, so it is easy to see.

              (A) have

              (B) haves

              (C) has

Local:   After that, you (10) _____ a large green park.

              (A) see

              (B) sees

              (C) seeing

Local:   The park (11) _____ very beautiful, but you don’t go inside it.

              (A) does

              (B) is

              (C) are

Local:   At the corner, the road (12) _____ into two smaller streets.

              (A) divide

              (B) is divide

              (C) divides

Local:   You (13) _____ the street on the right.

              (A) takes

              (B) take

              (C) taking

Tourist:   (14) _____ the station next to the park?

              (A) Does

              (B) Do

              (C) Is

Local:   No, it (15) _____. It is behind the post office.

              (A) isn’t

              (B) doesn’t

              (C) aren’t

Local:   A lot of people (16) _____ lost at this corner, so just follow the signs.

              (A) get

              (B) gets

              (C) is get

Local:   You wait until the traffic light (17) _____ green, and then you cross the road.

              (A) turn

              (B) turns

              (C) is turn

Tourist:   Thank you! By the way, what time (18) _____ the last train leave?

              (A) does

              (B) is

              (C) do

Local:   It leaves at 11:00 p.m., so you (19) _____ plenty of time.

              (A) have

              (B) has

              (C) are have

Local:   Everyone in this town (20) _____ very friendly, so just ask if you need more help!

              (A) are

              (B) do

              (C) is

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1 B

  • Why it’s correct: To ask a question with the subject “you” and the action verb “speak”, we must use the auxiliary “Do”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option A “Are” cannot be used with a base action verb. Option C “Does” is only for he/she/it.

2 A

  • Why it’s correct: In short answers, we match the auxiliary from the question (“Do you…”). So, “Yes, I do.”
  • Why the others are wrong: Option B “am” is wrong because the question didn’t ask “Are you…”. Option C is for plural subjects or “you”.

3 C

  • Why it’s correct: “Lost” functions as an adjective here. With the subject “I”, we use the “to be” verb “am” (I am lost).
  • Why the others are wrong: Options A and B do not match the subject “I”.

4 A

  • Why it’s correct: “It” (the station) is a singular subject describing a location/state, so we use the “to be” verb “is”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option B “does” requires an action verb. Option C “are” is for plural subjects.

5 A

  • Why it’s correct: For the subject “you”, the action verb “go” stays in its base form.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option B “goes” is only for he/she/it. Option C mixes the “to be” verb with an action verb, which is a structural error.

6 C

  • Why it’s correct: To ask a question with “I” and the action verb “need”, we use the auxiliary “Do”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option A “Am” cannot be used with the action verb “need”. Option B “Does” is for he/she/it.

7 A

  • Why it’s correct: The question is “Do I need…?”, so the negative reply for “you” is “No, you don’t.”
  • Why the others are wrong: Option B “aren’t” is wrong because the main verb is an action (need). Option C “doesn’t” is for singular 3rd person subjects.

8 B

  • Why it’s correct: For the subject “you”, the action verb “walk” stays in its base form.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option A “walks” is a common trap if the learner thinks of the singular “supermarket”, but the subject here is “you”. Option C mixes “are” with an action verb.

9 C

  • Why it’s correct: “The supermarket” is a singular subject (it). The 3rd person singular form of “have” is “has”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option A “have” is for I/you/we/they. Option B “haves” is not a real word in English.

10 A

  • Why it’s correct: “You” takes the base form of the verb “see”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option B “sees” is for he/she/it. Option C is the continuous form without a “to be” verb.

11 B

  • Why it’s correct: “The park” is a singular subject (it), and “beautiful” is an adjective. We use “is”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option A “does” is a common error when learners forget that adjectives need the “to be” verb. Option C “are” is for plural subjects.

12 C

  • Why it’s correct: “The road” is a singular subject (it), so we add “-s” to the action verb → “divides”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option A misses the “-s”. Option B incorrectly mixes “is” with an action verb.

13 B

  • Why it’s correct: The subject is “You”, so the verb “take” remains in its base form.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option A “takes” is for he/she/it. Option C “taking” requires a “to be” verb.

14 C

  • Why it’s correct: We are asking about the location of “the station” (singular). There is no action verb, so we use “Is”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Options A and B (“Does/Do”) are used when there is a main action verb in the question (like go, turn, walk).

15 A

  • Why it’s correct: The question was “Is the station…?”, so the short negative answer must be “No, it isn’t.”
  • Why the others are wrong: Option B “doesn’t” is used for action verbs. Option C “aren’t” is for plural subjects.

16 A

  • Why it’s correct: “People” is a plural noun (they), so the verb “get” stays in its base form.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option B “gets” is a very common mistake because learners often treat “people” as singular. Option C is a structural error.

17 B

  • Why it’s correct: “The traffic light” is a singular subject (it), so we add “-s” to the verb → “turns”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option A misses the “-s”. Option C mixes “is” with an action verb.

18 A

  • Why it’s correct: “The last train” is singular (it), and “leave” is an action verb. We use the auxiliary “does”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option B “is” cannot be used with the action verb “leave”. Option C “do” is for plural subjects.

19 A

  • Why it’s correct: “You” takes the base form of the verb “have”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option B “has” is for he/she/it. Option C is a structural error mixing “to be” and an action verb.

20 C

  • Why it’s correct: The pronoun “Everyone” is grammatically singular, so we use “is” with the adjective “friendly”.
  • Why the others are wrong: Option A “are” is a logic trap (everyone implies many people, but grammar treats it as a single unit). Option B “do” cannot link a subject to an adjective.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER
  • Soft Instructions: Instead of saying “Go straight, then turn left” (which can sound like a strict command), you can say You go straight, then you turn left.” This uses the Present Simple to make the directions sound friendly and helpful.
  • Locations and Landmarks: When describing buildings or streets, treat them as “It”.
    • Use is/are for descriptions (The park is green, the streets are small).
    • Add -s/-es to action verbs (The road turns left, the sign says ‘Stop’).
  • People is Plural: Remember that the word people equals they. Never add an “-s” to the verb after “people” (People get lost, NOT People gets lost).
  • Asking for the way: * If using an action verb: “How do I get to the station?”
    • If asking for location: “Where is the station?”

Exercises:   123456789101112

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