Word Formation – English Grammar Exercises for B1

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Exercises:   123456789101112

You are writing a1-star review to warn others about a terrible pair of headphones. Choose the best option (A, B, C, or D) to complete each sentence.

1   “Do not buy these headphones! They stopped working after one day and are completely ______.”

     (A) use

     (B) uselessly

     (C) useful

     (D) useless

2   “I spent $20 on this product, but honestly, it is absolutely ______.”

     (A) worth

     (B) worthless

     (C) worthy

     (D) worthlessly

 “Right out of the box, the left speaker was ______ and produced no sound.”

     (A) faulty

     (B) fault

     (C) faultless

     (D) faultily

 “The advertisement claimed these were ______ Bluetooth headphones, but they actually came with a permanent, fixed cable!”

     (A) wire

     (B) wired

     (C) wireless

     (D) wirelessly

 “Trying to contact their customer service for a refund is ______ because they never reply.”

     (A) point

     (B) pointlessly

     (C) pointed

     (D) pointless

 “I spent an ______ amount of time trying to pair them with my smartphone, but it never worked.”

     (A) end

     (B) endless

     (C) endlessly

     (D) ending

 “Instead of delivering clear music, all I heard was a constant, ______ scratching sound.”

     (A) noiseless

     (B) noisy

     (C) noise

     (D) noisily

 “The plastic ear cups are so hard that wearing them for more than ten minutes becomes highly ______.”

     (A) pain

     (B) painless

     (C) painful

     (D) painfully

9   “They feel incredibly cheap and almost ______, like empty plastic shells with nothing inside.”

     (A) weight

     (B) weighty

     (C) weightless

     (D) weightlessly

10   “The box arrived crushed and torn, which shows how ______ the manufacturer is about packaging.”

     (A) careless

     (B) care

     (C) careful

     (D) carelessly

11   “I felt completely ______ when the headphones started sparking and smoking while charging.”

     (A) help

     (B) helpful

     (C) helpless

     (D) helplessly

12   “Hoping to get any technical support from this shady company is a ______ situation.”

     (A) hopeless

     (B) hope

     (C) hopeful

     (D) hopelessly

13   “The headband has absolutely no padding, making the device very ______ to wear.”

     (A) comfortable

     (B) comfort

     (C) uncomfortably

     (D) uncomfortable

14   “Trust me, buying anything from this unknown brand is a highly ______ decision.”

     (A) risk

     (B) risky

     (C) riskless

     (D) riskily

15   “The instruction manual was translated so poorly that the sentences were entirely ______.”

     (A) meaning

     (B) meaningful

     (C) meaningless

     (D) meaninglessly

16   “My attempts to fix the broken audio jack were completely ______.”

     (A) success

     (B) successful

     (C) unsuccessfully

     (D) unsuccessful

17   “The terrible build quality of this product left me absolutely ______!”

     (A) speech

     (B) speechless

     (C) speaking

     (D) speechlessly

18   “The design is definitely not ______; it is full of sharp edges and factory errors.”

     (A) flaw

     (B) flawed

     (C) flawless

     (D) flawlessly

19   “Opening the package and realizing I had been scammed was a very ______ experience.”

     (A) joy

     (B) joyful

     (C) joyless

     (D) joylessly

20   “The Bluetooth connection drops every single minute, which is incredibly ______ when you are trying to listen to a podcast.”

     (A) stress

     (B) stressful

     (C) stressless

     (D) stressfully

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1 (D) useless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): The linking verb “are” requires an adjective. Use (noun) + -less (without) = useless (having no ability or skill to help/work).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (B) Common Mistake: Adverb. (C) Strong Distractor: Useful has the exact opposite meaning.

2 (B) worthless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Adjective required to modify the pronoun “it”. Worth + -less = worthless (having no value or use).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (C) Strong Distractor: Worthy means having value, which contradicts the 1-star rating. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

3 (A) faulty

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Fault (noun) + -y = faulty (defective/broken).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) Structural Error: Noun. (C) Strong Distractor: Faultless means perfect, which contradicts the complaint. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

4 (C) wireless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Wire + -less = wireless (operating without cables).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (B) Strong Distractor: Wired means it has a cable, but the reviewer is complaining that it claimed to be wireless. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

5 (D) pointless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Point + -less = pointless (having no meaning or purpose).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (B) Common Mistake: Adverb. (C) Strong Distractor: Pointed means having a sharp end or being direct.

6 (B) endless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Modifying the noun “amount”. End + -less = endless (infinite, taking too long).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (C) Common Mistake: Adverb. (D) Strong Distractor: Present participle/noun.

7 (B) noisy

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Modifying the noun “sound”. Noise + -y = noisy (making a lot of bad/loud sound).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Strong Distractor: Noiseless means silent, contradicting the “scratching sound”. (C) Structural Error: Noun. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

8 (C) painful

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Pain + -ful = painful (causing physical pain).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (B) Strong Distractor: Painless means causing no pain. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

9 (C) weightless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Weight + -less = weightless (having no weight, feeling extremely light and cheap).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (B) Strong Distractor: Weighty means heavy, contradicting the “empty plastic” description. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

10 (A) careless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Care + -less = careless (not giving enough attention or thought).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) Structural Error: Noun. (C) Strong Distractor: Careful is a positive trait, contradicting the “crushed” box. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

11 (C) helpless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): “Felt” is a linking verb requiring an adjective. Help + -less = helpless (unable to defend oneself).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (B) Strong Distractor: Helpful is positive. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

12 (A) hopeless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Modifying “situation”. Hope + -less = hopeless (impossible to resolve or succeed).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) Structural Error: Noun. (C) Strong Distractor: Hopeful means full of hope. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

13 (D) uncomfortable

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Adding the negative prefix un- to comfortable. Meaning: causing physical discomfort.
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Strong Distractor: Comfortable contradicts the lack of padding. (B) Structural Error: Noun. (C) Common Mistake: Adverb.

14 (B) risky

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Risk + -y = risky (full of the possibility of danger or failure).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (C) Strong Distractor: Riskless means safe. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

15 (C) meaningless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Meaning + -less = meaningless (making no sense).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (B) Strong Distractor: Meaningful is positive. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

16 (D) unsuccessful

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Negative prefix un- + success + -ful = unsuccessful (failing to achieve a goal).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (B) Strong Distractor: Successful contradicts the context of a 1-star review. (C) Common Mistake: Adverb.

17 (B) speechless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Speech + -less = speechless (unable to speak due to anger or shock).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (C) Strong Distractor: Participle/Gerund. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

18 (C) flawless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): The sentence uses a negative (“is definitely not”). Flaw (error) + -less = flawless (perfect). “Not flawless” means it has errors.
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (B) Strong Distractor: Flawed means having errors. If we said “not flawed,” we would mean it is perfect, which is wrong here. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

19 (C) joyless

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Joy + -less = joyless (bringing no happiness).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (B) Strong Distractor: Joyful means happy. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.

20 (B) stressful

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Stress + -ful = stressful (causing mental or emotional tension).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Structural Error: Noun. (C) Strong Distractor: Stressless means relaxing. (D) Common Mistake: Adverb.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER

1 The Power of the “-less” Suffix in Reviews

When writing a critique or a negative review, using adjectives with the -less suffix is highly effective. It immediately communicates that the product is lacking a fundamental requirement.

  • UseUseless (It lacks utility; it cannot be used).
  • WorthWorthless (It lacks value; it is a waste of money).
  • PointPointless (It lacks purpose).

2 Contrast with “-ful”

Many nouns can take both -less and -ful to create opposite adjectives. In a 1-star review, you must carefully select the negative state.

  • Helpful (Good customer service) $\leftrightarrow$ Helpless (Feeling stuck/scammed).
  • Meaningful (A good manual) $\leftrightarrow$ Meaningless (A badly translated manual).
  • Exception: Painful (causing pain) and Stressful (causing stress) are negative traits formed with -ful, while Painless and Stressless are positive!

3 Syntactic Position (Where to place these adjectives)

Adjectives formed from nouns function exactly like normal adjectives. They are primarily placed:

  • After linking verbs (be, feel, look, seem, become):
    • Example: The headphones are useless. I felt helpless.
  • Before nouns:
    • Example: It was a pointless attempt. It was a joyless experience.

4 The Adverb Trap (-ly)

Always ensure you do not select the adverb form (e.g., uselessly, carelessly) when you need to modify a noun or follow a linking verb.

  • Incorrect: The product is completely uselessly.
  • Correct: The product is completely useless.

Exercises:   123456789101112

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