Word Formation – English Grammar Exercises for B1

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for B1 » Word Formation – English Grammar Exercises for B1

Exercises:   123456789101112

You are writing a social media post to recommend a new science documentary to your friends. Choose the best option (A, B, C, or D) to complete each sentence.

 “I highly recommend the new space documentary on Netflix! It is incredibly ______ and taught me so much.”

     (A) inform

     (B) informative

     (C) information

     (D) informatively

2   “The drone footage showing the birth of stars was absolutely ______.”

     (A) impress

     (B) impression

     (C) impressively

     (D) impressive

 “The director found a very ______ way to explain quantum physics using simple 3D animations.”

     (A) create

     (B) creation

     (C) creative

     (D) creatively

4   “Unlike traditional lectures, this show is highly ______; you can click on the screen to answer quizzes.”

     (A) interactive

     (B) interact

     (C) interaction

     (D) interactively

5   “The lead scientist’s argument about saving our oceans was extremely ______.”

     (A) persuade

     (B) persuasive

     (C) persuasion

     (D) persuasively

 “I loved the episode about bees. It showed how ______ these tiny insects are for our ecosystem.”

     (A) produce

     (B) product

     (C) productive

     (D) productively

7   “However, the narrator used the exact same phrases too often, making episode 3 a bit ______.”

     (A) repeat

     (B) repetition

     (C) repetitively

     (D) repetitive

8   “The solutions they suggested for climate change seem very practical and ______.”

     (A) effect

     (B) effective

     (C) effectiveness

     (D) effectively

 “The film gives a ______ overview of the entire history of space travel.”

     (A) comprehensive

     (B) comprehend

     (C) comprehension

     (D) comprehensively

10   “Some of the statistics about global plastic pollution were quite shocking and ______.”

     (A) disrupt

     (B) disruption

     (C) disruptive

     (D) disruptively

11   “The host’s voice is very calm and ______, keeping you fully focused on the topic.”

     (A) attract

     (B) attraction

     (C) attractively

     (D) attractive

12   “They presented several ______ new methods to clean up garbage from the rivers.”

     (A) innovate

     (B) innovative

     (C) innovation

     (D) innovatively

13   “The documentary clearly warns us about the ______ power of extreme weather.”

     (A) destroy

     (B) destruction

     (C) destructive

     (D) destructively

14   “We need to take ______ measures right now to save endangered animal species.”

     (A) preventive

     (B) prevent

     (C) prevention

     (D) preventively

15   “It is so inspiring to see young people being ______ in environmental campaigns.”

     (A) act

     (B) action

     (C) active

     (D) actively

16   “The interviews with the local farmers who lost their lands were deeply ______.”

     (A) express

     (B) expressive

     (C) expression

     (D) expressively

17   “The final message of the movie is a call for a ______ change in our daily habits.”

     (A) decide

     (B) decision

     (C) decisively

     (D) decisive

18   “After watching this, I feel much more ______ of our beautiful natural habitats.”

     (A) protective

     (B) protect

     (C) protection

     (D) protectively

19   “If you are a student, this documentary will be highly ______ for your science project.”

     (A) support

     (B) supporter

     (C) supportive

     (D) supportively

20   “You absolutely must watch it! It is a ______ experience that will change how you see the world.”

     (A) transform

     (B) transformative

     (C) transformation

     (D) transformatively

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1 (B) informative

  • Why it is correct (The Key): An adjective is required after the linking verb “is” and the degree adverb “incredibly”. Inform (Verb) + -ative = Informative (providing useful information).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Base verb. (C) Noun (Structural error). (D) Adverb (Common mistake made by learners who think they need to modify the adverb “incredibly”).

2 (D) impressive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): An adjective is needed to describe the subject “footage”. ImpressImpressive (evoking admiration).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (B) Noun. (C) Adverb.

3 (C) creative

  • Why it is correct (The Key): An adjective is needed to modify the noun “way”. CreateCreative (imaginative/innovative).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (B) Noun. (D) Adverb.

4 (A) interactive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): An adjective is needed after “is highly”. InteractInteractive (allowing two-way communication).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) Verb. (C) Noun. (D) Adverb.

5 (B) persuasive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Adjective describing the “argument”. PersuadePersuasive (good at convincing someone). Note the spelling rule: drop ‘de’ and add ‘sive’.
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (C) Noun. (D) Adverb.

6 (C) productive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): An adjective is needed after “how” in an exclamatory/noun clause structure. ProduceProductive (achieving a significant amount or result).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (B) Noun. (D) Adverb.

7 (D) repetitive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Follows the “make + object + adjective” structure. RepeatRepetitive (repeating the same thing over and over).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (B) Noun. (C) Adverb.

8 (B) effective

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Needs to be an adjective to stay parallel with “practical,” connected by “and”. EffectEffective (successful in producing a desired result).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb/Noun. (C) Noun. (D) Adverb.

9 (A) comprehensive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Placed before the noun “overview” to describe it. ComprehendComprehensive (complete; including all elements).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) Verb. (C) Noun. (D) Adverb.

10 (C) disruptive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): An adjective describing the “statistics”. DisruptDisruptive (causing trouble or interrupting a process).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (B) Noun. (D) Adverb.

11 (D) attractive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Adjective parallel to “calm”. AttractAttractive (appealing or pleasing).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (B) Noun. (C) Adverb.

12 (B) innovative

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Positioned before the noun phrase “new methods”. InnovateInnovative (featuring new methods; advanced and original).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (C) Noun. (D) Adverb.

13 (C) destructive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Modifies the noun “power”. DestroyDestructive (causing great and irreparable harm/damage). Note the spelling change.
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (B) Noun. (D) Adverb.

14 (A) preventive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Placed before the noun “measures”. PreventPreventive (designed to keep something undesirable from happening).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) Verb. (C) Noun. (D) Adverb.

15 (C) active

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Adjective placed after “being” (the V-ing form of a linking verb). ActActive (engaging in physical or energetic pursuits).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (B) Noun. (D) Adverb.

16 (B) expressive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Adjective describing the “interviews” following a linking verb. ExpressExpressive (effectively conveying thought or feeling).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (C) Noun. (D) Adverb.

17 (D) decisive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Modifies the noun “change”. DecideDecisive (settling an issue; producing a definite result).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (B) Noun. (C) Adverb.

18 (A) protective

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Adjective following the linking verb “feel”. ProtectProtective (having or showing a strong wish to keep someone or something safe).
  • Distractor Analysis: (B) Verb. (C) Noun. (D) Adverb.

19 (C) supportive

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Adjective following the verb “will be”. SupportSupportive (providing encouragement or emotional help).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (B) Noun (refers to a person). (D) Adverb.

20 (B) transformative

  • Why it is correct (The Key): Modifies the noun “experience”. TransformTransformative (causing a marked change in someone or something).
  • Distractor Analysis: (A) Verb. (C) Noun. (D) Adverb.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER

1 The Purpose of the “-ive” Suffix (Verb → Adjective)

When writing reviews (for movies, books, or products), transforming verbs into adjectives using the -ive suffix is a powerful tool. This suffix generally means “having the nature of” or “tending to”.

  • Verb: The film informs us.
  • Adjective: The film is informative.
    This transformation shifts your tone from merely recounting what a subject does to actively evaluating what it is like, which is exactly what a good review requires.

2 Syntactic Position (Where to place these adjectives)

In this test, adjectives ending in -ive are primarily used in two crucial positions:

  • After Linking Verbs (be, feel, seem, become):
    • Example: The visual effects were impressive.
  • Before a Noun (to act as a modifier):
    • Example: A creative way, a comprehensive overview, preventive measures.

3 Spelling Rules for Adding “-ive”

  • Direct addition: Add -ive directly to the base verb (e.g., actactive, attractattractive).
  • Drop the final “e”: If the verb ends in “e”, drop it before adding -ive (e.g., createcreative, innovateinnovative).
  • Special change (“-de” to “-sive”): * persuadepersuasive
    • decidedecisive
    • comprehendcomprehensive
  • Other irregular changes: destroydestructive, produceproductive.

Exercises:   123456789101112

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