So vs. Such – English Grammar Exercises for B2

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Exercises:   123456789101112

Scam warning. A person is advising their friend not to buy a suspiciously cheap used laptop online.

Read the warning message to a friend below. Choose the best option (A, B, C, or D) to complete each sentence accurately.

 “Listen to me, this gaming laptop is being sold at ______ ridiculously low price that it is guaranteed to be a scam.”

     (a) so a

     (b) such a

     (c) so

     (d) such

 “The seller’s profile was created just yesterday, and he has ______ bad reviews on his other items that you shouldn’t even message him.”

     (a) such

     (b) so

     (c) such a

     (d) so much

 “Honestly, this is ______ unbelievable deal that I wouldn’t trust it with a single cent of my money.”

     (a) so an

     (b) such an

     (c) such

     (d) so

 “The photos he posted on the listing are ______ blurry that you can’t even see the condition of the keyboard.”

     (a) such

     (b) such a

     (c) so

     (d) very

5   “There is ______ little information in the product description that it screams ‘fake’ immediately.”

     (a) such little

     (b) so little

     (c) so a little

     (d) such a little

 “When I messaged him, he gave me ______ ridiculous excuse for selling it that I actually laughed out loud.”

     (a) such a

     (b) so a

     (c) such

     (d) so

 “Notice how he is putting ______ much pressure on you to transfer the money quickly?”

     (a) such much

     (b) so much

     (c) such

     (d) so a lot

 “This is ______ advanced model that it normally costs three times the amount he is asking for.”

     (a) so an

     (b) such a

     (c) such an

     (d) so

9   “Furthermore, the laptop looks ______ pristine in those pictures that he must have stolen them directly from Google Images.”

     (a) such a

     (b) such

     (c) very

     (d) so

10   “There are ______ many obvious red flags here that you need to block his number right now.”

     (a) such many

     (b) so many

     (c) so much

     (d) such a lot

11   “He is demanding ______ strange payment method that your bank’s fraud department will definitely flag the transaction.”

     (a) so a

     (b) such a

     (c) such

     (d) so

12   “He is acting ______ desperately to get the cash today that it is highly suspicious.”

     (a) so

     (b) such

     (c) such a

     (d) too

13   “It would be ______ foolish mistake to wire him the cash before seeing the device in person.”

     (a) such

     (b) so

     (c) such a

     (d) so a

14   “People usually fall for ______ obvious scams because they are blinded by the desire for a cheap upgrade.”

     (a) so

     (b) such a

     (c) such

     (d) so many

15   “You are taking ______ unnecessary risk just to save a few dollars on a computer.”

     (a) so an

     (b) such a

     (c) such an

     (d) so

16   “He also claims to offer ______ fast shipping for free that it mathematically makes no sense for a private seller.”

     (a) such a

     (b) such

     (c) so

     (d) so much

17   “The external verification link he sent looks ______ amateurish that a child could have coded it to steal your passwords.”

     (a) such an

     (b) so

     (c) such

     (d) very

18   “Please don’t be ______ gullible when browsing these unmoderated online marketplaces.”

     (a) such

     (b) such a

     (c) so

     (d) too

19   “I had ______ terrible luck with second-hand electronics last year that I only buy directly from the manufacturer now.”

     (a) such a

     (b) so much

     (c) so

     (d) such

20   “Remember the golden rule: if a deal seems ______ incredible that it defies basic logic, it is definitely a trap.”

     (a) such

     (b) so

     (c) such an

     (d) very

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1  (b) such a

  • Why it is correct: “Price” is a singular countable noun. The structure Such + a/an + Adjective + Singular Noun creates a powerful noun phrase emphasizing the abnormality of the situation.
  • Error Analysis: (a) so a (Structural Error); (c) so (Structural Error – ‘so’ requires an adjective without a noun); (d) such (Common Mistake – missing the required article ‘a’).

2  (a) such

  • Why it is correct: “Reviews” is a plural countable noun. The structure is Such + Adjective + Plural Noun.
  • Error Analysis: (b) so (Structural Error); (c) such a (Common Mistake – ‘a’ cannot be used with plural nouns); (d) so much (Meaning Trap – ‘much’ is for uncountable nouns).

3  (b) such an

  • Why it is correct: “Deal” is a singular countable noun. “Unbelievable” starts with a vowel sound, requiring “an”.
  • Error Analysis: (a) so an (Structural Error); (c) such (Common Mistake – missing the article); (d) so (Structural Error).

4  (c) so

  • Why it is correct: “Blurry” is a standalone adjective without a noun following it. So + Adjective + That.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such (Structural Error); (b) such a (Structural Error); (d) very (Meaning Trap – ‘very’ does not connect with the ‘that’ result clause).

5  (b) so little

  • Why it is correct: “Information” is an uncountable noun. “Little” acts as a quantifier here (meaning a small amount). The rule is So + little + uncountable noun.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such little (Common Mistake – ‘such little’ is used only when ‘little’ means small in size, e.g., ‘such little cats’. For quantity, use ‘so little’); (c) so a little (Structural Error); (d) such a little (Structural Error).

6  (a) such a

  • Why it is correct: “Excuse” is a singular countable noun.
  • Error Analysis: (b) so a (Structural Error); (c) such (Common Mistake – missing ‘a’); (d) so (Structural Error).

7  (b) so much

  • Why it is correct: “Pressure” is an uncountable noun. To emphasize a large quantity, use So much.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such much (Common Mistake); (c) such (Meaning Trap – loses the specific emphasis on the volume of pressure); (d) so a lot (Structural Error).

8  (c) such an

  • Why it is correct: “Model” is a singular countable noun. “Advanced” begins with a vowel sound.
  • Error Analysis: (a) so an (Structural Error); (b) such a (Common Mistake); (d) so (Structural Error).

9  (d) so

  • Why it is correct: “Pristine” is a standalone adjective describing the laptop.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such a (Structural Error); (b) such (Structural Error); (c) very (Meaning Trap).

10  (b) so many

  • Why it is correct: “Red flags” is a plural countable noun phrase. Emphasizing quantity requires So many.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such many (Common Mistake); (c) so much (Structural Error – ‘flags’ is countable); (d) such a lot (Structural Error – missing ‘of’).

11  (b) such a

  • Why it is correct: “Payment method” is a singular countable noun phrase.
  • Error Analysis: (a) so a (Structural Error); (c) such (Common Mistake); (d) so (Structural Error).

12  (a) so

  • Why it is correct: “Desperately” is an adverb describing the verb “acting.” So + Adverb.
  • Error Analysis: (b) such (Structural Error); (c) such a (Structural Error); (d) too (Meaning Trap).

13  (c) such a

  • Why it is correct: “Mistake” is a singular countable noun.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such (Common Mistake); (b) so (Structural Error); (d) so a (Structural Error).

14  (c) such

  • Why it is correct: “Scams” is a plural countable noun. Such + Adjective + Plural Noun.
  • Error Analysis: (a) so (Structural Error); (b) such a (Common Mistake – ‘scams’ is plural); (d) so many (Meaning Trap – changes the meaning from “this type of obvious scam” to “a high volume of obvious scams”).

15  (c) such an

  • Why it is correct: “Risk” is a singular countable noun. “Unnecessary” begins with a vowel sound.
  • Error Analysis: (a) so an (Structural Error); (b) such a (Common Mistake); (d) so (Structural Error).

16  (b) such

  • Why it is correct: “Shipping” is an uncountable noun. Such + Adjective + Uncountable Noun.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such a (Common Mistake – cannot use ‘a’ with uncountable nouns); (c) so (Structural Error); (d) so much (Meaning Trap – awkward phrasing, ‘fast’ describes the quality, not the quantity).

17  (b) so

  • Why it is correct: “Amateurish” is a standalone adjective.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such an (Structural Error); (c) such (Structural Error); (d) very (Meaning Trap).

18  (c) so

  • Why it is correct: “Gullible” is a standalone adjective.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such (Structural Error); (b) such a (Structural Error); (d) too (Meaning Trap – while ‘too gullible’ is grammatically correct, ‘so gullible’ directly addresses the degree of gullibility related to falling for the scam context).

19  (d) such

  • Why it is correct: “Luck” is an uncountable noun. Such + Adjective + Uncountable Noun.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such a (Common Mistake); (b) so much (Meaning Trap – focuses on quantity rather than the quality of being ‘terrible’); (c) so (Structural Error).

20  (b) so

  • Why it is correct: “Incredible” is a standalone adjective.
  • Error Analysis: (a) such (Structural Error); (c) such an (Structural Error); (d) very (Meaning Trap – does not connect with the ‘that’ clause).
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER

When trying to persuade or warn someone about a bad decision (like an obvious scam), So and Such are powerful rhetorical tools:

  1. Forming a Concrete Noun (Such a/an):
    • Instead of saying “The price is so low” (which sounds like an observation), say “It is such a low price that…” This packages the red flag into a solid object (a noun phrase), making the warning sound more authoritative and objective.
  2. Addressing the Quantity of Red Flags (So many / So much):
    • When the sheer volume of suspicious things is the issue, use So + many/much.
    • Example: He has so many bad reviews. There is so little information.
  3. Targeting Behaviors (So + Adjective/Adverb):
    • If the scammer is acting suspiciously, target the adjective or adverb directly with So.
    • Example: He is acting so desperately. The link looks so amateurish.

Exercises:   123456789101112

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