Verb “To Be” – English Grammar Exercises for A1

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for A1 » Verb “To Be” – English Grammar Exercises for A1

Exercises:   123456789101112

You are showing a family photo on your phone to a new friend. You want to tell your friend about the people in the picture — what they look like (physical appearance) and what kind of people they are (personality).

Choose the best option to complete each sentence.

1   This is my older brother, Leo. He ______ very tall and strong.

     (a) is

     (b) am

     (c) are

 Look at my little sister in the front. She ______ so funny and sweet!

     (a) are

     (b) is

     (c) has

 I am the one in the middle. I ______ quite short, but I run very fast!

     (a) are

     (b) is

     (c) am

4   These are my grandparents on the left. They ______ very old, but they love walking.

     (a) is

     (b) have

     (c) are

 My mom and dad ______ very kind and patient people.

     (a) are

     (b) is

     (c) am

6   This is my cousin, Mark. He ______ shy at all; he loves talking to everyone!

     (a) isn’t

     (b) doesn’t

     (c) aren’t

 “______ your father strict?” “No, he is very relaxed and easygoing.”

     (a) Does

     (b) Is

     (c) Has

 Look at my uncle. He ______ bald, and he wears funny glasses.

     (a) has

     (b) is

     (c) does

9   My twin brothers ______ 15 years old, and they ______ very lazy!

     (a) are / are

     (b) are / is

     (c) have / are

10   My aunts ______ quiet. They are always laughing and singing loudly.

     (a) don’t

     (b) isn’t

     (c) aren’t

11   “______ your sisters friendly?” “Yes, they are very nice to everyone.”

     (a) Are

     (b) Do

     (c) Is

12   My uncle and my aunt ______ both doctors, and they are very smart.

     (a) is

     (b) are

     (c) am

13   I ______ as tall as my brother. He is a giant!

     (a) don’t be

     (b) am not

     (c) not am

14   My grandmother ______ a very good cook, and she is always happy.

     (a) is

     (b) does

     (c) has

15   Everyone in my family ______ quite short, except for my dad.

     (a) are

     (b) is

     (c) have

16   “Who ______ the tall man in the back?” “That is my uncle Paul.”

     (a) is

     (b) does

     (c) are

17   Nobody in this picture ______ sad. We are all smiling!

     (a) are

     (b) do

     (c) is

18   My brother ______ very athletic, but he ______ very good at studying.

     (a) is / isn’t

     (b) is / doesn’t

     (c) does / isn’t

19   My sister ______ beautiful, and her hair ______ very long.

     (a) is / are

     (b) is / is

     (c) has / is

20   Even our dog, Max, is in the photo! He ______ small, but his ears ______ very big!

     (a) is / is

     (b) has / have

     (c) is / are

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1 (a) is

  • Why it’s correct: “He” is a singular third-person subject, which always takes the verb “is”. We use “To Be” + adjective to describe physical traits.
  • Why the others are wrong: (b) “am” is only for “I”. (c) “are” is for plural subjects.

2 (b) is

  • Why it’s correct: “She” takes “is”. We use “is” to describe personality traits like “funny and sweet”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) “are” is for plural subjects. (c) “has” is a common mistake for learners who translate “she has sweetness” directly from their native language.

3 (c) am

  • Why it’s correct: The subject “I” always takes “am”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) “are” and (b) “is” do not match the pronoun “I”.

4 (c) are

  • Why it’s correct: “They” (the grandparents) is a plural subject, requiring “are”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) “is” is for singular subjects. (b) “have” is a common translation trap (you are old, you do not have old).

5 (a) are

  • Why it’s correct: “My mom and dad” means “they” (plural). Therefore, you must use “are”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (b) “is” is for a single person. (c) “am” is only for “I”.

6 (a) isn’t

  • Why it’s correct: The negative form for “He” is “is not” (isn’t). It describes his personality (not shy).
  • Why the others are wrong: (b) “doesn’t” is used with action verbs (e.g., he doesn’t speak), not with adjectives like “shy”. (c) “aren’t” is for plural subjects.

7 (b) Is

  • Why it’s correct: To ask a Yes/No question about someone’s personality (strict), we use “Is + Subject + Adjective?” (Is your father strict?).
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) “Does” is for action verbs. (c) “Has” is for possession.

8 (b) is

  • Why it’s correct: “Bald” (having no hair) is an adjective. We use “He is bald”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) “has” is a trap. You can say “He has no hair”, but you must say “He is bald”. (c) “does” is for actions.

9 (a) are / are

  • Why it’s correct: “My twin brothers” and “they” are both plural subjects. We use “are” for age (are 15) and “are” for personality (are lazy).
  • Why the others are wrong: (b) uses “is” incorrectly for “they”. (c) uses “have” for age, which is a major English error.

10 (c) aren’t

  • Why it’s correct: “My aunts” is plural, so the negative form is “are not” (aren’t).
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) “don’t” is for actions. (b) “isn’t” is for a singular subject.

11 (a) Are

  • Why it’s correct: “Your sisters” is plural (they). The question must start with “Are”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (b) “Do” is for action verbs. (c) “Is” is for singular subjects.

12 (b) are

  • Why it’s correct: “My uncle and my aunt” is a compound plural subject (they), taking “are”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) “is” fails to recognize that there are two people. (c) “am” is only for “I”.

13 (b) am not

  • Why it’s correct: The negative form for “I” is “am not”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) “don’t be” is only used for commands. (c) “not am” is the wrong word order.

14 (a) is

  • Why it’s correct: “My grandmother” (she) takes “is”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (b) “does” and (c) “has” cannot link a subject to a noun phrase describing their identity (“a very good cook”).

15 (b) is

  • Why it’s correct: The pronoun “Everyone” is grammatically singular. It must take “is”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) “are” is a common trap for learners treating “everyone” as plural. (c) “have” is the translation trap for describing height.

16 (a) is

  • Why it’s correct: “The tall man” is a singular subject, so the question is “Who is the tall man?”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (b) “does” is for actions. (c) “are” is for plural subjects.

17 (c) is

  • Why it’s correct: Just like “everyone”, the pronoun “Nobody” acts as a singular subject and takes “is”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) “are” is for plural subjects. (b) “do” is for action verbs.

18 (a) is / isn’t

  • Why it’s correct: “My brother” (he) takes “is” for a positive trait (is athletic) and “isn’t” for a negative trait (isn’t good at).
  • Why the others are wrong: (b) uses “doesn’t” before an adjective (“good”). (c) uses “does” before an adjective (“athletic”).

19 (b) is / is

  • Why it’s correct: “My sister” (she) takes “is”. “Her hair” (it) is an uncountable singular noun, so it also takes “is”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) uses “are” for hair, but hair is uncountable in English. (c) mixes “has”, which doesn’t fit the structure “My sister is beautiful”.

20 (c) is / are

  • Why it’s correct: “He” (the dog) takes “is”. “His ears” is plural (they), so it takes “are”.
  • Why the others are wrong: (a) uses “is” for the plural “ears”. (b) uses “has/have”, which is incorrect when the adjective (small/big) comes directly after the verb without a noun.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER
  1. The “To Be” + Adjective Formula: When you want to describe someone’s appearance (tall, short, beautiful, bald) or personality (funny, shy, smart, lazy), you MUST use the verb To Be (am/is/are).
    • Do not use “do/does/don’t/doesn’t” with adjectives.
    • She doesn’t shy. → ✅ She isn’t shy.
    • Do your sisters friendly? → ✅ Are your sisters friendly?
  2. “To Be” vs. “To Have” for Appearance: This is a tricky area for A1 learners!
    • Use To Be with adjectives alone: He is tall. Her hair is long.
    • Use To Have when the adjective is attached to a noun: He has a tall body. She has long hair. 3 Hair is Singular: In English, the hair on your head is considered one big mass (uncountable). Always use “is” for hair. (e.g., Her hair is black, NOT Her hair are black).
  3. Everyone & Nobody: Remember the golden rule—words like everyone, everybody, nobody, and no one are always treated as a single unit (singular). Always use “is“. (e.g., Everyone is smiling).

Exercises:   123456789101112

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