What you'll practise at B2 level
- All conditional types including third and mixed
- Modal perfects: should have, must have, could have
- Passive voice across all tenses
- Non-defining relative clauses and reduced relatives
- Advanced reported speech with full tense backshift
- Indirect questions and complex question forms
- Inversion and fronting for emphasis
- B2 First exam vocabulary and collocations
Study tip: At B2, target the grammar structures that appear in FCE/IELTS tasks — modal perfects and inversions are high-yield.
English Exercises at Every CEFR Level
CEFR levels build progressively — each stage introduces the grammar and vocabulary you need before moving up. Browse the other levels to practise in the right range for your goals.
A2 Elementary Exercises
You can handle basic everyday situations and communicate simple information. You know core tenses and common vocabulary.
- Present simple and present continuous tenses
- Past simple for completed actions
- Core articles (a, an, the) and zero article
B1 Intermediate Exercises
You can deal with most situations while travelling and write simple connected texts on familiar topics.
- Present perfect vs. past simple
- Future forms: will, going to, present continuous for plans
- First and second conditionals
C1 Advanced Exercises
You can express yourself fluently and spontaneously without much searching for words in professional and academic contexts.
- Cleft sentences and fronting for stylistic emphasis
- Subjunctive mood in formal and academic contexts
- Advanced modal distinctions and semi-modals
C2 Proficiency Exercises
You can understand virtually everything you read or hear and express yourself precisely, differentiating finer shades of meaning.
- Ellipsis and substitution in formal and literary writing
- Stylistic inversion and complex fronting
- Complex nominalisation and abstract noun phrases
Not sure which level suits you?
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