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Straightforward Intermediate Unit Test 3 ((new)) Jun 2026

To prepare for the , you should focus on three main areas: living spaces and daily routines (Vocabulary), permission and obligation (Grammar), and making polite requests (Functional Language). 1. Vocabulary: Home and Sleep

A: “Would you like me to call a taxi?” B: a) Yes, I like. b) That would be great, thanks. c) I would. →

Sets the background scene or shows an action in progress interrupted by another event. ( It was raining heavily when I left the office. ) Straightforward Intermediate Unit Test 3

Learning the appropriate responses to stay polite in English-speaking environments. Test Format Overview Vocabulary Gap-fill / Multiple choice Assess housing and sleep terminology. Sentence transformation Rewrite sentences using specific modals (e.g., must, let). Functional Dialogue completion Use polite phrases for requests and permission. If you are looking for specific help, let me know: to check your work? Do you need a practice guide for the "have to / must" grammar? for the housing vocabulary?

The core grammatical focus of Unit 3 is on . This is where the unit gets its power. Mastering these subtle differences is key to sounding natural and accurate in English. To prepare for the , you should focus

— This represents a continuous background action that was interrupted by a sudden event (the power going out). 5. Top Test-Taking Strategies

The following report summarizes the core content, key vocabulary, and grammatical structures covered in this specific assessment based on the Straightforward Unit Test 3 curriculum 🏠 Vocabulary: Housing and Sleep b) That would be great, thanks

The woman looked up. She had short red hair and a friendly smile. “Yes! Well, almost. I’m driving to Bath, which is only twenty minutes from Bristol. I can drop you at the park-and-ride.”

Example : "I (in progress) when it started (interruption) to rain." 2. Used To

Mastering Straightforward Intermediate Unit Test 3: Your Ultimate Guide

You must know when to use an unspecific time frame versus a locked, completed past time. Primary Use Common Signal Words Life experience, unstated time, current relevance Already, yet, ever, never, since, for I have traveled to three different continents. Past Simple Finished actions at a specific point in the past Yesterday, in 2018, ago, last week I moved to London in 2018. Narrative Tenses: Past Continuous and Past Perfect

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