B2 | Grammar Exercises Pdf
Exercise 1: “If I ______ (know) you were coming, I ______ (bake) a cake.”
And somewhere, deep in her laptop’s hard drive, the old B2 grammar PDF sat quietly, its 200 exercises finally complete—except for one tiny change. Lena had renamed the folder.
Whom. The answer was whom . “To whom the job seems ideally suited.” She corrected her mistake.
This was harder. Relative clauses with prepositions. To whom? Lena sighed. She scrolled down to the answer key—but it was password protected. The PDF forced her to think. b2 grammar exercises pdf
By exercise 102, her eyes were burning. Future perfect vs. future continuous. “By this time tomorrow, I ______ (take) the exam.” Will have taken. Correct.
Now it said: .
Lena laughed. Started. The subjunctive mood. The PDF had taught her that. Exercise 1: “If I ______ (know) you were
Exercise 200: “It’s high time you ______ (start) studying more seriously.”
The PDF contained 200 exercises, each one a tiny trap of tenses and prepositions. Lena double-clicked the file. Page one loaded.
She had downloaded the file six months ago, back when “mixed conditionals” sounded like a type of fancy coffee and “inversion” was just something race car drivers did. Now, it was the only thing standing between her and a passing grade. The answer was whom
Exercise 34: “She is the candidate to ______ the job seems ideally suited.”
Then she saw the note her teacher had added in the footer: “The password is the past participle of ‘to speak’ in its irregular form.”
She typed the answer in the margin: had known / would have baked . Correct.
She smiled. Wouldn’t have worried.
She typed: . The answer key unlocked.








