If You Can Spot All 30 Spelling Mistakes In This Quiz, You Have Incredible Attention To Detail
From verb tenses and advanced vocabulary words to grammatical errors and parts of speech, this language quiz is designed to test your English knowledge as thoroughly as possible.
With just 30 tricky questions, we’ll test how comfortable you are with definitions, spelling, punctuation, and much more! Expect being asked to fill in the blanks, correct common mistakes, and form singular and plural nouns. Are your English skills as strong as you think? Let’s test them!
🚀 💡 Want more or looking for something else? Head over to the Bored Panda Quizzes and explore our full collection of quizzes and trivia designed to test your knowledge, reveal hidden insights, and spark your curiosity.💡 🚀
Image credits: kaboompics
•
Not Quite Done Yet!
Discover Your Competitive Edge
Subscribe Premium to Compare Your Stats with Others
More Premium features:
How did you score compared to others?
Your general stats:
| User | Result | Reward |
|---|---|---|
| / 30 | |
| / 30 | |
All of the answers are spelled with capitalization. :-)
Load More Replies...It says spelling mistakes, but the very first question is a grammar mistake... those are not the same things my guy.
This is a common misconception, at least it is in the US. Something or someone in the educational system there is reinforcing the belief that that spelling and grammar are the same thing. The stupid Microsoft Editor in Edge for example kept insisting that there should be a comma after "and" in the sentence I just wrote, flagging it as a "Spelling and grammar" error. (I've now turned it off.)
Load More Replies..."If You Can Spot All 30 Spelling Mistakes In This Quiz, You Have Incredible Attention To Detail" Did you put the wrong questions below the title? This is not a spelling quiz.
Q28: "The dog happily wagged _ tail". A more mischievous question-setter might have added 'their' as an option. 😁
Nope. Dogs have not fallen prey to the pronoun syndrome, hence a singular dog is always He, She or It, never the plural They
Load More Replies...There is one error: You use an adverb, not an adjective, to describe an adjective. Hence, "vibrant" would be a wrong word choice if it were used to describe the dress. The adverb is "vibrantly." "Vibrant" often seems to modify an adjective because if you something is vibrantly colored, you may also describe that thing itself as vibrant. (Compare to "bright, red" vs "brightly red.") This may be a case of there being no great answer, since "vibrant blue dress" probably should have a comma, but if calling a dress blue connotes anything besides its color (as "little red dress" connotes something worn to be s**y or "little black dress" connotes something worn to attract attention at an evening event), it's at least possibly correct (although I like the increasingly archaic grammatic technique of hyphenating such a word.)
All of the answers are spelled with capitalization. :-)
Load More Replies...It says spelling mistakes, but the very first question is a grammar mistake... those are not the same things my guy.
This is a common misconception, at least it is in the US. Something or someone in the educational system there is reinforcing the belief that that spelling and grammar are the same thing. The stupid Microsoft Editor in Edge for example kept insisting that there should be a comma after "and" in the sentence I just wrote, flagging it as a "Spelling and grammar" error. (I've now turned it off.)
Load More Replies..."If You Can Spot All 30 Spelling Mistakes In This Quiz, You Have Incredible Attention To Detail" Did you put the wrong questions below the title? This is not a spelling quiz.
Q28: "The dog happily wagged _ tail". A more mischievous question-setter might have added 'their' as an option. 😁
Nope. Dogs have not fallen prey to the pronoun syndrome, hence a singular dog is always He, She or It, never the plural They
Load More Replies...There is one error: You use an adverb, not an adjective, to describe an adjective. Hence, "vibrant" would be a wrong word choice if it were used to describe the dress. The adverb is "vibrantly." "Vibrant" often seems to modify an adjective because if you something is vibrantly colored, you may also describe that thing itself as vibrant. (Compare to "bright, red" vs "brightly red.") This may be a case of there being no great answer, since "vibrant blue dress" probably should have a comma, but if calling a dress blue connotes anything besides its color (as "little red dress" connotes something worn to be s**y or "little black dress" connotes something worn to attract attention at an evening event), it's at least possibly correct (although I like the increasingly archaic grammatic technique of hyphenating such a word.)


20
12