might (fast english)
Word Order Practice
Listen to each sentence and arrange the words in the correct order. Click on words to move them to your answer area.
Green checkmark (✓) means your current word order is correct so far. Red X (✗) means there's an error in the order.
Why Word Order Matters in English
Word order is crucial in English because it affects meaning. Unlike some languages that use case endings or particles to show word relationships, English relies heavily on word order to convey meaning.
This exercise helps you:
- Internalize English sentence patterns
- Recognize how natural speed speech fit into sentences
- Develop a natural feel for correct English structure
- Improve both listening and grammar simultaneously
1
0
/5
Fred
advertising
great
is
at
Fred
is
great
at
advertising
2
0
/21
imagine
You
more
some
not
might
in
honest
successful
but
people
he
as
as
that
he
honest
is
is
fact
less
You
might
imagine
that
he
is
not
as
honest
as
some
less
successful
people
but
in
fact
he
is
more
honest
3
0
/15
twisting
He
did
not
watched
truth
saw
that
he
other
sales
and
the
advertisers
increase
He
watched
other
advertisers
and
he
saw
that
twisting
the
truth
did
not
increase
sales
4
0
/14
honest
that
he
might
could
he
as
he
Then
as
well
be
decided
as
Then
he
decided
that
he
might
as
well
be
as
honest
as
he
could
5
0
/17
his
the
not
some
tell
he
might
all
all
advertisements
Where
otherwise
people
them
told
in
facts
Where
some
people
might
otherwise
not
tell
all
the
facts
he
told
them
all
in
his
advertisements
6
0
/15
and
appear
open
genuine
if
He
he
honest
might
more
and
did
felt
that
it
He
felt
it
might
appear
more
genuine
and
honest
and
open
if
he
did
that
7
0
/5
he
fact
In
right
was
In
fact
he
was
right
8
0
/10
trusted
bought
his
and
products
more
People
his
more
ads
People
trusted
his
ads
more
and
bought
his
products
more
9
0
/7
he
at
why
That's
advertising
is
great
That's
why
he
is
great
at
advertising
Tips for Effective Practice
- Always listen to the audio first before attempting to order the words
- Pay attention to common patterns like subject-verb-object
- Notice how natural speed speech are positioned in sentences
- If you make a mistake, use it as a learning opportunity - try to understand why the correct order is different
- After completing each sentence, listen to the audio again while reading your correctly ordered sentence