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  1. Exercise 1 about the usage and difference of ‘in the end’ and ‘at the end’ in English grammar. Level of difficulty: rather easy. Test yourself!

  2. You can add -or or -er to the end of many verbs to make nouns. • The nouns you make are the names of the people (or objects) that carry out the verb. E.g. bake – baker, destroy – destroyer, visit – visitor, rob – robber.

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  3. Test yourself with our free English language exercise about 'At the end, in the end, etc'. This is a free intermediate English grammar quiz and interractive grammar exercises. No sign-up required.

  4. Use the suffix ‘-er’ (or ‘-r) with the words in the box. 1. I work in a bakery and I bake bread. I’m a __________________. 2. Sam really wants to be a __________________ when he grows up. He likes to teach people. 3. I’m not a great __________________ but I like to golf on weekends.

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  5. Complete the 16 sentences by using the suffix '-er' (or '-r') with the words in the box; with ANSWER KEY and percentage conversion chart. Intermediate to Advanced Level.

  6. Rule 1: For words ending in two consonants, just add the suffix to the root word. For example: smart + er = smart er. Rule 2: For words that end in a short vowel sound followed by a...

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  8. With a one-syllable word or a word ending in -y or -ly add the suffix -er to form a comparative phrase with than. With an adjective or adverb of more-than-one syllable, u se more to create the comparative phrase with than .

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