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Interactive Grammar: Reporting Verbs in Academic English quiz

Use academic reporting verbs — state, argue, demonstrate, highlight, suggest — correctly in essays, reports, and dissertations.

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Grammar Explanation · Authentic Examples · Practice Questions

Lesson progressNot started
Duration
~15 min
Questions
10
Level
Advanced

Overview

Academic reporting verbs signal how a source's ideas relate to an argument: demonstrates, argues, suggests, acknowledges, highlights, notes, contends, emphasises, concludes, and proposes. Present simple is typically used for published works that remain relevant; past simple for dated or specific findings.

Academic Reporting Verbs

  • stateSmith states that the results confirm the hypothesis.
  • argueJones argues that inequality is increasing.
  • demonstrateThe study demonstrates that exercise reduces stress.
  • highlightThe report highlights the need for reform.

More Academic Verbs

  • suggestThe data suggests that prices will rise.
  • concludeThe researchers concluded that the treatment was effective.
  • noteThe author notes that exceptions exist.
  • point outShe points out that the evidence is limited.

Tense in Academic Reporting

  • In academic English, reporting verbs in present tense are common for published work.
  • Smith argues (present) — the paper still exists and argues this.
  • Jones found (past) — the study was completed in the past.

When to use

Literature review

Smith (2020) argues that urbanisation drives inequality.

Data reporting

The results suggest that further research is needed.

Essay writing

The author highlights the significance of the findings.

Citations

As Jones notes, the limitations must be acknowledged.

Academic Reporting Verbs — Multiple Choice

Choose the most appropriate academic reporting verb.

Multiple Choice10 questions
1The study that regular exercise reduces stress.
2Smith (2020) that inequality is increasing.
3The report the need for urgent reform.
4The author that the evidence was inconclusive.
5The data a strong correlation.
6Which verb is most appropriate in a literature review?
7The researchers that the intervention was successful.
8As Jones , the results require further analysis.
9Which tense is standard for citing published work?
10The findings the original hypothesis.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this lesson on reporting Verbs in Academic English cover?

Use academic reporting verbs — state, argue, demonstrate, highlight, suggest — correctly in essays, reports, and dissertations.

Which CEFR level is this lesson designed for?

This lesson is designed for Advanced (C1) learners and forms part of the Reporting Verbs in Academic English section on Grammartier.

What is the best approach for studying this grammar topic?

Start with the definition, then study the examples carefully to understand how the pattern works in context. Practise identifying the structure in authentic sentences before producing your own — this recognition-first approach builds a strong foundation for accurate, confident use.

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