I will take an exam / I will give an exam

Hello,
Context:
a. suppose that I am a teacher and want to say this sentence to the students.
b. suppose that I am a student and want to say this sentence to my friends.

  1. Tomorrow, I will take you exams/an exam.
  2. Tomorrow, I will give you an exam/exams.
  3. Tomorrow, I will take you a quiz/quizzes.
  4. Tomorrow, I will give you a quiz/quizzes.
  5. Tomorrow, I will take you a test/tests.
  6. Tomorrow, I will give you tests.

You see my confusion? I don’t know which one is ok to be used in which context. I have problems with the word orders.
What’s your opinion about my self made examples? If you were me, how would you say it in the two contexts?

Thank you

Teacher to students:
Tomorrow I will give you an exam/exams.
Tomorrow I will give you a quiz/quizzes.
Tomorrow I will give you a test/tests.

Student to friends:
Tomorrow I am/ we are taking an exam/exams.
Tomorrow I am/ we are sitting an exam/exams.
Tomorrow I am/ we are being given a quiz/quizzes.
Tomorrow I am/ we are being given a test/tests.
Tomorrow I am/ we are sitting a test/tests.
Tomorrow I am/ we are taking a test/tests.

The apostrophe after ‘tomorrow’ is not required in this context. There is no natural break there.

Many thanks.

Beeesneees,

  1. Tomorrow you are being giving a test/tests.
  2. Tomorrow we are being giving a test/tests.
    Which one is correct and meaningful? Thanks.

Both of them., depending on whether you are:
talking to someone else (you)
or talking about yourself and someone else/some others (we).

Hi, BN.

I can’t undersantd “we are being taking a test/tests”. Why “taking” after “being”? Please explain.

Many thanks.

My mistake, Untaught. When I was writing the answer I just copied and pasted one basic sentence a number of times, then edited them individually. The original sentence I copied had the word ‘being’ in it. When I edited that sentence, I accidentally overlooked the removal of ‘being’. Thanks for asking. I’ve put it right now.

Thank you, BN.