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.
Tomorrow, I will take you exams/an exam.
Tomorrow, I will give you an exam/exams.
Tomorrow, I will take you a quiz/quizzes.
Tomorrow, I will give you a quiz/quizzes.
Tomorrow, I will take you a test/tests.
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?
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.
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.