Practice ellipsis and substitution with B2-level exercises. Improve fluency, avoid repetition, and master advanced English grammar skills.
Ellipsis and Substitution Exercises
Using the same words over and over again when you speak or write in English sounds unnatural. Ellipsis and substitution are often used to make language more fluent and economical. These are very important grammar tools at B2 level and they are used very often in spoken and written English.
What Is Ellipsis?
Ellipsis is where words are left out of a sentence because they are not needed – the meaning is already evident from the context.
Example:
- I ordered the chicken, and she ordered the fish. → I ordered the chicken, and she the fish.
In the second sentence the verb “ordered” is omitted, as it is understood.
Key point:
Ellipsis removes repetition, and also makes sentences shorter and more natural.
Common Types of Ellipses
Ellipsis in Coordinating Clauses
Where words are repeated, they are left out in the second clause.
- Tom can play the guitar, and Anna can play the piano. → Tom can play the guitar, and Anna the piano.
Ellipsis with Auxiliary Verbs
Auxiliaries (do, be, have, will, etc.) can take the place of full verb phrases.
- She has finished her work, and I have finished my work too. → She has finished her work, and I have too.
Ellipsis in Short Responses
Commonly used in everyday speech.
- Are you coming? → Yes, I am. / Yes. (Both are correct; the shorter one uses ellipsis.)
Ellipsis after “than” and “as”
- He is taller than I am. → He is taller than me. (informal ellipsis)
- She works harder than I do. → She works harder than I.
What Is Substitution?
Substitution is the process of replacing a word or a group of words with another word to avoid repetition.
Example:
- I need a pen. Do you have one? (“one” replaces “a pen”)
Common Types of Substitution
“One / Ones”
Used for replacing countable nouns.
- I like the red shirt, not the blue one.
- These apples are better than the ones we bought yesterday.
“Do / Does / Did”
Used to substitute for verbs or verb phrases.
- She loves coffee, and I do too. (= I love coffee too)
- He didn’t finish the task, but she did.
“So / Not”
Used after verbs such as think, believe, hope, suppose.
- Is he coming? → I think so.
- Will it rain? → I hope not.
“Same”
Expressing Likeness.
- I’ll have the same. (= the same thing as someone else)
What’s the Difference Between Ellipsis and Substitution?
- Ellipsis = removing words
- Substitution = replacing words with another word
Compare:
- She can play the piano, and he can play the piano too. → Ellipsis: She can play the piano, and he can too. → Substitution: She can play the piano, and he does too.

