"In front of" is a compound preposition because it consists of multiple words that function together as a single preposition.
It shows the relationship between "the cloud" and "the moon" in the sentence.
Compound Preposition: According To, In Addition, With regard to etc.
In front of means کے سامنے
The object of a sentence receives the action of the verb.
In this sentence, "my homework" is the object as it is what is being completed.
Subject: I
Verb: Complete
Object: Homework
In passive voice, the object ("us") becomes the subject ("we"), and "cheated" remains in the past participle form.
"Will we have been cheated by them?" correctly follows the passive voice structure:
Will + subject + have been + past participle (cheated) + by + agent.
"Emotional compatibility" refers to the ability to connect and understand someone's emotions.
It is essential for maintaining healthy relationships.
Compatibility means ہم آہنگی، دوستی یا قربت
In questions and negative sentences, we commonly use "anybody" (or "anyone") instead of "somebody/someone".
So, the correct sentence is: "Does anybody seem to care about the environment nowadays?"
"Book" has a short vowel sound /ʊ/ as in "good" or "foot."
"Ball" has a long /ɔː/ sound and "Read" (present tense) has a long /iː/ sound.
In indirect speech, the tense of the reported speech is typically shifted one step back (present tense to past tense).
Thus, "I love" changes to "he loved" when reported indirectly.
"Raining cats and dogs" is a metaphor.
It compares the intensity of the rain to something chaotic without using "like" or "as."
When using "neither...nor", the verb agrees with the nearest subject — here, "prime minister" (singular).
So, the correct sentence is: "Neither the president nor the prime minister is in the favour of cutting down the price of electricity."
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