A semicolon (;) is used to separate two closely related independent clauses without a conjunction.
In this sentence, "I can't live in the house" and "it is damp" are independent clauses, making the semicolon appropriate.
"Exited" contains the inflectional morpheme "-ed", which indicates past tense.
Inflectional morphemes modify a word's tense, number, or degree without changing its core meaning.
The colon (:) is the appropriate punctuation mark to introduce the list of countries in the sentence, making it clear and correctly structured:
"He visited three countries: France, US, and Australia."
Two boys are alike in looks, but not in personality.
دو لڑکے شکل میں ایک جیسے ہیں لیکن شخصیت میں نہیں۔
"Alike" is used to indicate similarity in appearance or characteristics.
In the word "Plumber," the letter B is silent and not pronounced.
The correct pronunciation is "plu-mer."
"Last Night” shows Past Tense.
So, “was” is the correct option here.
It was too cold to go out.
The sentence requires a word that means "advice" or "guidance".
"Counsel" can be used as a noun to mean advice or as a verb to mean to advise.
The word Television has 4 syllables: Tel-e-vi-sion.
Each syllable is a distinct sound or beat in the word.
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