-
A. Adjective
-
B. Verb
-
C. Both A & B
-
D. Pronoun
Explanation
"Frequent" as a verb means to visit a place often (e.g., He frequents the library.).
"Frequent" as an adjective means occurring often (e.g., She made frequent trips.).
-
A. None of these
-
B. Frustrating
-
C. Frustrated
-
D. Frustrate
Explanation
"Frustrated" is the correct adjective to describe how someone feels.
"Frustrate" is a verb.
"Frustrating" describes something that causes frustration.
-
A. Adverb
-
B. Adjective
-
C. Noun
-
D. None of these
Explanation
In the sentence "The hand has five fingers", the word "five" is an adjective modifying the noun "fingers".
It describes the number of fingers, so it's an adjective.
-
A. Much
-
B. Many
-
C. So
-
D. None of these
Explanation
The correct replacement is "He is much obliged."
"Much" is used to express a greater degree of obligation or gratitude.
-
A. None of these
-
B. Very
-
C. Drives
-
D. Car
Explanation
"Very" modifies the adverb "fast," showing degree or intensity.
It is an adverb because it describes how fast he drives.
-
A. Day
-
B. Sleeps
-
C. None of these
-
D. Usually
Explanation
"Usually" describes how often he sleeps — it modifies the verb "sleeps", so it is an adverb of frequency.
"Sleeps" is a verb, and "day" is a noun.
-
A. Adverb
-
B. Adjective
-
C. Verb
-
D. None of these
Explanation
"Well" describes how something is begun, modifying the verb "begun."
It tells us the manner of the action, which is the role of an adverb.
-
A. But
-
B. And
-
C. None of these
-
D. Quickly
Explanation
Quickly describes how an action is performed (manner of action).
Adverbs of manner answer the question "how?" — e.g., He runs quickly.
-
A. Verb
-
B. Adverb
-
C. Adjective
-
D. None of these
Explanation
Not is an adverb because it modifies the verb are, indicating negation.
Adverbs often describe how, when, where, or to what extent an action occurs.
-
A. The horse galloped away.
-
B. I have spoken to him already
-
C. He seldom come here.
-
D. The boys works hard.
Explanation
The correct answer is: I have spoken to him already.
In this sentence, "already" is an adverb of time that specifies
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0