Such means of type about to be mentioned.
That is used refer specific things mentioned earlier.
Such means ایسا
That means جو
The word "beautiful" describes the appearance of the noun "doll."
It functioning as an adjective in the sentence.
The students in our school are smarter than those in other schools.
Smarter than those means ان سے زیادہ ہوشیار
This comparison is complete with the word "those" indicating the other schools' students.
Superior, Senior, Junior etc are followed by preposition To.
He is superior to me.
She is senior to me.
"As it was a minor offence, the traffic policeman let him off with a warning."
"Offence" (noun) means a violation or a wrongdoing, especially of a law or rule.
The sentence is talking about a small violation, so "minor offence" is the correct phrase.
"Wise people do not spend their money foolishly."
"Wise" is an adjective describing people.
We use adjectives before nouns (e.g., wise people).
"Wisely" is an adverb, and "wisdom" is a noun — both do not fit here.
"An honest person always speaks the truth."
"Truth" is a noun and is the correct object of the verb "speaks".
"True" is an adjective, and "truly" is an adverb — neither fits grammatically here.
"Even his opponents admit that he is endowed with rare talents."
The verb "endowed" is commonly followed by "with" when describing the possession of a particular quality or talent.
"With" is the correct preposition in this context.
When comparing two people, we use "more beautiful" (comparative form of "beautiful").
"Most beautiful" is used when comparing more than two.
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