A. Beautiful
B. This
C. None of these
D. Very
Explanation
" Beautiful " describes the noun " flower ," so it is the adjective.
" This " is a determiner; " very " is an adverb.
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A. His
B. Excellent
C. None of these
D. Performance
Explanation
" Excellent " describes the quality of the noun "performance", so it is an adjective . Adjectives modify or give more information about nouns or pronouns — here, it tells how the performance was.
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A. Where
B. Who
C. How
D. What
Explanation
It is correct to say 'What does she look like?' .
This is asking for general information about someone's appearance.
It is also correct, but less common, to say 'How does she look?'
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A. Hundred-dollars
B. Hundreds-dollar
C. Hundreds-dollars
D. Hundred-dollar
Explanation
We make plural of Compound Noun by adding S in main words
Mother-in-law
Mothers-in-law
Commander-in-chief
Commanders-in-chief
Hundred-dollar
Hundred-dollars
ND12_8_2023
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A. worse than expectation
B. worse than I had expected
C. worst than was expectation
D. bad as I had expected
Explanation
he correct phrase is " worse than I had expected " because it uses proper comparative structure.
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A. Team
B. Practice
C. Enough
D. None of these
Explanation
" Enough " is an adjective here because it describes how much practice the team had.
Adjectives modify nouns, and in this case, " enough " modifies " practice ."
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A. Ours
B. None of these
C. Us
D. Our
Explanation
This is our house, not yours.
This is because "our" is a possessive pronoun
It is used to indicate ownership by a group that includes the speaker,
And it functions as a determiner in this context.
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A. Whose
B. None of these
C. Who
D. Which
Explanation
Use " which " for animals or things in non-defining relative clauses.
In this sentence, " which I loved dearly " refers to the dog — making " which " the correct relative pronoun .
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A. Description
B. Limiting
C. Proper adjective
D. Indicative adjective
Explanation
Objectives limiting the meaning of a noun showing either possession, demonstration, or number are called Proper adjectives.
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"Proper adjectives" also describe people, places, and things for example Your country is a proper noun and it has a capitalized proper adjective. ND16-8-2023
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A. Enthusiast
B. Authority
C. Novice
D. Export
Explanation
"Although he was a novice new at the game, Asad knew the others were playing incorrectly."
اگرچہ وہ اس گیم میں بالکل نیا تھا، اسد جانتا تھا کہ دوسرے غلط طریقے سے کھیل رہے ہیں۔
Note: “a novice new” is a bit redundant , so it would sound better as “Although he was a novice at the game…”, but for this multiple-choice format, “Novice” is the best fit.
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