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A. Noun phrase
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B. Adjective clause
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C. None of these
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D. Noun clause
Explanation
"If Sara will be coming with us" acts as the object of the verb "wonder."
It expresses a complete idea and functions as a noun in the sentence.
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A. None of the above
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B. Day/Day
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C. Days/Days
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D. Day/Days
Explanation
If two nouns are joined by preposition, the noun on either side singular and the verb is also singular.
Day by day is the correct sentence.
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A. Which is my favourite season
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B. Will be here
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C. None of these
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D. Will be here in another week
Explanation
An adjective clause is a dependent clause that describes a noun.
"Which is my favourite season" describes "Summer," making it the adjective clause in the sentence.
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A. Adjective Clause
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B. Noun Phrase
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C. Adverb Clause
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D. Main Clause
Explanation
There are two kinds of adjective clauses:
1. Restrictive
2. Non-restrictive.
An adjective clause describes a noun and begins with a relative pronoun like that or which.
In this sentence it describes the fruit by specifying how it is grown.
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A. None of these
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B. Unexpected
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C. What he did
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D. Was unexpected
Explanation
A noun clause is a group of words that functions as a noun.
In this sentence, "What he did" acts as the subject of the sentence.
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A. Where she went
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B. She went
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C. None of these
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D. Don't know
Explanation
A noun clause acts as a noun in a sentence, and "where she went" is the noun clause acting as the object of the verb "know".
It answers the question "What don't you know?", making it a noun clause.
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A. None of these
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B. Adjective clause
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C. Main clause
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D. Noun clause
Explanation
A noun clause functions as a noun and acts as the object of the verb "believe."
"Everything that you read in the newspaper" serves as the direct object of "believe," making it a noun clause.
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A. Limiting
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B. Indicative adjective
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C. Proper adjective
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D. Description
Explanation
Objectives limiting the meaning of a noun showing either possession, demonstration, or number are called Proper adjectives.
..
- "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. None of these
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B. Infinitive phrase
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C. Pronoun phrase
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D. Adverb phrase
Explanation
"To catch the bus" starts with "to" + verb, which is an infinitive form.
It functions as a phrase explaining the purpose or reason related to "time."
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A. None of these
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B. She enjoys reading books
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C. They are watching a movie
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D. The girl who won the race is my cousin
Explanation
A relative clause provides more information about a noun and usually begins with a relative pronoun like "who."
In this sentence, "who won the race" is a relative clause describing "the girl."
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