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A. Rang
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B. Ring
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C. Rung
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D. None of these
Explanation
"All was having bath when the phone rang."
Past continuous tense ("was having") combined with the simple past tense ("rang")
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A. None of these
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B. Is facing
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C. Faced
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D. Faces
Explanation
Present continuous "is facing" is used for an ongoing issue.
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A. Being
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B. None of these
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C. Be
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D. Been
Explanation
The past perfect tense requires "had" plus the past participle of the verb.
The past participle of "be" is "been".
Nothing had been done by them.
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A. Gave
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B. Giving
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C. None of these
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D. Give
Explanation
"Which you gave me" = a relative clause giving more info about "the book."
The verb "give" is in the past tense ("gave") because the action happened in the past — the book was given earlier.
You lost the book → past tense
Someone gave you the book → also past tense
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A. None of these
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B. You had made beautiful painting
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C. You have made beautiful painting
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D. You will have made beautiful painting
Explanation
Present perfect tense = have/has + past participle
"You" takes "have", and "made" is the past participle of "make"
So, the correct sentence is: You have made beautiful painting.
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A. None of these
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B. Present perfect continuous
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C. Present continuous
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D. Present perfect
Explanation
The sentence "We have been defeated by them" is in the Present Perfect Passive tense.
It follows the structure: have/has been + past participle.
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A. Has stopped
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B. Stopped
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C. Stops
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D. Stop
Explanation
Present simple "stops" is used in time clauses for future meaning.
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A. We are having lunch.
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B. They are going to the Market.
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C. I am learning English.
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D. She is sleeps now.
Explanation
Present continuous uses "is/are/am + verb-ing" (e.g., "She is sleeping").
"She is sleeps" is incorrect because "sleeps" is not in -ing form.
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A. None of these
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B. Past Simple
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C. Past Continuous
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D. Present Perfect
Explanation
The sentence "Did the children sleep late?" uses "did" + base verb, which indicates Past Simple tense.
It refers to a completed action in the past.
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A. Past events
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B. Actions happening now
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C. None of these
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D. Completed actions
Explanation
Present Continuous tense shows actions currently in progress.
Example: She is reading a book now.
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