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A. Why has this jug been broken by you?
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B. None of these
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C. Why this jug has been broken by you?
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D. Why have this jug been broken by you?
Explanation
Why has this jug been broken by you?
The structure for passive voice in present perfect tense: has/have + been + past participle.
The subject “you” becomes the agent, and “this jug” becomes the subject of the passive sentence.
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A. Our pen has broken by someone
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B. Your pen has been broken by someone
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C. None of these
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D. Your pen has broken by someone
Explanation
Passive voice of "Someone has broken your pen" is formed as:
Object + has/have been + past participle + by + subject
So, "Your pen has been broken by someone" is grammatically correct.
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A. A latter is been written by me
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B. None of these
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C. A latter is being written by me
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D. A latter is been written by my
Explanation
Passive voice of "I am writing a letter" is formed as:
Object + is/are being + past participle + by + subject
So, "A letter is being written by me" is correct.
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A. My work shall do by myself.
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B. None of these
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C. My work shall have been done by me.
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D. My work shall be done by me.
Explanation
In passive voice, the object (my work) becomes the subject, and the verb changes accordingly:
Active voice: I shall do my work myself.
Passive voice: My work shall be done by me.
Rule for future simple tense: Shall/will + be + past participle (done) is used to form the passive structure.
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A. The houses are covered by snow.
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B. The houses are covered with snow.
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C. None of these
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D. The houses were covered with snow.
Explanation
Active voice: Snow covered the houses. (Subject: Snow, Verb: covered, Object: houses)
Passive voice: The houses were covered with snow. (Object becomes the subject, verb changes to past participle with "were")
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A. Active
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B. Passive
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C. Exclamatory
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D. None of these
Explanation
The sentence follows the active voice structure, where the subject (All my certificates) performs the action (are attached).
In passive voice, it would be restructured as: All my certificates have been attached herewith.
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A. The mouse was chased by cat
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B. None of these
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C. The mouse is chased by cat
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D. The mouse is being chased by cat
Explanation
The correct passive form is "The mouse was chased by the cat."
In passive voice, the object (mouse) becomes the subject, and the verb form changes to reflect the past action.
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A. I must helped her.
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B. None of these
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C. I must help her.
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D. I shall be helped by her.
Explanation
The correct active voice for "She must be helped by me" is "I must help her."
Here, the focus shifts from the person receiving help to the person providing it.
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A. Will have
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B. Had
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C. Would have been
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D. Would have
Explanation
This sentence belongs to the third type of conditional sentence.
In type 3 conditional sentences, the time is the past and the situation is hypothetical.
Formula: if + past perfect, …would + have + past participle.
صحیح جملہ منتخب کریں. اگر میں آپ ہوں تو میں اسے دوبارہ کبھی مدعو نہیں کروں گا۔
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A. If I were you, I would never invite her again
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B. If I am you, I would never invite her again
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C. Both are correct
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D. both are wrong
Explanation
یہاں ولڈ استعمال ہوا لہذا اس کے ساتھ ور اے گا۔
We use would as the past of will, to describe past beliefs about the future: I thought we would be late, so we would have to take the train.
incorrect: If I am you, I would never invite her again
correct: If I were you, I would never invite her again
This is a hypothetical sentence.
Were is used with I in such sentences.
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0