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A. Beside
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B. Near
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C. None of these
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D. Besides
Explanation
"Beside" means next to or by the side of (the tree is positioned directly adjacent to the wall).
Example: "The tree stands beside the wall."
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A. From
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B. Off
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C. Of
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Noor Fatima falls off the horse."
"Off" is used to indicate a movement away from a surface or position.
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A. From
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B. On
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C. At
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D. In
Explanation
The phrase should be: "The sun rises in the East".
It indicating the location or direction where the sun rises.
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A. Do
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B. To do
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C. Doing
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D. None of these
Explanation
It is as easy to do it right as do.
یہ کرنا اتنا ہی آسان ہے جتنا صحیح کرنا
Do is best to keep the meaning of the original sentence.
Do is an irregular verb.
Sh4-8-2023
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A. On
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B. From
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C. With
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D. To
Explanation
The correct phrase is "agree with" when expressing agreement with a proposal or opinion.
Example: I am totally agreed with your proposal.
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A. As
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B. Many
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C. Those
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D. The
Explanation
The cow is a useful animal.
The definite article "the" specifies a particular cow or cows in general.
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A. None of these
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B. She asked to him if she could do anything for him.
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C. She asked her if she could do anything for him.
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D. She asked him if she could do anything for him.
Explanation
She asked him if she could do anything for him.
In indirect speech, "said to" changes to "asked" in yes/no questions.
The pronoun "I" changes to "she," and "can" changes to "could" in reported speech.
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A. He
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B. They
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C. Mine
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D. She
Explanation
A possessive pronoun shows ownership. "Mine" is the possessive pronoun here, indicating ownership (e.g., "This book is mine").
"He," "She," and "They" are personal pronouns.
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A. With
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B. None of these
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C. To
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D. By
Explanation
"Angry with" is the correct preposition when referring to a person.
"Angry at" is used for situations or things.
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A. None of these
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B. Would buy
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C. Bought
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D. Had bought
Explanation
She wished she had bought the new car.
اس کی خواہش تھی کہ اس نے نئی کار خریدی ہو۔
"She wished" refers to a past regret, so the past perfect "had bought" is correct.
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