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A. None of these
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B. The glass had not broken the boy.
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C. The glass was not broken the boy.
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D. The glass is not broken the boy.
Explanation
The original sentence is in the active voice, and the correct conversion to the passive voice is:
"The boy did not break the glass" → "The glass was not broken by the boy"
This changes the focus from the doer (the boy) to the receiver (the glass).
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A. None of these
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B. Did the mother dry the clothes in the lawn?
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C. Did his mother dry the clothes in the lawn?
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D. Did the mother dried the clothes in the lawn?
Explanation
The sentence is converted to active voice as "Did the mother dry the clothes in the lawn?"
The auxiliary verb "did" is used, followed by the base form "dry" for correct tense in active voice.
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A. Comes
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B. Come
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C. None of these
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D. Came
Explanation
Correct sentence:
"If he had come to me, I would have helped him."
This is intended to be a third conditional sentence
If + past perfect, would have + past participle
The right choice ("had come") is not among the options.
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A. The European
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B. A European
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C. An European
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D. Some European
Explanation
“European” starts with a vowel letter but a /juː/ sound, so “a” is correct
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A. The
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B. An
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C. A
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D. None of these
Explanation
The correct sentence is: "Ali Rizwan needed a little more time than others to talk."
"A" is used before singular countable nouns when referring to an unspecified quantity.
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A. Whom made this cake?
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B. You are looking for whom?
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C. Whom are you looking for?
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Whom are you looking for?"
"Whom" is the objective case of "who" and should be used when it functions as the object of a verb or preposition.
In this sentence, "whom" is the object of the preposition "for," making it grammatically correct.
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A. She visited the eiffel tower in France.
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B. We moved to Texas in July.
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C. I went to paris last Summer.
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D. None of these
Explanation
Proper nouns like Texas and months like July must always be capitalized.
The sentence follows correct capitalization rules with no errors in names, months, or sentence beginning.
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A. Park
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B. None of these
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C. Were
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D. Playing
Explanation
"Playing" has an inflectional ending “-ing” that shows progressive tense.
Inflectional endings modify a word's tense, number, or degree without changing its core meaning.
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A. She's
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B. None of these
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C. Sh's
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D. Shes'
Explanation
"She's" is the correct contraction of "she is" (She + is = She's).
The apostrophe (') replaces the missing letter "i" in "is".
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A. It should rain day after tomorrow.
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B. None of these
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C. It may rain day after tomorrow.
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D. It must rain day after tomorrow.
Explanation
The phrase "possibility of rain" best matches the modal verb "may", which indicates uncertainty or possibility.
"May" is the most appropriate and polite way to express weather-related predictions.
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
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