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A. Dash
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B. Parenthesis
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C. None of these
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D. Hyphen
Explanation
A hyphen (–) is used in compound nouns like “brother-in-law” to join the words clearly.
It differs from a dash, which is longer and used to separate ideas in a sentence.
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A. One - won
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B. Won - won
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C. Won - one
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D. None of these
Explanation
One of my school teams won the cricket match.
"One" refers to a number or a single item, and "won" is the past tense of win.
These are homophones — they sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
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A. To make a polite request
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B. None of these
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C. To make a prediction
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D. To give a suggestion
Explanation
The modal verb "could" is used here to politely ask someone to repeat something.
It softens the tone, making the request more courteous.
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A. He is learning to play the piano.
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B. None of these
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C. The sugar causes diabetes.
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D. The Nile is the longest river in the world.
Explanation
"Sugar" as a general, uncountable noun doesn't need "the" when talking in general.
Correct form: "Sugar causes diabetes." — remove "the" for general statements.
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A. Visited
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B. None of these
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C. Sunday
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D. Museum
Explanation
"Sunday" is a proper noun (a day of the week) and must always be capitalized.In the sentence, "sunday" is incorrectly written in lowercase — it should be "Sunday".
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A. I can’t see tahirs car.
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B. I can’t see Tahir’s car.
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C. None of these
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D. I can’t see Tahirs car.
Explanation
"Tahir" is a proper noun → should be capitalized.
Possession is shown with apostrophe + s → Tahir’s car is correct.
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A. Reign
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B. Rein
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C. Ring
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Reign" means the rule or period of power of a king or queen — matches the meaning of the sentence.
It is the correct homophone (same sound, different meaning/spelling) for this royal context.
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A. After he finished his meal, he went out.
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B. Quickly, finish your homework before dinner.
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C. None of these
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D. She sings, and dances gracefully.
Explanation
After he finished his meal, he went out.
The comma separates the introductory dependent clause ("After he finished his meal") from the independent clause ("he went out").
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A. council
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B. counsul
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C. counsel
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D. councel
Explanation
The sentence requires a word that means "advice" or "guidance".
"Counsel" can be used as a noun to mean advice or as a verb to mean to advise.
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A. To express strong feelings or emphasis
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B. None of these
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C. To indicate a pause in a sentence
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D. To separate items in a list
Explanation
An exclamation mark (!) expresses strong emotions like surprise, excitement, or anger.
It is used at the end of exclamatory sentences.
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