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A. She told her not to touch it
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B. He told him not to touch it
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C. She told him not to touch it
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D. She said to him not to touch it
Explanation
She told him not to touch it.
In indirect speech, commands are reported by changing "said to" to "told."
"Don't" changes to "not," followed by the verb in its base form.
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A. He asked me if I see the new car
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B. He asked me if I have seen the new car
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C. He asked me if I had saw the new car
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D. He asked me If I had seen the new car
Explanation
He asked me if I had seen the new car.
The correct form uses past perfect tense ("had seen") to report a question in the past.
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A. He told me that he can go then.
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B. None of these
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C. He told me that I could go then.
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D. He told me that you could go now.
Explanation
The correct narration is: "He told me that I could go then."
In reported speech, "you" changes to "I" and "can" changes to "could," with "now" changing to "then" to reflect the shift in time.
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A. None of these
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B. Will she not have been sung a song?
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C. Will a song not have been sung by her?
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D. Will have a song not been sung by her?
Explanation
Will a song not have been sung by her?
In passive voice, the object ("a song") comes first, followed by the helping verbs ("will have been").
The past participle of "sing" is "sung", and the subject ("she") becomes "by her" at the end.
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A. Caesar has been accused of ambition by Brutus.
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B. None of these
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C. Caesar is accused of ambition by Brutus.
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D. Caesar was accused of ambition by Brutus.
Explanation
Caesar was accused of ambition by Brutus.
- The sentence is in past simple active voice and is correctly changed to past simple passive voice.
- "Accused" remains in past form, and "Caesar" becomes the subject of the passive sentence.
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A. The cat is chasing the rat.
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B. The rat is being chased by the cat.
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C. The rat was chased by the cat
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D. The rat chases the cat.
Explanation
Active Voice: The cat chased the rat.
(Subject = cat, verb = chased, object = rat)
Passive Voice: The rat was chased by the cat.
(Object becomes subject, verb changes to passive form)
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A. A song has sung by her.
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B. A song will have been sung by her.
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C. A song have been sung by her.
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D. A song will had sung by her.
Explanation
In passive voice, "She will have sung a song" becomes "A song will have been sung by her."
Passive voice changes the focus from the subject to the object.
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A. None of these
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B. She will not catch the train
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C. She will not have caught the train
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D. She has not caught the train
Explanation
The train will not have been caught by her sentence is in the future perfect passive voice.
It is active voice equivalent is "She will not have caught the train."
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A. Will she takes tea?
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B. Does She take tea?
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C. Do she takes tea?
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D. Does She Takes tea?
Explanation
Did She Take Tea means کیا وہ چائے پیتی تھی
Does she take tea means کیا وہ چائے پیتی ہے
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A. A past participle
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B. An infinitive
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C. A present participle
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D. A gerund
Explanation
In the sentence, "played" functions as the past participle of the verb "play."
The past participle is used in this context to form the passive voice ("was played"), indicating that:
the match was played by someone (the subject of the sentence is not specified)
and then shown on TV.
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