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A. From
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B. None of these
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C. At
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D. Far
Explanation
"From" is used to show removal or separation (taking something away).
So, "I had to take my book from the table" is correct.
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A. By
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B. On
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C. None of these
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D. With
Explanation
"By" means next to or beside someone.
So, "My sister sat by my mom in the bus" is the correct sentence.
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A. From
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B. With
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C. None of these
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D. In
Explanation
"From" shows the source or place where something was obtained.
So, "I bought some milk from the grocery store" is correct.
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A. In
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B. With
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C. By
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D. None of these
Explanation
We use "in" to show that someone lives inside a place like a castle.
So, "The princess lives in the castle" is the correct usage.
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A. Good
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B. Best
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C. None of these
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D. Better
Explanation
"Better" is the correct comparative form of "good" used to compare two people.
It shows that mother’s chicken preparation is of higher quality than grandmother’s.
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A. None of these
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B. More clearly
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C. Very clearly
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D. Clearly
Explanation
When comparing how two people speak, use the comparative form "more clearly" with an adverb of more than one syllable.
"Clearly" alone is positive.
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A. Better
-
B. Best
-
C. None of these
-
D. The best
Explanation
"The best" is the superlative form used when comparing one person against all others.
It means Kamal writes better than everyone else.
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A. Late
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B. None of these
-
C. Later
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D. Latest
Explanation
"Later" is the correct comparative form of "late" used when comparing two or more people's arrival times.
The sentence compares the father's arrival to the rest of the family, so "later" fits best.
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A. She asked her if she could do anything for him.
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B. She asked him if she could do anything for him.
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C. None of these
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D. She asked to 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. Main clause
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B. None of these
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C. Adjective clause
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D. Gerund phrase
Explanation
"Sailing on the lake" acts as the object of the verb "like" — this shows it functions as a noun.Since it begins with a verb in -ing form ("sailing") and acts as a noun, it's a gerund phrase.
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