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A. He asked me if I had saw the new car
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B. He asked me if I see the new car
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C. He asked me if I have seen 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. The teacher said that the boy may be allowed to go home now.
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B. The teacher said the boy might be allowed to go home then.
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C. The teacher asked if the boy might be allowed to go home then.
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D. The teacher said that the boy might be allowed to go home then.
Explanation
The teacher said that the boy might be allowed to go home then is the correct indirect speech conversion.
"Now" changes to "then" in reported speech, and "may" becomes "might" to maintain the past tense.
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A. None of these
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B. We said, "For sure, we are late.
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C. We said, "We are late."
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D. We said, "We are late, aren't we?"
Explanation
The correct direct narration of the indirect statement "We wanted to be confirmed that we were late" is: "We said, 'We are late, aren't we?'".
It accurately reflects the desire for confirmation and uses a question format.
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A. He told me that I could go then.
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B. He told me that you could go now.
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C. He told me that he can go then.
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D. None of these
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. She said that she was sick.
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B. She said she was sick.
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C. She said that she is sick
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D. None
Explanation
The correct narration is: "She said that she was sick."
In reported speech, the present tense "am" changes to the past tense "was" to match the reporting verb's past tense.
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A. He said to me that I am dishonest
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B. He told me that I am dishonest
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C. He said to me that I will be dishonest
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D. He told me that I was dishonest
Explanation
If the reported speech is in Present Tense, then the indirect speech will be converted into Past Tense.
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A. The teacher urged him never be late for school for school
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B. The teacher told him never be late for school for school
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C. The teacher said to him that never be late for school
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D. None
Explanation
This is a sentence of Imperative Sentence.
Imperative sentences are those which contain the sense of Request, Command, etc.
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A. Will a song not have been sung by her?
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B. Will have a song not been sung by her?
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C. None of these
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D. Will she not have been sung a song?
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. By changing the main verb
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B. By changing the subject
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C. None of these
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D. By changing the tense of the auxiliary verb
Explanation
In passive voice, the auxiliary verb "is/are" in the present continuous tense is changed to "was/were" in the past continuous tense.
The main verb remains in the past participle form.
For example:
Active: "The book is being read by the students."
Passive (Past Continuous): "The book was being read by the students."
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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 was accused of ambition by Brutus.
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D. Caesar is 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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