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A. He asked me why I have come late.
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B. He told me why I had come late.
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C. He asked me why I had come late.
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D. None of these
Explanation
He asked me why I had come late.
In indirect speech, the present perfect tense ("have come") changes to the past perfect ("had come") when reporting a past event.
"Said to" is changed to "asked" when asking a question.
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A. She exclaimed what a lovely dress it was.
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B. None of these
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C. She exclaimed that it was a lovely dress.
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D. She exclaimed what a lovely dress it is.
Explanation
In indirect speech, the exclamatory sentence is changed into a statement.
The present tense ("is") changes to past tense ("was").
The phrase "What a lovely dress it is!" is reported as "She exclaimed that it was a lovely dress."
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A. The teacher ordered Amna to watch your steps.
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B. None of these
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C. The teacher ordered Amna to watch her steps.
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D. The teacher requested Amna to watch your steps.
Explanation
In indirect speech, the pronoun "your" changes to "her" because it refers to Amna.
The verb "said" is changed to "ordered" as it is a command.
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A. He said that if I work hard, I will pass the exam.
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B. He said that if he worked hard, he would pass the exam.
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C. He said that if he works hard, he would pass the exam
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D. He said that if I worked hard, I would pass the exam.
Explanation
Corrected narration:
"He said that if he worked hard, he would pass the exam."
In indirect speech, we change the present tense to the past tense. "Will" becomes "would," and "I" becomes "he."
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A. The lion shot the hunter.
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B. The lion was shot by the hunter.
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C. The lion is shot by the hunter.
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D. None of these
Explanation
The lion was shot by the hunter.
The sentence is in simple past tense: "shot."
In passive voice, it becomes "was + past participle" → was shot.
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A. Our killing of enemies is done by our soldiers.
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B. None of these
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C. The enemies are being killed by our soldiers.
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D. The enemies are killed by our soldiers.
Explanation
The enemies are being killed by our soldiers.
The sentence is in present continuous tense: "are killing."
In passive voice, present continuous becomes "are being + past participle" → are being killed.
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A. A story is being written by me.
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B. None of these
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C. A story had been written by me.
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D. A story has been written by me.
Explanation
Present perfect passive structure: has/have been + past participle
Active: I have written a story.
Passive: A story has been written by me.
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A. Why have this jug been broken by you?
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B. Why this jug has been broken by you?
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C. Why has this jug been broken by you?
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D. None of these
Explanation
Why has this jug been broken by you?
The structure for passive voice in present perfect tense: has/have + been + past participle.
The subject “you” becomes the agent, and “this jug” becomes the subject of the passive sentence.
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A. Your pen has been broken by someone
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B. None of these
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C. Our pen has broken by someone
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D. Your pen has broken by someone
Explanation
Passive voice of "Someone has broken your pen" is formed as:
Object + has/have been + past participle + by + subject
So, "Your pen has been broken by someone" is grammatically correct.
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A. A latter is been written by me
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B. A latter is been written by my
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C. None of these
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D. A latter is being written by me
Explanation
Passive voice of "I am writing a letter" is formed as:
Object + is/are being + past participle + by + subject
So, "A letter is being written by me" is correct.
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0