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A. None of these
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B. Possessive
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C. Indefinite
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D. Demonstrative
Explanation
"Any" is an indefinite adjective here, as it refers to an unspecified or unknown person.
It is used in questions and negatives to indicate uncertainty or non-specificity.
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A. None of these
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B. Team
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C. Enough
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D. Practice
Explanation
"Enough" is an adjective here because it describes how much practice the team had.
Adjectives modify nouns, and in this case, "enough" modifies "practice."
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A. The most thrilling
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B. None of these
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C. The less thrilling
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D. The thrillingest
Explanation
For adjectives like "thrilling" (with more than one syllable), the superlative is formed using "most".
So, the correct form is: "the most thrilling" — used to compare more than two things.
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A. This is the easiest test I've taken.
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B. That is the most tallest building.
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C. None of these
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D. He is the better student in class.
Explanation
This is the easiest test I've taken.
"Easiest" is the correct superlative form of the adjective "easy" (easy → easier → easiest).
The structure follows the rule: "the + superlative adjective" (e.g., the tallest, the smartest, the easiest).
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A. Noun
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B. None of these
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C. Adjective
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D. Adverb
Explanation
The infinitive phrase "to sleep" is modifying the noun "day", telling what kind of day.
Since it describes or qualifies a noun, it functions as an adjective.
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A. Longer
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B. None of these
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C. Longest
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D. More long
Explanation
"Longer" is the correct comparative form of the adjective "long."
It is used to compare the lifespan of non-smokers with that of smokers.
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A. None of these
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B. Longer
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C. Long
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D. Longest
Explanation
When comparing two things, we use the comparative form of the adjective, which is "longer" for "long."
"Longest" is the superlative form used when comparing three or more things.
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A. Proper adjective
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B. None of these
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C. Descriptive adjective
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D. Indefinite adjective
Explanation
'Every' is an indefinite adjective because it refers to each member of a group individually, without specifying a particular one.
It modifies the noun 'creature' in a non-specific way.
Similar examples: each, some, many, few.
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A. The carpets that you bought last year have rotted.
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B. My boss like to have a monthly meeting.
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C. Please put those boxes under the table.
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D. My brother totally love cricket.
Explanation
The carpets that you bought last year have rotted.
'that you bought last year' is an adjective clause modifying "carpets."
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A. More interesting
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B. Interesting
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C. None of these
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D. Most interesting
Explanation
Use “most interesting” for the superlative form to compare with all other books.
It fits the phrase "ever read," implying the highest degree.
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