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A. Adverb
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B. Conjunction
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C. Adjective
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D. Pronoun
Explanation
An Adverb is a which qualifies an Adjective.
Beautiful is an adjective.
Very is an Adverb.
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A. Compound-complex
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B. Complex
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C. Compound
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D. Simple
Explanation
"My Dad was delighted when I showed him my result" is a complex sentence
Because it consists of one independent clause and one dependent clause, connected by the subordinating conjunction "when."
Independent Clause: "My Dad was delighted"
Dependent Clause: "When I showed him my result"
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A. renounce
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B. All
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C. retract
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D. recant
Explanation
Some common synonyms of abjure are forswear, recant, renounce, and retract.
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A. Noun phrase
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B. Verb phrase
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C. Adverb clause
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D. None of these
Explanation
"When I heard him talk so" gives more information about the time of the action "was surprised," which is a function of an adverb clause.
It begins with the subordinating conjunction "when" and contains a subject ("I") and a verb ("heard"), forming a dependent clause.
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A. Adjective phrase
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B. None of these
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C. Relative clause
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D. Adverb clause
Explanation
"When you get back from your trip" is an adverb clause because it modifies the verb "give" by telling when the action should happen.
Adverb clauses begin with subordinating conjunctions like when, because, although, if, etc.
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A. None of these
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B. Whom are you looking for?
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C. Whom made this cake?
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D. You are looking for whom?
Explanation
"Whom are you looking for?"
"Whom" is the objective case of "who" and should be used when it functions as the object of a verb or preposition.
In this sentence, "whom" is the object of the preposition "for," making it grammatically correct.
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A. None of these
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B. Playing
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C. Were
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D. Park
Explanation
"Playing" has an inflectional ending “-ing” that shows progressive tense.
Inflectional endings modify a word's tense, number, or degree without changing its core meaning.
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A. First – Secondly – Then – Finally
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B. None of these
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C. First - After that - Secondly - Finally
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D. First - Finally - Then - Secondly
Explanation
The correct logical sequence is:First (beginning) → Secondly (next point) → Then (follow-up) → Finally (conclusion).
This order ensures clear progression and proper flow of ideas.
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A. She's
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B. None of these
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C. Shes'
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D. Sh's
Explanation
"She's" is the correct contraction of "she is" (She + is = She's).
The apostrophe (') replaces the missing letter "i" in "is".
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A. None of these
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B. It should rain day after tomorrow.
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C. It may rain day after tomorrow.
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D. It must rain day after tomorrow.
Explanation
The phrase "possibility of rain" best matches the modal verb "may", which indicates uncertainty or possibility.
"May" is the most appropriate and polite way to express weather-related predictions.
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