A. To bestow importance
B. To make publicly known
C. To misinterpret
D. To originate
Explanation
To give currency: To make something seem more credible or probable, perhaps by providing additional information or details.
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A. Will study
B. Studies
C. Had studied
D. Studied
Explanation
The sentence should be: "If he had studied harder, he would have passed the exam."
This is a third conditional sentence used for hypothetical situations in the past .
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A. Had
B. Have
C. Has
D. Did
Explanation
Did you hear the President's speech?
We use "Did" to form questions in the simple past tense.
"Hear" is the base form of the verb ( after "did," we don't change the verb ).
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A. could
B. will
C. might
D. should
Explanation
"let me tell you it will not"
"میں آپ کو بتاتا ہوں کہ ایسا نہیں ہوگا"
"Will" accurately conveys a strong certainty that light will not come.
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A. would not go
B. did not go
C. did not went
D. would not gone
Explanation
It was raining heavily yesterday, so they did not go out.
کل موسلا دھار بارش ہو رہی تھی اس لیے وہ باہر نہیں نکلے۔
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"did not go" effectively communicates that they remained indoors because of the rain.
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A. had won
B. won
C. has had won
D. was winning
Explanation
By the time he was thirty, he had won many tournaments."
جب وہ تیس سال کا تھا، اس نے بہت سے ٹورنامنٹ جیت لیے تھے۔"
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"had won" is used in this sentence to convey the past perfect tense.
This sentence , "By the time he was thirty" establishes a point in the past.
The action of winning tournaments ("had won") is placed before this past point in time
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A. Slept
B. Was sleeping
C. Sleeps
D. Had slept
Explanation
The sentence should read : "To his horror, he found that he had slept for nearly 24 hours." The use of the past perfect tense (had slept) indicates that the action of sleeping started in the past and continued up to the point in the past when he found out how long he had been asleep.
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A. Subject+simple future of the verb to be'+past participle
B. Subject+simple future of the verb 'to be'+present participle
C. Subject+simple future of the verb 'to do'+present participle
D. Subject+simple future of the verb to have+past participle
Explanation
The correct answer is: Subject+simple future of the verb 'to do'+base form of the verb.
The Future Simple Tense is formed using the auxiliary verb "will" (or "shall" plus the base form of the main verb.
The correct structure is :
Subject + will (or shall) + base form of the verb For example: I will go, she will study, they will arrive, etc.
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A. eating
B. eaten
C. ate
D. both
Explanation
Ate and eaten are two forms of the irregular verb eat.
Ate is the past tense form and eaten is the past participle form .
Additional Info
The third-person singular simple present indicative form of " eat " is " eats ".
The present participle of " eat " is " eating ".
The past participle of " eat " is " eaten ".
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A. have been
B. none
C. has been
D. had been
Explanation
I have been waiting for 3 hours
میں 3 گھنٹے سے انتظار کر رہا ہوں۔
The Tense of the sentence is Present Perfect Continuous tense because " have been waiting " is given in the sentence.
Have been in the form used with any other subject (including the pronouns I, we, and they)
ND18-9-2023
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