-
A. Will work
-
B. None of these
-
C. Worked
-
D. Has worked
Explanation
This is a second conditional sentence (If + past simple, would + base verb).
So the correct form is: If he worked harder, he would pass.
-
A. None of these
-
B. Is writing
-
C. Had written
-
D. Writes
Explanation
The reporting verb "said" is in the past tense, so the reported speech must also shift to the past perfect.
Therefore, "He said that he had written the letter" is the correct indirect narration.
-
A. Essential
-
B. None of these
-
C. A pleasant
-
D. An abundant
Explanation
"Essential" means absolutely necessary.
Essential means ضروری
-
A. In addition to
-
B. Well
-
C. None of these
-
D. Moreover
Explanation
"In addition to" correctly connects two activities, indicating she does both.
In addition to means اس کے علاوہ
In addition to teaching English, she also writes for various newspapers.
انگریزی پڑھانے کے علاوہ ، وہ مختلف اخبارات کے لئے بھی لکھتی ہیں۔
-
A. Speak
-
B. None of these
-
C. Speaks
-
D. Speaking
Explanation
- "Jalal" is a singular subject.
- So the verb should be in the singular form "speaks."
- In present simple tense, third-person singular subjects (he/she/it) take the verb with an "-s" (speaks).
- Jalal speaks English, Urdu and bit of Dari.
- جلال انگریزی ، اردو اور دری کا تھوڑا سا بولتا ہے۔
-
A. She eats breakfast
-
B. Was seeing
-
C. In the garden
-
D. The boy running
Explanation
A complete sentence requires a subject and a verb, which "She eats breakfast" has.
-
A. has been
-
B. was
-
C. will be
-
D. have been
Explanation
This uses the present perfect continuous tense, which is used to describe an action that started in the past and is still continuing in the present.
-
A. Will have
-
B. Had
-
C. Have
-
D. Will have been
Explanation
By the time he arrives, we will have already left.
This uses the future perfect tense to indicate that an action will be completed before another future event.
-
A. To who it may concern.
-
B. To whom it may concern.
-
C. Who it may concern.
-
D. Whom it may concern.
Explanation
"Whom" is the correct word to use as an object.
It follows the preposition "to."
This makes "To whom it may concern" the proper and formal phrase.
-
A. Was studying
-
B. Studied
-
C. Had been studying
-
D. Had studied
Explanation
She had been studying for three hours when the power went out.
"Had been studying" is a past perfect continuous tense.
It indicates an action that began in the past.
The action continued for a duration of time.
It ended before another past event (when the power went out).
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0