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A. None of these
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B. Shahid's brother order him to wait for him
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C. Shahid's brother suggested him to wait for him
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D. Shahid's brother requested him to wait for him
Explanation
The original sentence ("Please wait for me.") uses the word "Please," which indicates a polite request, not an order or suggestion.In indirect speech, such requests are reported using "requested + object + to + verb."
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A. The teacher says that if I work hard, I will pass the test.
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B. None of these
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C. The teacher says that if you work hard, you will pass the test.
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D. The teacher says that if you work hard, we will pass the test.
Explanation
The teacher says that if you work hard, you will pass the test.
The reporting verb "says" is in the present tense, so no tense change is needed.
Quoted speech becomes indirect: "you" remains "you" as it's a general statement.
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A. He said to me that I was ill
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B. None of these
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C. He told me that he had been ill.
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D. He said to me that he has been ill.
Explanation
He told me that he had been ill.
Rules of Narration Change:
Reporting Verb: "Said to" → "Told" (more natural in reported speech).
Tense Shift: Past ("was") → Past Perfect ("had been") (since the original statement was about a past condition).
Pronoun Shift: "I" → "he" (to match the subject "He").
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A. He told me not to go away.
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B. None of these
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C. He requested me not to go away.
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D. He begged that I should not go away.
Explanation
Correct Narration Change:
The original sentence ("Please don't go away," he said to me.) is an implored request (polite command).
In indirect speech, "said to" changes to "requested" (for polite pleas) or "told" (neutral).
"Don’t go away" becomes "not to go away" (infinitive structure in reported speech).
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0