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A. The beggar cannot be teased
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B. Let the beggar not be teased
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C. Let the beggar not teased
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D. Let the beggar do not be teased
Explanation
Active Voice: Do not tease the beggar.
Passive Voice: Let the beggar not be teased
Passive Voice: You are advised to not tease the beggar.
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A. A song was not being sung by him
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B. A song is not sung by him
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C. None of these
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D. A song is not being sung by him
Explanation
In passive voice, the object of the active sentence becomes the subject.
"A song is not sung by him" is the correct passive construction for the present tense.
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A. The hat was being chosen by the child
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B. The hat is chosen by the child
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C. The hat was chosen by the child
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D. The hat should be chosen by the child
Explanation
The hat was chosen by the child is the correct passive form.
In passive voice:
- The object "hat" becomes the subject.
- The verb "chose" is changed to "was chosen" to reflect the action done by the child.
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A. Let my be not laughed at
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B. Let me be not laughed at
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C. Let we be not laughed at
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D. Let I be not laughed at
Explanation
- Active Voice: Do not laugh at me.
- Passive Voice: Let me be not laughed at.
- Active Voice: Let + indirect object + first form of a verb + direct object.
- Passive Voice: Let + direct object + be + third form of a verb + by + indirect object.
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A. None of these
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B. Our keys were lost by her
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C. Our keys have been lost by us
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D. Our keys has been lost by her
Explanation
The sentence is in present perfect tense ("have lost"), so the passive form is "have been lost."
Subject "we" changes to "by us" in the passive voice, making the correct form: "Our keys have been lost by us."
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A. The entire house was painted by Tahir
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B. The entire house has been painted by Tahir
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C. The entire house had been painted by Tahir
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D. The entire house was being painted by Tahir
Explanation
The entire house was painted by Tahir.
The original sentence is in simple past tense ("painted"), so the passive voice must also be in simple past.
"Was painted" correctly changes the active sentence to passive in past tense.
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A. Whom do you wish to punish?
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B. Who do you wish to punish?
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C. Whose do you wish to punish?
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D. Which do you wish to punish?
Explanation
"Whom" is the objective case of "who," used when referring to the object of the verb (here, "punish").
Example: Whom did you invite? (Correct because "invite" acts on "whom").
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A. He asked me where he will find the book I had recommended
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B. None of these
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C. He asked me where he will find the book I have recommended
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D. He asked me where he would find the book I had recommended
Explanation
He asked me where he would find the book I had recommended.
In passive voice, the reported speech changes the verb tense appropriately, and the indirect speech follows the past tense structure.
"Will" changes to "would" in indirect speech, and "have recommended" changes to "had recommended."
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A. Pets are kept by Elizabeth
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B. None of these
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C. Pets are keeped by Elizabeth
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D. Pets are being kept by Elizabeth
Explanation
The sentence is in simple present tense, so the passive voice follows the structure:
Object + is/are + past participle + by + subject
Hence, "Pets are kept by Elizabeth" is correct.
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A. Was the curtains being sewed by here?
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B. Are the curtains being sewed by here?
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C. Will the curtains being sewed by here?
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D. Were the curtains being sewed by her?
Explanation
Past Continuous Tense
Active Voice Formula: Subject + was/were + v4+ object.
Passive Voice Formula: Object + was/were being + v3 + by + subject
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
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