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A. Us
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B. Our
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C. None of these
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D. Ours
Explanation
This is our house, not yours.
This is because "our" is a possessive pronoun
It is used to indicate ownership by a group that includes the speaker,
And it functions as a determiner in this context.
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A. None of these
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B. He
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C. I
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D. She
Explanation
Third-person narrative uses pronouns like he, she, they to tell the story from an outside perspective.
"I" is a first-person pronoun, used only in first-person narration.
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A. Theirs
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B. Their
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C. Their’s
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Theirs" is a possessive pronoun that replaces “their [noun]” without repeating the noun.
Use “theirs” when the noun is implied (e.g., “the favorite activity”).
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A. None of these
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B. Who
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C. Which
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D. Whose
Explanation
Use "which" for animals or things in non-defining relative clauses.
In this sentence, "which I loved dearly" refers to the dog — making "which" the correct relative pronoun.
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A. None of these
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B. Embarrassing
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C. My
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D. This
Explanation
"This" is a demonstrative pronoun used to point out something specific — in this case, the situation.
Demonstrative pronouns include this, that, these, those and replace nouns in context.
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A. Whom
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B. Which
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C. Who
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Which" is used when choosing from a known or limited set (like specific paintings).
The sentence is asking to identify one from several, so "Which" fits correctly.
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A. Which
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B. Who
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C. None of these
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D. Whom
Explanation
"Who" is used for people and sometimes for pets (like cats or dogs) when they are personified or named (e.g., "Mano").
Since Mano is a named cat and the subject of the clause, "who loves milk" is correct.
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A. Someone
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B. Somebody
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C. None of these
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D. Anybody
Explanation
In questions and negative sentences, we commonly use "anybody" (or "anyone") instead of "somebody/someone".
So, the correct sentence is: "Does anybody seem to care about the environment nowadays?"
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A. None of these
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B. Possessive pronoun
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C. Reflexive pronoun
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D. Indefinite pronoun
Explanation
"Everybody" refers to an unspecified group of people, making it an indefinite pronoun.
Indefinite pronouns do not refer to any specific person or thing.
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A. None of these
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B. The children completed their project.
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C. The man received her invitation today.
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D. The girl lost his pencil.
Explanation
The children completed their project. "Children" is plural, and "their" correctly matches the plural antecedent. |
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
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