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A. Ourselves
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B. None of these
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C. Itself
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D. Herself
Explanation
"Itself" is the correct reflexive pronoun to refer back to the cat, a singular third-person subject.
Reflexive pronouns are used when the subject and the object of the sentence are the same.
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A. They
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B. It
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C. He
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D. She
Explanation
The alarm is a singular, non-living thing, so the correct pronoun is "it."
Correct sentence: When the alarm rang, I turned it off.
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A. Write, Foot, Train
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B. Nobody, Somebody
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C. Herself, Itself, Myself
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D. Their, Mine, Her, Yours
Explanation
Reflexive pronouns refer back to the subject (e.g., I saw myself).
Words like myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, yourselves, themselves are reflexive pronouns.
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A. Keep
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B. Neat
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C. Bedroom
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D. Her
Explanation
Words like my, his, her, their, your etc. are called Possessive Pronouns.
"Her" is a pronoun used to show possession (possessive pronoun).
It refers to something that belongs to Hira (her bedroom).
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A. None of these
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B. Ourselves
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C. Themselves
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D. Herself
Explanation
"Ourselves" is a reflexive pronoun that correctly refers back to the subject "Sara and I."
Reflexive pronouns are used when the subject and object of the sentence are the same, which is the case here.
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A. Conjunction
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B. Pronoun
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C. Adverb
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Us" is a pronoun because it refers to a group of people.
It is the objective case of the pronoun "we."
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A. Reflexive pronoun
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B. Indefinite pronoun
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C. Personal pronoun
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D. None of these
Explanation
Reflexive pronouns reflect back to the subject of the sentence (e.g., "yourself" refers to "you").
They are used when the subject and object of a verb are the same person.
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A. None of these
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B. Gave
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C. She
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D. Me
Explanation
Object pronouns receive the action in a sentence.
In the sentence "She gave me the book," "me" is the object pronoun as it receives the action of "gave."
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A. Relative
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B. Demonstrative
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C. None of these
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D. Reflexive
Explanation
Reflexive pronouns (myself, yourself, himself, etc.) end with "self" or "selves."
They reflect the action back to the subject (e.g., "He hurt himself.").
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A. Preposition
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B. None of these
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C. Pronoun
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D. Noun
Explanation
"Mine" is a possessive pronoun that shows ownership.
It replaces a noun phrase like "my car" to avoid repetition.
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