A. Interrogative pronoun
B. Relative pronoun
C. Conjunction
D. Demonstrative pronoun
Explanation
He is the athlete who has won many competitions," the word "who" is a relative pronoun .
"Who" is a relative pronoun .
It is used to introduce a clause providing more information about "the athlete."
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A. destructive
B. reflexive
C. innovative
D. none of these
Explanation
"THEMSELVES" is a reflexive pronoun used here to indicate that the action of preparing i s directed back at the subject "they ."
Reflexive: Reflexive pronouns are used when the subject and the object of the verb are the same, and they often end in "-self" or "-selves" (e.g., "myself," "yourself," "themselves").
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A. Him and me went to the store
B. Me and him went to the store
C. He and I went to the store
D. I and him went to the store
Explanation
Correct usage would be " He and I went to the store. "
When pronouns are connected in series, they should have the same case.
They could all be in the subject case (e.g., "he and I" ), object case (" him and me "), or possessive case (" his and my ")
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وہاں کون آپ کا دفاع کرنے کی کوشش کر رہا ہے؟\ کیا ہے \"WHO\"
A. pronoun
B. none
C. Interrogative pronoun
D. both
Explanation
An interrogative pronoun is a pronoun used to ask a question.
The five interrogative pronouns are:
what
which
who
whom
and whose.
ND17-1-2023
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A. It’s/his
B. Its/his
C. Its/he’s
D. It’s/one’s
Explanation
"Its" refers to the possessive form of the pronoun "it." For example, when referring to a pair of shoes, you might say, "That's not its box."
Meanwhile, "it's" is the contraction for the words "it is" or "it has." For example, "It's (it is) going to be a fabulous night" or "It's (it has) been a fabulous night."
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Explanation
This book is mine .
"mine" is a possessive pronoun that stands alone and replaces a noun.
The other options are incorrect:
my → possessive adjective (needs a noun after it: my book)
me → object pronoun (e.g., Give me the book.)
I → subject pronoun (e.g., I have the book.)
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A. myself
B. I
C. me
D. mine
Explanation
When the subject includes someone else and yourself, and it's performing an action, you should use the subject pronoun "I".
John and I are going to the park.
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A. which
B. None
C. whose
D. who
Explanation
Whose is a possessive pronoun. Use it when you're asking to whom something belongs.
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A. Pronoun
B. None of these
C. Adjective
D. Noun
Explanation
" Who " is a relative pronoun that refers back to " the boy ".
It introduces the relative clause " who scored a fifty."
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A. Accusative
B. Possessive
C. Nominative
D. None of these
Explanation
The possessive pronouns are my, our , your, his, her, its, and their.
Our means ہماری
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