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A. Blew
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B. Blow
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C. None of these
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D. Blue
Explanation
"Blew" is the past tense of "blow," which fits the sentence context.
The sentence becomes: "The wind blew strongly during the storm."
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A. A
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B. The
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C. None of these
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D. An
Explanation
The correct sentence is: "People saw a whole new side of him."
"A" is used because "whole" modifies a singular, countable noun ("side"), and the phrase starts with a consonant sound.
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A. What she had written
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B. What had she written
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C. She had written what
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D. None of these
Explanation
The phrase "What she had written" follows the correct word order for a noun clause.
It functions as the object of the preposition "by" in the sentence.
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A. Plug in
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B. Plug out
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C. Set up
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D. None of these
Explanation
The correct phrasal verb is "plug in", meaning to connect a device to a power source or computer.
Plug in means رابطہ بحال کرو
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A. Grows
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B. Will grow
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C. None of these
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D. Grow
Explanation
The sentence is in simple present tense, used for general facts.
So the correct sentence is: "Cotton grows in America, Egypt and Pakistan."
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A. None of these
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B. Have gone
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C. Had gone
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D. Went
Explanation
The phrase "last year" indicates a past action.
The simple past tense of "go" is went, so the correct sentence is:
"We went to Ziarat for our holidays last year."
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A. Many - has
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B. Much - has
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C. None of these
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D. Much - is
Explanation
Correct sentence: "How much is there in your account?"
"Much" is used for uncountable nouns like money, and "is" matches the singular form.
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A. Are
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B. Were
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C. Is
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D. None of these
Explanation
When using "neither...nor", the verb agrees with the nearest subject — here, "prime minister" (singular).
So, the correct sentence is: "Neither the president nor the prime minister is in the favour of cutting down the price of electricity."
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A. Long nice pink cotton
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B. None of these
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C. Pink nice Long cotton
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D. Nice Long pink cotton
Explanation
The correct adjective order in English is: opinion → size → color → material → noun.
"Nice (opinion), long (size), pink (color), cotton (material)" is the right sequence before "Kurta".
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A. Is reading usually
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B. None of these
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C. Is usually reading
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D. Usually reads
Explanation
The correct structure for habitual actions is "usually + verb".
In this case, "usually reads" fits the sentence.
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0