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A. None of these
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B. The birds Are singing the songs!
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C. The birds Singing The Songs.
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D. The birds are singing the song.
Explanation
The sentence is correctly capitalized at the beginning and ends with a period.
"The birds are singing the song" is a statement, so it requires a period at the end.
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A. Semi colon
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B. Apostrophe
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C. Period
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D. Comma
Explanation
The apostrophe (’) is used to show possession, indicating that the camera belongs to Asad.
It is placed after the noun (Asad) and before the "s" to indicate ownership.
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A. Main verb
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B. Infinitive
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C. None of these
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D. Modal verb
Explanation
In the sentence "He wanted to read that book," the word "read" is part of the infinitive "to read."
An infinitive is the base form of a verb usually preceded by "to" (e.g., to read, to write).
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A. None of these
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B. Negative
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C. Optative
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D. Exclamatory
Explanation
The sentence expresses a strong emotion or feeling — in this case, love or admiration.
Sentences showing emotions and ending with an exclamation mark are exclamatory.
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A. Simple sentence
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B. Compound sentence
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C. None of these
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D. Compound complex
Explanation
A simple sentence contains a single independent clause, as in "The donuts smell and taste fresh."
It has one subject ("the donuts") and two predicates ("smell" and "taste"), but it's still a single, complete thought.
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A. Last night you returned late.
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B. None of these
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C. Last night you returned late.
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D. Last night you are returning late.
Explanation
"Last night you returned late" is the correct sentence.
Because it uses the past tense to describe an action that happened in the past.
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A. Determiner
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B. None of these
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C. Infinitive
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D. Gerund
Explanation
"To wear" is in the infinitive form (to + base verb).
It shows the purpose of the noun "shoes" — what the shoes are meant to do.
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A. Interrogative
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B. None of these
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C. Negative
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D. Optative
Explanation
The sentence asks a question, so it is an interrogative sentence.
Interrogative sentences usually end with a question mark and seek information.
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A. Both Farid and Naseem are good swimmers.
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B. Farid and Naseem both are good swimmers.
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C. Swimmers are good both Farid and Naseem.
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D. None of these
Explanation
Both Farid and Naseem are good swimmers.
This sentence follows the correct structure, placing "Both" at the beginning for emphasis, and it maintains clarity and proper word order.
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A. She is the best person for the job certainly.
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B. She is certainly the best person for the job.
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C. Certainly she is the best person for the job.
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D. None of these
Explanation
She is certainly the best person for the job.
This sentence correctly places the adverb "certainly" before the main verb "is" for clarity and emphasis.
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0