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A. To
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B. Since
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C. None of these
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D. For
Explanation
The phrase "goes on for some time" is the correct usage when referring to a duration of time.
"For" is used with periods of time (e.g., for hours, for years, for some time).
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A. A car was been driven by him, when the accident occurred.
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B. A car was being driven by him, when accident occurred.
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C. A car was driven by him, when the accident occur.
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D. A car driven by him, when the accident occur.
Explanation
Direct indirect after was use being.
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A. Insult
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B. Anger
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C. Pain
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Add insult to injury" is an idiom meaning to make a bad situation worse by adding something even more hurtful or aggravating.
It refers to a situation where something negative happens and then something else is done to worsen it.
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A. Prosperity
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B. None
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C. Both
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D. emergency
Explanation
emergency ھنگامی حالات
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A. Test
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B. None of these
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C. Ease
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D. Provoke
Explanation
Ordeal means آزمائش
Ease means آسانی
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A. To be in a risky or dangerous situation
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B. To be very strong and stable
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C. None of these
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D. To be extremely happy
Explanation
- The phrase "hang by a thread" means being in a precarious or unstable situation where failure or disaster is imminent.
- It originates from the idea of something barely holding on, like a thread that could snap at any moment.
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A. To deal with someone or something that proves unexpectedly troublesome or powerful
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B. To trap wanted criminal with great difficulty
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C. None of these
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D. To meet with disaster
Explanation
- The phrase means encountering a person or situation that is much harder to handle than expected.
- It originates from military slang, where soldiers mistakenly captured a strong enemy instead of an easy target.
مجھے ٹکٹ نہیں ملا۔ اگر ___ ایک، میں اندر جا سکتا ہوں۔
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A. I have
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B. None
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C. I had
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D. I'd have
Explanation
Had is the past tense and past participle of have.
Had is sometimes used instead of 'if' to begin a clause
SH16-8-2023
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A. Did not, see
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B. Should not, see
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C. Have not, see
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D. Could not, see
Explanation
The completion of the sentence follows the correct grammatical structure for the given blanks.
"Have you not called" is in the present perfect tense, indicating an action that should have been completed in the past but hasn't been completed yet.
"When you saw" is in the past simple tense, used to describe an action that occurred and was completed in the past.
انگریزی کے معیاری استعمال کے مطابق صحیح آپشن کا انتخاب کریں۔
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A. We cannot afford to eat in restaurants nowadays.
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B. We do not afford to eating in restaurants nowadays.
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C. We do not afford for eat in restaurants nowadays.
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D. We do not afford to eat in restaurants nowadays.
Explanation
The correct option is: We cannot afford to eat in restaurants nowadays.
It uses the correct verb form "cannot afford" to express the inability to do something due to financial constraints.
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0