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A. Or
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B. None of these
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C. Because
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D. But
Explanation
The correct sentence is: "Hurry up or you will miss the bus."
"Or" is used to show a warning or consequence — if you don't hurry, the result will be missing the bus.
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A. None of these
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B. Being completed
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C. To Complete
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D. Complete
Explanation
The sentence "Samra got her employees to complete their work before deadlines" uses the structure:
"Get + someone + to + verb" (to persuade or instruct someone to do something).
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A. Is
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B. Are
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C. None of these
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D. Were
Explanation
"Twenty kilometres" is treated as a singular unit of distance.
Therefore, it takes a singular verb — "is" — to match the singular subject meaning.
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A. None of these
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B. Got
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C. Gets
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D. Get
Explanation
"Yesterday" shows past tense, so we need the past form of the verb.
The past form of "get" is "got."
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A. Has
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B. Does
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C. None of these
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D. Will
Explanation
The correct sentence is: "She will finish the work by tomorrow."
"Will" is the appropriate auxiliary verb to indicate future action.
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A. None of these
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B. Was working
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C. Will work
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D. Work
Explanation
"I am busy right now. I was working on it."
Since "right now" indicates the present moment,
The sentence refers to something happening recently, but is currently interrupted.
The past continuous tense "was working" is the correct choice.
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A. On, at
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B. None of these
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C. In, at
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D. In, on
Explanation
"Ali usually gets up early in the morning and goes to bed late at night."
We say "in the morning" for parts of the day.
We say "at night" for the nighttime.
So the correct and natural usage is: in the morning, at night.
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A. Will serve
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B. Will have served
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C. Will be serving
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D. None of these
Explanation
The phrase "by October next" indicates a future point in time with a completed action.
So, the correct tense is future perfect, i.e., "will have served".
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A. In case
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B. Unless
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C. None of these
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D. If
Explanation
The correct sentence would be, "I shall see you tomorrow unless I have to work late."
Unless is used to indicate a condition under which something will not happen.
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A. Being
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B. Has been
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C. Been
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D. None of these
Explanation
"It's been a really long time" is the correct form.
It indicating the duration of time that has passed.
"Been" is the past participle used with "has" in this context.
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