"Who" is used for people and acts as the subject of the clause.
It correctly introduces the relative clause: "who had hit the enemy."
One of my school teams won the cricket match.
"One" refers to a number or a single item, and "won" is the past tense of win.
These are homophones — they sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
A complex sentence contains one independent clause and at least one dependent (subordinate) clause.
The dependent clause "Although we were late" and the independent clause "we caught the train."
An imperative sentence gives a command or instruction.
"Finish your homework" directs someone to do something, so it is imperative.
Present Continuous tense shows actions currently in progress.
Example: She is reading a book now.
"By himself" means that he went there alone or without assistance.
It indicates that the action was done independently.
The word "carpenter" has three syllables: car-pen-ter.
Pronoun-antecedent agreement means the pronoun must agree in number and gender with its antecedent.
In this case, "boys" is plural, so the correct pronoun is "their," making the sentence grammatically correct.
The letter "b" in "doubt" is silent and not pronounced.
Silent letters are common in English and can affect spelling but not pronunciation.
The correct structure in English is Subject (I) + Adverb (rarely) + Verb (see) + Object (such natural beauty).
This forms a grammatically correct and natural-sounding sentence.
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