Transitive verbs require a direct object to complete their meaning (e.g., "She kicked the ball").
The subject is needed to start the sentence, but it is not specifically required by transitive verbs to complete their meaning.
In this context, "divine" refers to something that is related to God or divinely inspired.
The divine message refers to the messages from God, particularly in the context of prophethood or revelation.
Divine means الہی
God means خدا
"Lying" is a present participle of the verb "lie," used as an adjective to describe "witness."
Participle adjectives are verb forms that function as adjectives (e.g., "running water," "broken glass").
Cholera "breaks out" means it spreads rapidly, especially after floods due to contaminated water.
Floods increase the risk of waterborne diseases like cholera.
Fathom means سمجھو
Comprehend means سمجھو
Transitional devices are words or phrases that connect ideas smoothly in writing.
"At this time," "after," and "finally" indicate time transition, making them transitional devices.
Usury is a thing or concept — specifically, the practice of charging excessive interest on loans — which makes it a noun.
In the sentence, it functions as the object of the verb “take.”
"Playing" has an inflectional ending “-ing” that shows progressive tense.
Inflectional endings modify a word's tense, number, or degree without changing its core meaning.
The sentence is a second conditional (imaginary/unreal situation in the present), using "if + past tense" and "would + base verb".
Since it says "if the weather were good", the correct structure is: "We would play football."
Vast means وسیع
Immense means وسیع