In the word "sandwich," the "d" is silent and not pronounced.
The pronunciation of "sandwich" sounds like "san-wich," with the "d" remaining unspoken.
"Will" is used to express future predictions or certainty, like weather forecasts.
So, "There will be heavy snow tomorrow" correctly predicts future weather.
"The wages of sin" is a noun phrase because it consists of a noun ("wages") and its modifier ("of sin"), which together function as the subject of the sentence.
A noun phrase acts as a subject, object, or complement in a sentence.
"Do not stop!" is an imperative sentence because it gives a command or instruction.
It also has a negative form because it tells the listener not to do something. So, it is both imperative and negative.
An adjective clause is a dependent clause that describes a noun.
"Which is my favourite season" describes "Summer," making it the adjective clause in the sentence.
"Sarah’s bowl of noodles" functions as a noun phrase because it acts as a single unit referring to a thing (the bowl).
A noun phrase consists of a noun and its modifiers, which in this case are "Sarah’s" (possessive) and "of noodles" (prepositional phrase).
The first letter "W" should be capitalized.
"Faraz" and "Saad" are proper nouns, so they must start with capital letters.
A question mark (?) is required at the end of the interrogative sentence.
Masculine Gender → Male (e.g., boy, king)
Feminine Gender → Female (e.g., girl, queen)
Common Gender → Both male & female (e.g., teacher, doctor)
Neuter Gender → Neither male nor female (e.g., table, book)
"Quickly" is the adverb form of "Quick."
Similarly, "Timely" is the adverb form of "Time".
The sentence is in past tense ("acquired"), so the correct passive form uses "was acquired."
Past Indefinite Tense
Active voice: Subject + V2 + Object
Passive Voice: Object + was/were + V3 + by + Subject