Present continuous uses "is/are/am + verb-ing" (e.g., "She is sleeping").
"She is sleeps" is incorrect because "sleeps" is not in -ing form.
"Beware" is an imperative verb used to give a warning or command.
It means "be cautious" or "be on guard", making it a verb in this sentence.
The vowel in "cube" (represented by 'u') is a long vowel because it is pronounced as /juː/ (like the 'u' in "flute").
In F'a't and W'i'n, the vowels are short vowels.
Learnt is the second and third form of Learn.
Learn means سیکھنا یا علم حاصل کرنا
A transitive verb required an object while intransitive verb does not.
A trigraph is a group of three letters representing a single sound (phoneme).
In "Watch", the letters "tch" form a trigraph, producing a single /ʧ/ sound.
The phrase "I need to" expresses a requirement or necessity.
Modal verbs like "need to" indicate something essential or important.
A noun clause functions as a noun and acts as the object of the verb "believe."
"Everything that you read in the newspaper" serves as the direct object of "believe," making it a noun clause.
In offers or polite suggestions, the word “something” is used (e.g., “to drink something”).
“Wouldn’t you like to drink something?” is grammatically and contextually correct.
Alliteration is the repetition of the same beginning consonant sound in closely connected words.
The repeated “t” sound in Tall trees towered toward shows perfect alliteration.