Both Farid and Naseem are good swimmers.
This sentence follows the correct structure, placing "Both" at the beginning for emphasis, and it maintains clarity and proper word order.
"She was late" is in the past simple tense, so the following action should be in past perfect to show it happened earlier.
"The class had started" (past perfect) correctly indicates that the class began before she arrived.
A collective noun refers to a group of people, animals, or things considered as a single unit.
"Army" represents a group of soldiers, making it a collective noun.
"Rarely" means not often, which fits the contrast given by "but" in the sentence.
The sentence implies that despite being wealthy, he does not frequently help the poor.
"Whom" is correct because it is the object of the verb "met."
"Who" is used as a subject, but here, "I" is the subject, so "whom" is appropriate.
A descriptive paragraph provides detailed information about a person, place, situation, or thing.
It focuses on sensory details (sight, sound, smell, touch, and taste) to create a vivid image.
A metaphor directly compares two unrelated things without using "like" or "as" — here, life is directly called a box of chocolates.
It implies that life is full of surprises, just like assorted chocolates in a box.
Naming words are nouns — names of people, animals, places, or things.
Pen, car, rabbit are all nouns, making them the correct group of naming words.
"Reign" means the rule or period of power of a king or queen — matches the meaning of the sentence.
It is the correct homophone (same sound, different meaning/spelling) for this royal context.
She said, "We are going to the park."
Inverted commas (quotation marks) should enclose the spoken words, and the full stop should come inside the closing quotation mark.