The words like on, over, at, under, by etc. are called Prepositions.
"Under" is a preposition showing the relationship between the cat and the table.
Prepositions indicate position, direction, or time in a sentence.
The student was punished by the teacher. is the correct passive voice transformation of the given active sentence.
The past tense of "punished" is used in the passive construction.
The correct sentence is: "Ali Rizwan needed a little more time than others to talk."
"A" is used before singular countable nouns when referring to an unspecified quantity.
The correct phrase is "The house is on fire", meaning the house is burning.
The preposition "on" is used when referring to something being in the state of burning or combustion.
"Globe" begins with the consonant cluster "gl", where two consonants come together at the start.
Attitude and Round start with a single consonant sound.
A preposition links nouns, pronouns, or phrases to other words in a sentence.
It shows relationships like direction, place, time, or cause (e.g., in, on, at, by).
In negative sentences, "any" is used with uncountable nouns like sugar.
Since the sentence is negative (have not got), "any" is the correct choice.
An adverb of reason explains why something happens.
"Hence" means for this reason or as a result, making it an adverb of reason.
Examples:
He was unwell; hence, he didn't attend the meeting.
A simple sentence contains one independent clause, even if it has a compound subject or verb.
"Alia and Saira are working and playing at the same time." has a single clause, making it a simple sentence.
Personification is when human qualities are given to non-human things.
Here, the sun is described as "playing hide and seek", which is a human action.