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A. Preposition of time
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B. Preposition of position
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C. Preposition of movement
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Down" in this sentence shows movement from a higher place to a lower place.
Prepositions of movement indicate direction or motion, such as into, onto, up, down, across etc.
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A. Kindly
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B. Door
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C. None of these
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D. Dear
Explanation
"Dear" describes the noun "friend", so it is an adjective.
"Kindly" is an adverb.
"Door" is a noun.
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A. Adjective
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B. None of these
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C. Proper adjective
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D. Action verb
Explanation
"Located" describes the state or position of the house.
Past participles (like "located") can function as adjectives when they describe a noun.
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A. Phrasal verb
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B. Noun Phrase
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C. Adjective clause
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D. Adjective phrase
Explanation
"Extremely catching" describes the noun "eyes," functioning as an adjective phrase.
It consists of an adverb ("extremely") modifying an adjective ("catching").
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A. None of these
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B. He runs everyday regularly.
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C. It's cold outside.
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D. We won the match luckily.
Explanation
"Outside" is an adverb of place, telling where it is cold.
Adverbs of place describe location or direction, like here, there, outside, upstairs.
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A. Preposition
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B. Conjunction
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C. Pronoun
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D. Adverb
Explanation
"Still" most commonly functions as an adverb
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A. Gently
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B. There
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C. Often
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Gently" describes how an action is performed, which makes it an adverb of manner.
Adverbs of manner explain the way in which something is done, like gently, quickly, or loudly.
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A. Adverb of manner
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B. Adverb of frequency
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C. None of these
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D. Adverb of degree
Explanation
"Extremely" modifies the adjective "happy" to show the intensity or degree of happiness.
This makes it an adverb of degree, which expresses how much or to what extent something is true.
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A. None of these
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B. Adverb of Time
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C. Adverb of Place
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D. Adverb of Manner
Explanation
"Last night" tells when the action happened.
Adverbs of time describe when something occurs (e.g., today, yesterday, last night).
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A. He speaks loudly
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B. She sings melodiously
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C. The dog is resting outside
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D. None of these
Explanation
The dog is resting outside.
"Outside" is an adverb of place, indicating where the dog is resting.
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