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A. He said that he did not like beef
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B. He said that he did not liked beef
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C. He said that he does not like beef
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D. He told that he does not liked beef
Explanation
Direct: He said, "He does not like beef".
Indirect: He said that he did not like beef
Remove inverted commas
Convert present into past tense
Add that
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A. Upon
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B. On
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C. None of the above
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D. To
Explanation
- Generally we say something to his or her face.
- To is a preposition here.
- I said it to his face.
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A. I asked him “Where will you stay?”
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B. None of these
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C. I said to him “Where you will stay?”
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D. I said to him “Where will I stay?”
Explanation
I asked him, “Where will you stay?”
In direct speech, the pronoun and tense are adjusted: "he would stay" becomes "you will stay."
Since it's a question, the correct form uses "will" before the subject.
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A. He is writing this letter.
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B. He will write this letter.
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C. He has written that letter.
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D. He wrote this letter.
Explanation
"That letter was written by him" is in the past simple passive voice.
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The active voice equivalent of a past simple passive sentence is in the past simple active.
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"He wrote this letter" is past simple active, and matches the meaning and time.
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A. Passive Voice
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B. Active Voice
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C. Indirect Speech
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D. Direct Speech
Explanation
Direct Speech repeats or quotes the exact words spoken by someone, often enclosed in quotation marks.
Example: She said, "I am going to the market."
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A. They stopped him to telling a lie.
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B. They asked him to not told a lie.
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C. They forbade him to told a lie.
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D. They forbade him to tell a lie.
Explanation
They said to him "Do not tell a lie"
They forbade him to tell a lie.
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A. At
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B. To
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C. None of these
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D. In
Explanation
The correct preposition to use with direction is "to," as it indicates movement toward a specific location.
Hence, "He went to the direction of the post office" is correct.
وہ ڈاک خانے کی سمت چلا گیا۔
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A. To
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B. About
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C. In
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D. At
Explanation
He went in the direction of the police station.
وہ تھانے کی طرف بڑھا۔
The correct preposition is "in" when referring to movement in a specific direction.
Such as "in the direction of the police station."
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A. She said to him not to touch it
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B. He told him not to touch it
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C. She told her not to touch it
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D. She told him not to touch it
Explanation
She told him not to touch it.
In indirect speech, commands are reported by changing "said to" to "told."
"Don't" changes to "not," followed by the verb in its base form.
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A. She asked what they were doing
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B. She asked what they are doing
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C. None of these
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D. She said what they was doing
Explanation
She asked what they were doing.
This correctly changes the direct speech into indirect speech by shifting the tense and maintaining proper structure.
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