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A. Of
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B. In
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C. From
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D. With
Explanation
Usually preposition with is used after Charged
Other examples:
He has been charged with drink-driving.
I have been charged with obstruction.
She has been charged with perjury.
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A. The beggar cannot be teased
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B. Let the beggar do not be teased
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C. Let the beggar not teased
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D. Let the beggar not be teased
Explanation
Active Voice: Do not tease the beggar.
Passive Voice: Let the beggar not be teased
Passive Voice: You are advised to not tease the beggar.
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A. Noun
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B. Preposition
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C. Adjective
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D. Adverb
Explanation
The word Any is an Adverb which is used in Negative sentence.
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A. I will been invited by her.
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B. I will invited by her.
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C. I shall be invited by her.
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D. I shall being invited by her.
Explanation
The correct passive form is: "I shall be invited by her."
In passive voice, "will invite" changes to "shall be invited" to maintain proper future tense and passive structure.
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A. After winter vacations, the University is opening in Monday
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B. After winter vacations, the University is opening by Monday
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C. After winter vacations, the University is opening on Monday
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D. None of these
Explanation
"On" is the correct preposition used with days of the week.
It shows the exact day something will happen.
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A. On
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B. With
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C. None of these
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D. Over
Explanation
The correct preposition to use with "deal" in this context is "with" (deal with = handle or address something).
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A. Of
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B. In
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C. With
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D. From
Explanation
The letter was written in ink.
خط سیاہی سے لکھا گیا
"In" is a preposition as "Liquid instrument"
ND12_8_2023
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A. Dependent clause
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B. Phrase
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C. Independent clause
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D. None of these
Explanation
In the sentence "Her parents are walking on the road in the morning," the phrase "in the morning" is adverbial.
An adverbial phrase modifies the verb "are walking" by providing information about when the action is taking place.
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A. Noun clause
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B. Adjective clause
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C. None of these
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D. Adverb clause
Explanation
"Because the night is cold" explains why the action is done, modifying the verb "take" — this is the role of an adverb.
Adverb clauses answer questions like why, when, how, or under what condition.
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A. None of these
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B. He went to hospital
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C. He has gone to the hospital
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D. He goes to the hospital
Explanation
"Goes" is the present simple tense of the verb "go".
It describes a habitual or regular action happening in the present.
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