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A. Hurt
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B. Been hurt
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C. Was hurt
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D. Hurted
Explanation
Ali has Hurt his hand but he is feeling better now.
***
Hurt means زخمی کردینا
Hurt' is an irregular verb which means its past simple and past participle forms are also 'Hurt'.
"Hurted" and "been hurt" is incorrect form and don't exist n English
ND12_8_2023
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A. That you have met
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B. That you met
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C. That has meet you
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D. which you meet
Explanation
Here 'Yesterday' shows something happened in the past.
Second form of a verb is used in Past Indefinite Tense.
Met is the second & third form of Meet.
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A. Oneself
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B. Myself
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C. Himself
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D. Yourself
Explanation
The speaker refers to their own absence, so the correct reflexive pronoun is "myself".Reflexive pronouns match the subject: "I" → "myself".
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A. Whom
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B. Whose
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C. Which
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D. Who
Explanation
"Which" is used to refer to things (like "novel") and introduces a relative clause.
The sentence means: "This is the novel which you might like" – correct and complete.
Who, whom, what, which, and that are called Relative Pronouns.
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A. None of these
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B. Subject
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C. Direct object
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D. Indirect object
Explanation
An indirect object tells to whom or for whom the action is done.
Example: She gave him a gift. ('him' is the indirect object).
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A. That he has lost my pen
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B. If I could help
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C. None of these
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D. Whether he is sane
Explanation
The verb "said" is typically followed by "that" when reporting a statement.
"That he has lost my pen" is a correctly structured reported speech sentence.
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A. None of these
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B. Our keys has been lost by her
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C. Our keys were lost by her
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D. Our keys have been lost by us
Explanation
The sentence is in present perfect tense ("have lost"), so the passive form is "have been lost."
Subject "we" changes to "by us" in the passive voice, making the correct form: "Our keys have been lost by us."
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A. The entire house had been painted by Tahir
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B. The entire house has been painted by Tahir
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C. The entire house was painted by Tahir
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D. The entire house was being painted by Tahir
Explanation
The entire house was painted by Tahir.
The original sentence is in simple past tense ("painted"), so the passive voice must also be in simple past.
"Was painted" correctly changes the active sentence to passive in past tense.
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A. Who do you wish to punish?
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B. Which do you wish to punish?
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C. Whom do you wish to punish?
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D. Whose do you wish to punish?
Explanation
"Whom" is the objective case of "who," used when referring to the object of the verb (here, "punish").
Example: Whom did you invite? (Correct because "invite" acts on "whom").
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A. He asked me where he will find the book I had recommended
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B. He asked me where he would find the book I had recommended
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C. He asked me where he will find the book I have recommended
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D. None of these
Explanation
He asked me where he would find the book I had recommended.
In passive voice, the reported speech changes the verb tense appropriately, and the indirect speech follows the past tense structure.
"Will" changes to "would" in indirect speech, and "have recommended" changes to "had recommended."
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