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A. Showed
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B. Much
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C. Patient
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D. None of these
Explanation
In the sentence "They showed much patience":
"Much" is an adjective modifying the noun "patience" (quantifying it).
"They": Pronoun (subject).
"Showed": Verb.
"Patience": Noun.
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A. Fruit
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B. None of these
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C. Any
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D. Eat
Explanation
In the sentence "She did not eat any fruit":
"Any" is an adjective modifying the noun "fruit" (quantifying it negatively).
"Fruit": Noun (object).
"Eat"/"Did": Verbs.
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A. Her/wooden/comfortable/old
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B. Her/comfortable/old/wooden
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C. None of these
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D. Comfortable/her/wooden/old
Explanation
Possessive pronoun "Her" comes first.
Followed by adjectives in this order:
Opinion (comfortable)
Age (old)
Material (wooden)
This is the correct sequence for multiple adjectives before a noun.
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A. Prettier
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B. None of these
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C. Pretty
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D. The prettiest
Explanation
"Who is the prettiest girl in the picture?"
"The prettiest" is the superlative form of "pretty".
When comparing one person out of a group, we use the superlative form of the adjective
"The" is used before superlative adjectives.
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A. Adjective
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B. Adverb
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C. Verb
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Well" describes how something is begun, modifying the verb "begun."
It tells us the manner of the action, which is the role of an adverb.
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A. And
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B. None of these
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C. But
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D. Quickly
Explanation
Quickly describes how an action is performed (manner of action).
Adverbs of manner answer the question "how?" — e.g., He runs quickly.
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A. None of these
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B. Bitterly
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C. Bitter
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D. Badly
Explanation
"Tastes" is a linking verb, so it is followed by an adjective ("bitter").
Adverbs modify actions, but taste describes a state, requiring an adjective.
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A. Began
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B. Begun
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C. None of these
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D. Will begun
Explanation
The verb "began" is the correct past tense form of "begin."
It is sed to describe an action that started in the past.
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A. For Seeing
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B. To Seeing
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C. For to see
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D. To See
Explanation
Waiting to see the doctor means دندان ساز سے ملنے کیلئے انتظار کرنا
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A. Jinnah was knew to him
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B. Jinnah is known to him
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C. Jinnah will be known to him
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D. Jinnah was known to him
Explanation
Know is a verb which means جاننا
Knew is the second form and known is the third form of know.
Past Indefinite tense
Active Voice= Subject + Second Form of Verb + Object.
Passive Voice = Object + was/were + third of verb + by + subject.
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