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A. The movie was the more boring than the book
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B. The movie was most boring than the book
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C. None of these
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D. The movie was more boring than the book
Explanation
Comparative adjectives compare two things and usually use "more" with adjectives of two or more syllables like "boring."
"More boring" correctly shows the comparison between the movie and the book.
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A. His handwriting is neater than hers.
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B. His handwriting is neat than hers.
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C. His handwriting is neatest than hers.
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Neater" is the correct comparative form of the adjective "neat" to compare two things.
The comparative adjective "neater" is used to show the difference between two items (his handwriting vs. hers).
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A. She is tall than her sister.
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B. She is taller than her sister.
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C. She is more tall than her sister.
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Taller" is the correct comparative form of the adjective "tall."
Comparative adjectives are used to compare two things, often ending in -er.
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A. Noun clause
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B. None of these
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C. Adverb clause
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D. Adjective clause
Explanation
"Who did impressive speech on Pakistan day" describes the noun "Sajid," making it an adjective clause.
It modifies and provides more information about the subject "Sajid."
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A. Permission
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B. Suggestion
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C. A request
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D. None of these
Explanation
The sentence "Will you return that music down?" is asking someone to do something, making it a request.
The structure "Will you..." typically indicates a polite way of asking for something to be done.
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A. Let it be done at once.
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B. Let it be do at once
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C. None of the above
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D. Let be done at once.
Explanation
For order:
Active Voice Formula: V + object.
Passive Voice Formula: Let + subject + be + V
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A. He shall be helped
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B. He will be helped
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C. He should be helped
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D. None of these
Explanation
"They should help him" is in the active voice,
Where the subject ("They") acts on the object ("him")
Shifting the focus from the doer (they) to the receiver of the action (he).
Therefore, the correct passive voice form is:
"He should be helped."
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A. He has eaten pizza which he bought last night
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B. He has eaten the pizza which he bought last night
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C. None of these
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D. He had eaten the pizza which he has bought last night
Explanation
He has eaten the pizza which he bought last night
Correct. The sentence uses correct tense and article usage:
"has eaten" (present perfect) – recent action,
"which he bought last night" – past simple for a specific past time ("last night")
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A. The windows have cleaned by the butcher.
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B. The windows had been cleaned by the butcher.
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C. None of these
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D. The windows have been cleaned by the butcher.
Explanation
The windows have been cleaned by the butcher.
The sentence is in present perfect tense: has cleaned.
In passive voice, it becomes: have been cleaned (for plural subject: the windows).
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A. The obstacle course was run by me in record time
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B. The obstacle course has run by me in record time
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C. None of these
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D. The obstacle course is run by me in record time
Explanation
The obstacle course was run by me in record time.
This is the passive voice of the active sentence "I ran the obstacle course in record time."
In passive voice: Object + was/were + past participle + by + subject
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