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A. None of these
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B. Whom are you looking for?
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C. You are looking for whom?
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D. Whom made this cake?
Explanation
"Whom are you looking for?"
"Whom" is the objective case of "who" and should be used when it functions as the object of a verb or preposition.
In this sentence, "whom" is the object of the preposition "for," making it grammatically correct.
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A. We moved to Texas in July.
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B. None of these
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C. She visited the eiffel tower in France.
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D. I went to paris last Summer.
Explanation
Proper nouns like Texas and months like July must always be capitalized.
The sentence follows correct capitalization rules with no errors in names, months, or sentence beginning.
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A. Playing
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B. None of these
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C. Were
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D. Park
Explanation
"Playing" has an inflectional ending “-ing” that shows progressive tense.
Inflectional endings modify a word's tense, number, or degree without changing its core meaning.
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A. None of these
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B. Shes'
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C. Sh's
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D. She's
Explanation
"She's" is the correct contraction of "she is" (She + is = She's).
The apostrophe (') replaces the missing letter "i" in "is".
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A. It must rain day after tomorrow.
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B. None of these
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C. It should rain day after tomorrow.
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D. It may rain day after tomorrow.
Explanation
The phrase "possibility of rain" best matches the modal verb "may", which indicates uncertainty or possibility.
"May" is the most appropriate and polite way to express weather-related predictions.
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A. Hyphen
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B. Dash
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C. Parenthesis
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D. None of these
Explanation
A hyphen (–) is used in compound nouns like “brother-in-law” to join the words clearly.
It differs from a dash, which is longer and used to separate ideas in a sentence.
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A. None of these
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B. Won - one
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C. Won - won
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D. One - won
Explanation
One of my school teams won the cricket match.
"One" refers to a number or a single item, and "won" is the past tense of win.
These are homophones — they sound the same but have different meanings and spellings.
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A. To give a suggestion
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B. To make a polite request
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C. None of these
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D. To make a prediction
Explanation
The modal verb "could" is used here to politely ask someone to repeat something.
It softens the tone, making the request more courteous.
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A. He is learning to play the piano.
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B. The sugar causes diabetes.
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C. None of these
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D. The Nile is the longest river in the world.
Explanation
"Sugar" as a general, uncountable noun doesn't need "the" when talking in general.
Correct form: "Sugar causes diabetes." — remove "the" for general statements.
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A. None of these
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B. Museum
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C. Sunday
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D. Visited
Explanation
"Sunday" is a proper noun (a day of the week) and must always be capitalized.In the sentence, "sunday" is incorrectly written in lowercase — it should be "Sunday".
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0