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A. The mother prayed by her son might be successful
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B. The mother prayed that her son may be successful
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C. The mother prayed that her son might be successful
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D. The mother prayed that his son might be successful
Explanation
- The sentence is an optative sentence (expressing a wish), and "May you" changes to "might" in indirect speech.
- The pronoun "her" replaces "your" to maintain proper narration.
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A. Let your pen given me and take your seat.
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B. You are requested to give me your pen and take your seat.
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C. None of these
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D. You are warned to give me your pen and take your seat.
Explanation
You are requested to give me your pen and take your seat.
This option is polite and correctly conveys a formal request, maintaining the original meaning while using appropriate language.
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A. That book will have been finished by me
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B. None of these
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C. That book will be finished by me
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D. That book has been finished by me
Explanation
In passive voice, the object ("that book") becomes the subject, and the verb tense is adjusted accordingly.
The sentence changes from "I will have finished that book" to "That book will have been finished by me."
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A. Why was I not invited by him to dinner
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B. Why was I not invite by him to dinner
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C. Why I was not invite by him to dinner
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D. Why I was not invited by him to dinner
Explanation
- In passive voice, the structure is "Why + was/were + subject + past participle + by agent."
- "Invited" is the correct past participle of "invite," making this sentence grammatically accurate.
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A. Will work
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B. Worked
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C. Had worked
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D. Have worked
Explanation
Ten year ago, I had worked in Lahore.
دس سال پہلے میں نے لاہور میں کام کیا تھا۔
The past perfect tense "had worked" is used here to indicate an action that was completed before another point in time, in this case, ten years ago.
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A. Doesn't
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B. Didn't
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C. Isn't
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D. Hasn't
Explanation
"I watched TV last night, but my sister didn't."
This indicates that your sister did not watch TV last night, using the simple past tense to match the context.
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A. His spectacles has new.
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B. His spectacles are new.
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C. None of these
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D. His spectacles was new.
Explanation
The subject of the sentence is "spectacles", which is a plural noun.
The verb "are" is the correct form to use with a plural subject. "Spectacles" refers to two glasses, one for each eye, so it's a plural noun.
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A. Declarative
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B. Imperative
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C. Interrogative
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D. Exclamatory
Explanation
“Go to your room” is an imperative sentence because it expresses an order or command.
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A. Exclamation
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B. Apostrophe
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C. Hyphen
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D. None of these
Explanation
The sentence "She is my mother-in-law" contains a hyphen (-) which is used to join two words (mother and in-law) to form a compound adjective.
It modifying the noun "She".
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A. Bradigier
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B. None of these
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C. Brigadier
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D. Barigidar
Explanation
Brigadier اعلی افسر
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