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A. None of these
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B. I did not sang a song.
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C. I did not sing a song.
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D. I does not sing a song.
Explanation
In negative past tense sentences with "did not," the main verb stays in its base form (sing).
Using "did not" already shows past tense, so the verb does not change.
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A. Regardless of the weather then to watching the game on television
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B. Regardless of the weather than watching the game on television
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C. Regardless of the weather than watched the game on television
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D. None of these
Explanation
They would prefer to go to the stadium regardless of the weather than watching the game on television.
"Regardless of the weather" is the correct phrase (requires "of").
"Than watching" is grammatically correct for comparison (preferring stadium over TV).
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A. None of these
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B. The principal announced that the school was going to change its attendance policy.
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C. The principal announced that school were changing it’s attendance policy.
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D. The principle announced the school was changing their attendance policy.
Explanation
"Principal" is the correct spelling for the head of a school.
"Was" agrees with singular subject "school."
"Its" is the correct possessive pronoun for "school."
"Attendance" is the correct spelling.
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A. Did cows eat grass?
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B. Does cows eat grass?
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C. None of these
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D. Do cows eat grass?
Explanation
For present simple tense with plural subject “cows,” use “Do.”
"Does" is for singular subjects.
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A. He not played for an hour
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B. He has not been played for an hour
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C. He did not play for an hour
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Did not play" is the correct past simple negative form for the verb "play."
Subject (He) + auxiliary verb (did) + not + base verb (play).
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A. Was she the only one who knew the solution?
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B. None of these
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C. Had she the only one who knew the solution?
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D. Did she the only one who knew the solution?
Explanation
The original sentence is in past tense ("was"), so the correct question form starts with "Was."
The subject and verb are correctly inverted to form the question.
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A. Exclamatory sentence
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B. None of these
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C. Interrogative sentence
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D. Declarative sentence
Explanation
The sentence asks a question, beginning with "What kind of," which makes it interrogative.
Interrogative sentences are used to seek information and end with a question mark (?).
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A. Complex Sentence
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B. Compound Sentence
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C. None of these
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D. Simple Sentence
Explanation
A complex sentence contains one independent clause and at least one dependent clause.
Independent clause: The boys did not go to the zoo
Dependent clause: because they went to the park
The dependent clause starts with the subordinating conjunction "because", which makes the sentence complex.
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A. Simple Sentence
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B. Complex Sentence
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C. None of these
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D. Compound Sentence
Explanation
The sentence has a dependent clause ("Although he worked hard") and an independent clause ("he did not do well in the examination").
This combination makes it a complex sentence.
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A. Compound Sentence
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B. Simple Sentence
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C. None of these
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D. Complex Sentence
Explanation
The sentence has one independent clause ("it barked loudly") and one dependent clause ("When the dog chased the cat").
This structure defines a complex sentence.
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