A. This is a most Perfect.
B. None of these
C. This is Perfect.
D. This is most perfect.
Explanation
The correct sentence is " This is perfect ."
The word " perfect " is an absolute adjective and does not require " most " or " a " for emphasis.
Show/Hide Explanation
A. An European
B. A European
C. The European
D. Some European
Explanation
“European” starts with a vowel letter but a /juː/ sound, so “a” is correct
Show/Hide Explanation
A. The
B. A
C. None of these
D. An
Explanation
The correct sentence is: "Ali Rizwan needed a little more time than others to talk."
" A " is used before singular countable nouns when referring to an unspecified quantity.
Show/Hide Explanation
A. None of these
B. The bird is chirping in its nest.
C. In the nest in the bird chirping is.
D. The bird chirping in its nest is.
Explanation
Correct word order in English is Subject + Verb + Object/Complement.
" The bird (S) + is chirping (V) + in its nest (Complement)" makes a grammatically correct sentence.
Show/Hide Explanation
A. Where is Shandor located.
B. Where is Shandor located?
C. Where is Shandor Located?
D. None of these
Explanation
The sentence is a question , so it ends with a question mark (?).
" Shandor " is a proper noun, so it must start with a capital letter.
Show/Hide Explanation
A. The customers' trolleys
B. The customers trolley's
C. None of these
D. The customer's trolleys
Explanation
" Customer's " (with apostrophe before s) shows possession by one customer.
" Trolleys " is the correct plural noun being possessed.
Show/Hide Explanation
A. She has two sisters.
B. None of these
C. Although I was tired.
D. I love reading books.
Explanation
" Although I was tired " is a dependent clause because it begins with a subordinating conjunction (although) and cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.
It needs an independent clause to complete its meaning (e.g., Although I was tired, I finished my work .)
Show/Hide Explanation
A. The drummer
B. None of these
C. At the crowd
D. After the final speech
Explanation
The subject is the doer of the action , and in this sentence, " the drummer " is performing the action of hurling .
Phrases like " After the final speech " and " at the crowd " are prepositional phrases .
Show/Hide Explanation
A. Teacher
B. None of these
C. Complains
D. Behavior
Explanation
" Complains " has the inflectional ending “- s ”, showing third person singular present tense.
Inflectional endings modify a word’s tense, number, or degree without changing its core meaning or part of speech.
Show/Hide Explanation
A. Whom are you looking for?
B. Whom made this cake?
C. You are looking for whom?
D. None of these
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.
Show/Hide Explanation
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0