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A. Rein
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B. Reign
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C. Ring
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Reign" means the rule or period of power of a king or queen — matches the meaning of the sentence.
It is the correct homophone (same sound, different meaning/spelling) for this royal context.
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A. Quickly, finish your homework before dinner.
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B. None of these
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C. She sings, and dances gracefully.
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D. After he finished his meal, he went out.
Explanation
After he finished his meal, he went out.
The comma separates the introductory dependent clause ("After he finished his meal") from the independent clause ("he went out").
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A. council
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B. counsul
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C. counsel
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D. councel
Explanation
The sentence requires a word that means "advice" or "guidance".
"Counsel" can be used as a noun to mean advice or as a verb to mean to advise.
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A. To indicate a pause in a sentence
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B. To express strong feelings or emphasis
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C. To separate items in a list
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D. None of these
Explanation
An exclamation mark (!) expresses strong emotions like surprise, excitement, or anger.
It is used at the end of exclamatory sentences.
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A. Decorating with lights, the house looked beautiful.
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B. The house was decorating with lights and looked beautiful.
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C. Decorated with lights, the house looked beautiful.
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D. None of these
Explanation
Decorated with lights, the house looked beautiful.
This sentence uses the past participle "decorated" to combine the ideas.
It avoids repetition and clearly connects the decoration with the appearance of the house.
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A. She said, "We are going to the park".
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B. None of these
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C. She said, "We are going to the park."
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D. She said "We are going to the park".
Explanation
She said, "We are going to the park."
Inverted commas (quotation marks) should enclose the spoken words, and the full stop should come inside the closing quotation mark.
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A. She may not read Chinese.
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B. She cannot read Chinese.
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C. She might not read Chinese.
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Cannot" is the correct modal verb expressing inability, matching the meaning of "not able to."
It is the most direct modal form equivalent to the original sentence.
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A. The dogs barking loudly
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B. The dog bark loudly
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C. The dogs bark loudly
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D. The dogs barks loudly
Explanation
The dogs bark loudly.
"The dogs" is a plural subject, so it needs a plural verb "bark" to match.
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A. I want that small new square red bag.
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B. I want that square small new red bag.
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C. I want that red small square new bag.
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D. I want that small square new red bag.
Explanation
The correct order of adjectives in English typically follows: Determiner + Opinion + Size + Age + Shape + Color + Noun.
"That (determiner) small (size) new (age) square (shape) red (color) bag (noun)" follows this standard adjective order.
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A. None of these
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B. Pronoun phrase
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C. Adverb phrase
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D. Infinitive phrase
Explanation
"To catch the bus" starts with "to" + verb, which is an infinitive form.
It functions as a phrase explaining the purpose or reason related to "time."
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