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A. None of these
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B. We will travel to California in June.
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C. We will travel to california in june.
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D. We will travel to california in June.
Explanation
We will travel to California in June.
"California" is a proper noun (a state) and should be capitalized.
"June" is the name of a month and should also be capitalized.
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A. Anagram
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B. None of these
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C. Transitional devices
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D. Homophones
Explanation
Transitional devices are words or phrases that link ideas, sentences, or paragraphs smoothly (e.g., however, therefore, moreover).
They help improve the flow and clarity of writing by connecting thoughts logically.
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A. He before the teacher arrived completed the assignment
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B. None of these
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C. Before the teacher arrived, he the assignment completed
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D. He completed the assignment before the teacher arrived
Explanation
The sentence (He completed the assignment before the teacher arrived) follows the correct subject-verb-object structure.
It maintains proper logical sequence and clarity of action and time.
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A. Bed
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B. John
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C. None of these
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D. He
Explanation
Anaphoric reference points back to something mentioned earlier.
Here, "He" refers back to "John."
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A. Mr. Smith is our English teacher
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B. None of these
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C. Mr. Smith is our english teacher
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D. Mr. Smith is our English Teacher
Explanation
"Mr." and "English" are capitalized because they are proper nouns.
"Teacher" is not capitalized because it's a common noun in this context.
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A. None of these
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B. She
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C. Books
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D. Library
Explanation
"She" is the anaphoric reference, as it refers back to "Mary" in the previous sentence.
Anaphoric references link pronouns or other words to their antecedents in the text.
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A. Such natural beauty I rarely see
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B. I see rarely such natural beauty
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C. None of these
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D. I rarely see such natural beauty
Explanation
The correct structure in English is Subject (I) + Adverb (rarely) + Verb (see) + Object (such natural beauty).
This forms a grammatically correct and natural-sounding sentence.
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A. Sunday
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B. Sara
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C. She
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D. None of these
Explanation
Anaphoric reference is when a pronoun (like "She") refers back to a noun previously mentioned (in this case, Sara).
"She" refers to Sara in the second sentence.
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A. He always does his homework.
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B. Does always homework his he.
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C. None of these
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D. Does always he his homework.
Explanation
The correctly rearranged sentence is: "He always does his homework."
This sentence follows the proper word order for English grammar.
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A. Him
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B. Someone
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C. I
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D. Book
Explanation
Antecedent is the noun that a pronoun refers to.
In this sentence, "him" refers back to "Someone", making Someone the antecedent.
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