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A. He told her that she might succeed
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B. He said to her that she might succeed
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C. He prayed to God that she may succeed
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D. She wished her success
Explanation
He said to her, "May you succeed"
ans.
She wished her success
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A. He said to them,
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B. HeHe said to them,
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C. He said to them,
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D. He said to they,
Explanation
narration is the action or process of narrating a story.
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A. he told that his father was going with him
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B. he told that he is going with his father
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C. I told that he was going with his father
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D. he told that his father was going with me
Explanation
He said my father is going with me. (Present Continues tense)
He told that his father was going with him (Past Continues tense)
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A. None of these
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B. She told her husband will he be home soon.
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C. She asked her husband if he would be home soon.
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D. She asked her husband would you be home soon.
Explanation
She asked her husband if he would be home soon.
"Will you be..." (direct question) changes to "if he would be..." (indirect speech).
The question form becomes a statement in reported speech, and "will" changes to "would."
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A. Message
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B. Mobile phone
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C. Her
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D. He
Explanation
Direct object: a message
Indirect object: her (the person receiving the message)
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A. He told that you are ready.
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B. He wondered if I am ready.
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C. He asked if I was ready.
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D. He said I was ready.
Explanation
Change from direct to indirect speech:
"He said, 'Are you ready?'" → This is a question.
The reporting verb becomes "asked."
"Are you ready?" → "if I was ready" in indirect speech.
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A. I advised Hamid to speak the truth always
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B. I asked Hamid to speak the truth
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C. None of these
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D. I request Hamid to speak the truth always
Explanation
- In indirect speech, commands and advice are usually reported using verbs like "advised" or "told."
- "Always speak the truth" is a piece of advice, so "advised" is the most appropriate choice.
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A. The porter said, "I would take care of your baggage while you bought your ticket, Madam."
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B. None of these
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C. The porter said, "I would take care of your baggage while you buy your ticket, Madam."
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D. The porter said, "I will take care of your baggage while you buy your ticket, Madam."
Explanation
The porter said, "I will take care of your baggage while you buy your ticket, Madam."
The sentence is in direct speech.
Present tense ("will" and "buy") is used because the event has not yet occurred, aligning with the porter’s respectful assurance.
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A. None of these
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B. The doctor asked the patient how he had felt when the pain was gone.
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C. The doctor asked the patient how he is feeling now and if the pain has gone down.
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D. The doctor asked the patient how he felt then and if the pain had gone down.
Explanation
The doctor asked the patient how he felt then and if the pain had gone down.
In indirect speech, present tense changes to past tense, and "now" changes to "then."
This follows the rules of reported speech.
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A. He asked his teacher whether he needed to read this chapter.
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B. He asked his teacher whether there was a need to read that chapter.
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C. He asked his teacher if he had to read that chapter.
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D. None of these
Explanation
In indirect speech, "Need I" changes to "if he had to," and "this chapter" becomes "that chapter" for proper tense and reported speech structure.
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