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A. None of these
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B. The officer told the peon that if he did not do his duty well he would dismiss him
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C. The officer threatened to dismiss the peon if he did not do his duty well
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D. The officer suggested to the peon that if he did not do his duty well, he would be dismissed
Explanation
- The officer's statement is a warning, so "threatened" fits the context.
- It conveys the conditional clause accurately in indirect speech.
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A. He asked me whether I had seen the cricket match the earlier night
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B. He asked me whether I had seen the cricket match the last night
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C. None of these
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D. He asked me whether I saw the cricket match the earlier night
Explanation
He asked me whether I had seen the cricket match the last night.This is the correct reported speech, as it:
- Changes "Did you see" to "whether I had seen" (reported speech)
- Changes "last night" to maintain the correct time reference.
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A. None of these
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B. He told me that he wanted me to have attended the party.
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C. He asked me that he wanted me to have attend the party.
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D. He told me that he want me to have attend the party.
Explanation
- The correct narration is: He told me that he wanted me to attend the party.
- "I want" changes to "he wanted" in indirect speech, and "to attend" remains the same.
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A. The beggar cursed that I might go to hell
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B. None of these
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C. The beggar wished me that I may go to hell
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D. The beggar asked me to go to hell
Explanation
- The use of "might" in the indirect speech correctly reflects the nature of a curse or a wish for something undesirable to happen.
- The sentence indicates a negative or harsh wish, which aligns with the curse format.
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A. She asked me how I know that.
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B. She asked me how I knew that.
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C. She asked me if I knew that.
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D. None of these
Explanation
She asked me if I knew that.
This is the correct indirect speech form as it maintains the original question format using an if-clause to introduce the reported speech.
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A. He said good morning and asked if you could help him.
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B. He greeted good morning and asked could he help him.
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C. None of these
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D. He wished him good morning and asked whether he could help him.
Explanation
In indirect speech, greetings like "Good morning" are expressed as "wished," and the question is converted into a reported clause using "whether."
The modal "can" changes to "could" to match the past tense of the reporting verb.
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A. None of these
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B. He advised me to not be late.
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C. He advised me that I should not be late.
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D. He advised us not to be late.
Explanation
In indirect speech, the imperative "do not be late" is converted into a reported statement.
It maintains the advice in a polite and grammatically correct form.
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A. He said her to sit down.
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B. He asked her that sit down.
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C. None of these
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D. He said that she could sit down.
Explanation
Direct speech:
"Please sit down," he said.
Correct indirect speech:
He asked her to sit down
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A. He asked me where I will spend this night.
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B. None of these
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C. He asked me where I would spend this night.
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D. He asked me where I would spend that night.
Explanation
In indirect speech, "will" changes to "would," and "this night" changes to "that night" to reflect past reporting.
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A. He asked me to keep quiet
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B. He ordered to keep quiet
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C. He instructed to me to keep quiet
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D. None of these
Explanation
He asked me to keep quiet.
This option correctly conveys the meaning of the original statement, transforming the direct speech into indirect speech.
The phrase captures the essence of the command while using the appropriate reporting verb "asked."
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
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