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A. Corporal
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B. Captain
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C. Colonel
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D. Major
Explanation
Corporal is a lower-ranking military position.
While Major, Captain and Colonel are officer ranks.
Therefore, Corporal is the odd one out in terms of rank level.
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A. None of these
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B. Interrogative
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C. Imperative
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D. Exclamatory
Explanation
The sentence "Get down from there" is a command or request, which is characteristic of an imperative sentence.
Imperative sentences give orders, make requests, or offer suggestions.
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A. None of thes
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B. He told Maria to help him do his work.
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C. He asked Maria to let him help do his work.
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D. He said to Maria that he should help her do her work.
Explanation
The direct sentence is in imperative mood using “let me”, which in indirect speech is usually reported using “requested” or “asked”.
The correct transformation should be something like: He requested Maria to allow him to do his work.
None of the given options exactly match this structure.
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A. None of these
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B. Do the Sun set in the west?
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C. Does the Sun set in the west?
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D. Does the Sun sets in the west?
Explanation
"Does" is used with singular nouns like "the Sun," and the verb remains in base form ("set").
The correct interrogative form maintains subject-verb agreement and proper auxiliary usage.
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A. None of these
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B. T
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C. S
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D. B
Explanation
In the word "subtle," the "b" is silent and not pronounced.
The pronunciation of "subtle" sounds like "sut-l," with the "b" remaining unspoken.
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A. Bridge - Groom
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B. Widow - Bachelor
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C. Lady - Gentleman
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D. Nephew - Niece
Explanation
The correct pair for Widow is Widower (not Bachelor).
Bachelor is the opposite of Spinster or Bachelorette, not Widow.
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A. W
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B. None of these
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C. D
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D. H
Explanation
In the word "sandwich," the "d" is silent and not pronounced.
The pronunciation of "sandwich" sounds like "san-wich," with the "d" remaining unspoken.
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A. He continued running despite the rain.
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B. None of these
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C. Despite he the rain continued running.
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D. He despite the rain continued running.
Explanation
The sentence correctly conveys that despite the rain, he kept running.
"Despite the rain" is a prepositional phrase that shows the condition under which he continued running.
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A. Round
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B. Attitude
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C. None of these
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D. Globe
Explanation
"Globe" begins with the consonant cluster "gl", where two consonants come together at the start.
Attitude and Round start with a single consonant sound.
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A. Exclamatory sentence
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B. Declarative sentence
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C. Imperative sentence
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Listen boys!" is giving a command or instruction, which is the key feature of an imperative sentence.
Imperative sentences often start with a verb and address someone directly.
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