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A. Will she not have been sung a song?
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B. Will a song not have been sung by her?
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C. Will have a song not been sung by her?
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D. None of these
Explanation
Will a song not have been sung by her?
In passive voice, the object ("a song") comes first, followed by the helping verbs ("will have been").
The past participle of "sing" is "sung", and the subject ("she") becomes "by her" at the end.
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A. A small plastic pipe was rolled through a marble by Robin.
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B. The marble was rolled through a small plastic pipe by Robin.
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C. The marble was rolled by Robin in a small plastic pipe.
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D. None of these
Explanation
The marble was rolled through a small plastic pipe by Robin.
- This is the correct passive voice of the given sentence while maintaining proper word order.
- The subject "Robin" becomes the agent, and "the marble" becomes the object in passive form.
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A. Miss Kiran asked us to do your work quietly.
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B. Miss Kiran said to do our work quietly.
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C. None of these
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D. Miss Kiran asked to do your work quietly.
Explanation
In reported speech, the imperative sentence "Do your work quietly" is transformed into an infinitive structure (to do our work quietly).
The pronoun "your" changes to "our" to reflect the perspective of the speaker.
The verb "said" is replaced with "asked" to convey the request.
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A. Good performance has be shown by him
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B. Good performance has shown by him
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C. Good performance has been shown by him
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D. Good performance had been shown by him
Explanation
Good performance has been shown by him.
In passive voice, the object "good performance" becomes the subject.
"Has shown" changes to "has been shown" to maintain the correct tense.
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A. By whom are you taught English
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B. English is taught by whom
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C. By whom were you taught English
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D. By whom has English been taught
Explanation
The correct passive form is: "By whom are you taught English?"
In passive voice, the subject "you" becomes the object.
The verb is rearranged as "are taught" to reflect the action done by "whom."
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A. None of these
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B. By who the bell ring?
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C. By whom the bell rings?
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D. By whom the bell ring?
Explanation
Present indefinite change into past indefinite
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A. To ignore a problem.
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B. To make a decision quickly.
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C. To play a card game.
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D. To share a responsibility.
Explanation
"To pass the buck" means avoiding responsibility for something and instead shifting it to someone else.
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A. Do she takes tea?
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B. Does She take tea?
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C. Will she takes tea?
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D. Does She Takes tea?
Explanation
Did She Take Tea means کیا وہ چائے پیتی تھی
Does she take tea means کیا وہ چائے پیتی ہے
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A. Spin
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B. Spinning
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C. Spins
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D. Spun
Explanation
The simple past tense of the verb "spin" is "spun."
This verb is irregular, meaning it does not follow the typical pattern of adding "-ed" for the past tense.
For example, "spin" (present) changes to "spun" (past).
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A. Present perfect tense
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B. Perfect infinitive tense
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C. None
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D. Present perfect continuous tense
Explanation
The inverted commas part shows "perfect infinitive tense."
It is used to express an action that was completed before another action, in this case, "to have acted properly."
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