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A. Country
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B. Islamabad
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C. Lake
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D. Mountain
Explanation
The name of any particular person, place or thing is called Proper Noun.
Iran, Islamabad, Samsung, K2 etc. are examples of Proper Noun.
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A. Arabic
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B. Latin
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C. French
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D. Greek
Explanation
The word "security" comes from the Latin word "securitas," which means "freedom from anxiety or care".
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A. Greek
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B. Latin
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C. French
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D. German
Explanation
CV stands for curriculum vitae.
Curriculum: Means "course of study" in Latin.
Vitae: Means "life" in Latin.
So, "Curriculum Vitae" literally translates to "course of life" in Latin.
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A. She said that she could speak French fluently.
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B. She said that she can speak French fluently.
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C. None of these
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D. She said that she may speak French fluently.
Explanation
She said that she could speak French fluently.
"Can" changes to "could" in reported speech.
The rest of the sentence stays the same.
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A. This wisdom has been acquired by him only after much reading.
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B. This wisdom was acquired by him only after much reading.
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C. None of these
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D. This wisdom will be acquired by him only after much reading.
Explanation
The sentence is in past tense ("acquired"), so the correct passive form uses "was acquired."
Past Indefinite Tense
Active voice: Subject + V2 + Object
Passive Voice: Object + was/were + V3 + by + Subject
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A. er
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B. full
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C. None of these
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D. ness
Explanation
The suffix "-er" added to a verb forms a noun that means a person who performs the action (e.g., "teach" → "teacher").
It is commonly used to indicate agent nouns, identifying the doer of the verb.
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A. Cloud
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B. Octopus
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C. Apricot
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D. Ostrich
Explanation
"Cloud" begins with the consonant sound "C", not a vowel sound.
The Ostrich, Apricot, Octopus — start with vowel sounds.
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A. Ball
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B. Dog
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C. Hat
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D. None of these
Explanation
Ball has a long vowel sound (/ɔː/) as in "ball."
Dog has a short vowel sound (/ɒ/ or /ɔː/ depending on dialect, but generally short).
Hat has a short vowel sound (/æ/).
Big has a short vowel sound (/ɪ/).
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A. Read
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B. Ball
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C. None of these
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D. Book
Explanation
"Book" has a short vowel sound /ʊ/ as in "good" or "foot."
"Ball" has a long /ɔː/ sound and "Read" (present tense) has a long /iː/ sound.
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A. Three letters forming one sound
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B. None of these
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C. Two letters combined to create a single sound
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D. Two separate words joined
Explanation
A digraph is when two letters are used together to represent one sound (e.g., sh, ch, th).
It's common in English spelling patterns and phonics.
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