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A. Regular noun
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B. None of these
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C. Irregular noun
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D. Collective noun
Explanation
"Goose" is an irregular noun because its plural is "geese," not "gooses."
Irregular nouns change spelling in the plural form rather than just adding -s/-es.
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A. None of these
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B. Uncountable
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C. Concrete
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D. Proper
Explanation
Weather is an uncountable noun because it cannot be counted as individual units.
It refers to a general condition.
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A. Noun
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B. Verb
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C. Adverb
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D. None of these
Explanation
Adding the suffix “er” to a verb (teach) forms a noun meaning "one who performs the action."
So, teacher is a noun.
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A. None of these
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B. Animate Noun
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C. Feminine Noun
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D. Inanimate Noun
Explanation
An inanimate noun refers to non-living things, such as "table," "car," or "rock."
These nouns represent objects, places, or things that do not have life.
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A. Unexpected
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B. Was unexpected
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C. What he did
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D. None of these
Explanation
A noun clause is a group of words that functions as a noun.
In this sentence, "What he did" acts as the subject of the sentence.
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A. Plant
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B. Chocolate
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C. Ox
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D. Dish
Explanation
"Ox" is an irregular noun because its plural form is "oxen", not "oxes."
The dish → dishes, chocolate → chocolates, plant → plants follow regular plural rules.
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A. Adjective
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B. Verb
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C. None of these
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D. Noun
Explanation
"Determination" is a noun as it refers to a quality or state (the act of being determined).
It names an abstract concept, not an action or description.
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A. Common Noun
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B. Abstract Noun
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C. Proper Noun
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D. Collective Noun
Explanation
The words like team, forest, police, staff, people, audience, class etc. are called: Collective Noun.
Staff refers to a group of people working together, which makes it a collective noun.
It names a collection treated as a single unit.
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A. None of these
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B. She went
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C. Don't know
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D. Where she went
Explanation
A noun clause acts as a noun in a sentence, and "where she went" is the noun clause acting as the object of the verb "know".
It answers the question "What don't you know?", making it a noun clause.
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A. Few
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B. None of these
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C. Some
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D. Any
Explanation
"Some" is used when offering or requesting an unspecified amount of something, typically uncountable nouns like "rice."
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