A. One's promise has to be kept.
B. One's promise should be kept.
C. None of these
D. A promise should be keeping.
Explanation
" Should keep " in active voice changes to " should be kept " in passive voice.
The object " one's promise " becomes the subject in passive form.
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A. He was visited not by me.
B. He was not visited by me.
C. He did not visited by me.
D. None
Explanation
The correct passive voice is: " He was not visited by me ."
In passive voice , the auxiliary verb "was" is used with the past participle "visited" to form the negative construction.
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A. Does she liked by you?
B. Do she liked by you?
C. Is she liked by you?
D. None
Explanation
The correct passive voice is: " Is she liked by you? "
In passive voice , the subject of the active sentence becomes the object , and the auxiliary verb is adjusted accordingly.
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A. None of these
B. Have been meeting
C. Met
D. Have met
Explanation
Yet is an Adverb which is generally used with Present Perfect Tense.
I do not think I have met him yet.
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A. Kind
B. Fanciful
C. None of these
D. Faithful
Explanation
The sentence implies she shares helpful or thoughtful advice , which fits best with " kind word of advice."
Kind means قسم
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A. Attributed - Requested
B. Reduced - Required
C. None of these
D. Projected - Destined
Explanation
"Complete and constant openness is a notion that can be reduced to absurdity. Am I required to stop everyone on the street and tell them my reaction to their appearance?"
The sentence uses irony to question extreme openness, and " reduced " and " required " fit the tone and logic well.
Reduced means کم
Required means ضروری ہے
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A. Within, for
B. For, over
C. For, beyond
D. Over, For
Explanation
"For two weeks" → expresses the duration of time
"Beyond the safety of his house" → means he didn’t go outside his house
Complete sentence:
"For two weeks, he did not venture beyond the safety of his house, even once."
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A. the tallest
B. the taller
C. tall
D. None of these
Explanation
Sara is the tallest girl in our school.
“The tallest” is a superlative form that compares more than two.
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A. Needn’t have gone.
B. None of these
C. Needn’t to have gone.
D. Mustn’t have gone.
Explanation
The phrase " needn't have gone " indicates that the action was unnecessary but was done anyway.
This is the correct use of " needn't have " in a past context to express regret or realization.
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A. Must you need buy
B. Need you have to buy
C. None of these
D. Need you buy
Explanation
The structure " Need you buy " is a correct form of a question using " need " for asking about necessity.
This is a formal or old-fashioned way of phrasing the question.
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