-
A. They attacked me
-
B. They attacks me
-
C. They had attack me
-
D. They are attack me
Explanation
The correct past simple tense is "They attacked me" — no need for "on" with "attack" in this context.
-
A. In the competition
-
B. At his failure
-
C. Were all shocked
-
D. No error
Explanation
The sentence is grammatically correct.
"They were all shocked at his failure in the competition." follows proper structure and usage.
-
A. Adjective phrase
-
B. Verb phrase
-
C. Adverb phrase
-
D. None of these
Explanation
"Under the fence" tells where the dog dies, so it functions as an adverbial phrase showing place.
It modifies the verb "dies," describing the location.
-
A. None
-
B. An adverb of time
-
C. An adjective place
-
D. An adverb of place
Explanation
In the sentence "Ambition urges me forward," the word "forward" is an adverb of place.
It indicates the direction of the movement caused by ambition.
-
A. To See
-
B. For Seeing
-
C. For to see
-
D. To Seeing
Explanation
Waiting to see the doctor means دندان ساز سے ملنے کیلئے انتظار کرنا
-
A. None of these
-
B. In
-
C. Make
-
D. Noise
Explanation
"In" shows the relationship between the action and the location — it tells where the noise is made.
A preposition connects nouns or pronouns to other words in a sentence, often indicating place, time, or direction.
-
A. None of these
-
B. Regardless of the weather than watched the game on television
-
C. Regardless of the weather then to watching the game on television
-
D. Regardless of the weather than watching the game on television
Explanation
They would prefer to go to the stadium regardless of the weather than watching the game on television.
"Regardless of the weather" is the correct phrase (requires "of").
"Than watching" is grammatically correct for comparison (preferring stadium over TV).
-
A. With
-
B. From
-
C. Of
-
D. Off
Explanation
Generally deprive is followed by of.
Deprive of means کسی چیز سے محروم کردینا
Nelson Mandela was deprived of his freedom.
-
A. In
-
B. Above
-
C. At
-
D. On
Explanation
The correct preposition is "on" when something is attached to or hanging on a surface.So: Look at the picture on the wall.
-
A. Did you parked
-
B. None of these
-
C. Did you park
-
D. Parked you
Explanation
In past tense questions, the auxiliary verb "did" is used, followed by the base form of the main verb ("park").
Correct structure: "Where did you park the car?"
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0