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A. None of these
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B. Is
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C. Was
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D. Were
Explanation
Either Sana or her friends were present there.
This is because "either...or" structures take the verb form that agrees with the subject closer to the verb.
It in this case is "friends" (plural), hence "were" is correct.
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A. of
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B. or
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C. then
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D. is
Explanation
She is afraid of anything.
وہ کسی بھی چیز سے ڈرتی ہے۔
"Afraid of" is a standard phrase in English.
The preposition "of" is used to indicate the cause or object of the fear.
وہ ____ آمنہ سے بڑی ہے لیکن ثناء سے سب سے بڑی ہے۔
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A. a/ an
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B. than /the
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C. an /the
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D. than /a
Explanation
"than" is used after "older" to establish the comparison between "she" and "Amina."
This construction follows the pattern of "comparative adjective + than" when comparing two things.
"the oldest" is used to denote the superlative form, indicating that "she" is the oldest among "Sana" and potentially others.
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A. Preposition
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B. Adjective
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C. Noun
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D. Adverb
Explanation
Several words are sometimes used as adverbs or sometimes used as prepositions.
A word is a preposition when it governs a noun or a pronoun, It is an adverb when it does not.
The wheel came off. “Off” is an adverb here
He jumped off the train. “Off” is a preposition here
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A. With
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B. To
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C. Over
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D. In
Explanation
Attribute to is a transitive verb which means سبب قراردینا، منسوب کرنا یا نسبت دینا
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A. Preposition
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B. Pronoun
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C. Verb
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D. Noun
Explanation
Here through means moving in one side and out of the other side.
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A. Preposition
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B. Pronoun
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C. Noun
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D. Verb
Explanation
Here “Since” is a preposition showing a particular time in the past until now.
Since Monday means سوموار سے لیکر اب تک
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A. celebrating
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B. celebration
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C. celebrate
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D. to celebrate
Explanation
In this sentence, the correct option is "to celebrate."
The phrase "planned to celebrate" indicates that Shugufta and Azhar have made plans to mark their success by getting married.
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A. They are playing against whom?
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B. Who against they are playing?
Explanation
Formula: Subject + Verb + Preposition + Pronoun
They: Subject
Are playing: Verb
Against: Preposition
Whom: Pronoun
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A. None of these
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B. False
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C. True
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D. Neither False nor True
Explanation
A preposition is typically followed by a noun or pronoun to complete its meaning.
Example: "She sat on the chair." — "on" (preposition) is followed by "the chair" (noun).
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