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A. Semicolon
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B. Period
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C. Question mark
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D. Exclamation mark or comma
Explanation
The exclamation mark! (also known as an exclamation point in American English)
It is a punctuation mark usually used after an interjection or exclamation to indicate strong feelings or to show emphasis.
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A. Where is Shandor located.
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B. None of these
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C. Where is Shandor located?
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D. Where is Shandor Located?
Explanation
The sentence is a question, so it ends with a question mark (?).
"Shandor" is a proper noun, so it must start with a capital letter.
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A. I went to paris last Summer.
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B. She visited the eiffel tower in France.
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C. We moved to Texas in July.
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D. None of these
Explanation
Proper nouns like Texas and months like July must always be capitalized.
The sentence follows correct capitalization rules with no errors in names, months, or sentence beginning.
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A. None of these
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B. Dash
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C. Parenthesis
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D. Hyphen
Explanation
A hyphen (–) is used in compound nouns like “brother-in-law” to join the words clearly.
It differs from a dash, which is longer and used to separate ideas in a sentence.
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A. None of these
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B. I can’t see Tahir’s car.
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C. I can’t see Tahirs car.
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D. I can’t see tahirs car.
Explanation
"Tahir" is a proper noun → should be capitalized.
Possession is shown with apostrophe + s → Tahir’s car is correct.
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A. None of these
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B. She sings, and dances gracefully.
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C. Quickly, finish your homework before dinner.
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D. After he finished his meal, he went out.
Explanation
After he finished his meal, he went out.
The comma separates the introductory dependent clause ("After he finished his meal") from the independent clause ("he went out").
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A. None of these
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B. To separate items in a list
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C. To express strong feelings or emphasis
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D. To indicate a pause in a sentence
Explanation
An exclamation mark (!) expresses strong emotions like surprise, excitement, or anger.
It is used at the end of exclamatory sentences.
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A. Watch out, there is a snake near the fire place
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B. None of these
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C. Please close the door
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D. I have two brothers
Explanation
An exclamation mark expresses strong emotion or urgency.
"Watch out" is a warning that needs emphasis.
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A. Period
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B. None of these
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C. Comma
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D. Apostrophe
Explanation
Apostrophes in contractions replace missing letters (e.g., don't for do not).
They make speech and writing more concise and conversational.
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A. I love to read books
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B. None of these
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C. Where is the library
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D. Wow
Explanation
"I love to read books" is a complete declarative sentence and ends with a full stop.
"Wow," is an interjection and usually followed by an exclamation mark or comma.
"Where is the library" is a question requiring a question mark.
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
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