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A. None of these
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B. My aunt, who lives in Karachi is a doctor.
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C. My aunt who lives in Karachi, is a doctor.
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D. My aunt, who lives in karachi, is a doctor.
Explanation
The correct sentence includes commas around "who lives in Karachi".
This indicates it is a non-essential clause.
It adds additional information about the aunt.
It does not change the main meaning.
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A. which you meet
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B. That you have met
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C. That you met
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D. That has meet you
Explanation
Here 'Yesterday' shows something happened in the past.
Second form of a verb is used in Past Indefinite Tense.
Met is the second & third form of Meet.
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A. Which
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B. Whom
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C. Who
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D. Whose
Explanation
"Which" is used to refer to things (like "novel") and introduces a relative clause.
The sentence means: "This is the novel which you might like" – correct and complete.
Who, whom, what, which, and that are called Relative Pronouns.
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A. Relative
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B. Principle
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C. None of these
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D. Noun
Explanation
"Who stands first" is a relative clause because it describes "the boy" using the relative pronoun "who."
Relative clauses provide additional information about a noun and usually begin with who, which, or that.
سوسن وہ عورت ہے ____ شوہر ہسپتال میں ہے۔
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A. none
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B. whose
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C. hers the
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D. her
Explanation
Whose is a possessive pronoun.
Use it when you're asking (or telling) to whom something belongs
SH16-8-2023
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A. He has eaten the pizza which he bought last night
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B. He has eaten pizza which he bought last night
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C. None of these
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D. He had eaten the pizza which he has bought last night
Explanation
He has eaten the pizza which he bought last night
Correct. The sentence uses correct tense and article usage:
"has eaten" (present perfect) – recent action,
"which he bought last night" – past simple for a specific past time ("last night")
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A. Was stolen/has offered
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B. Has been stolen/has been offered
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C. None of these
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D. Was stolen/was offered
Explanation
The correct verb tenses to use are "was stolen" and "was offered".
This indicates that the bike was stolen (past event) and the reward was offered (past event) to recover it.
"My bike which was stolen was brought back only when a 20-pound-reward was offered."
میری موٹرسائیکل جو چوری کی گئی تھی اسے صرف اس وقت واپس لایا گیا جب 20 پاؤنڈ کا بدلہ پیش کیا گیا تھا۔
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A. whom
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B. who
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C. whose
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D. which
Explanation
"Who" is used as the subject of a clause referring to people.
The clause "who wants a pen" describes "the one" — the person.
"Whom" is used for objects of verbs or prepositions.
"Whose" shows possession.
"Which" refers to things, not people.
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A. None of these
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B. Relative clause
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C. Pronoun clause
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D. Adverb clause
Explanation
"Whose family owns a cattle farm" gives more information about "Maria" and begins with the relative pronoun "whose."
It is a relative clause because it modifies a noun and connects to it using a relative pronoun.
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A. Adjective Phrase
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B. Verb Phrase
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C. Noun Phrase
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D. None of these
Explanation
The phrase "who speaks the truth" describes or modifies "someone", which is a noun.
Therefore, it functions as an adjective phrase (more precisely, a relative clause).
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