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A. He wanted to know if we have been shopping
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B. He wanted to know that, if we had been shopping
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C. He wanted to know if we had been shopping
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D. None of these
Explanation
- The sentence is in indirect speech, converting the present perfect question ("Have you been shopping?") into past perfect tense.
- The structure follows proper grammar rules for reporting questions, without using "that."
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A. Between
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B. Near
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C. Among
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Near" indicates proximity, meaning the store is close to the park.
Example: "The store is near the park."
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A. None of these
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B. In
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C. Of
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D. With
Explanation
The phrase "run out of" is a common English expression meaning to have no more of something.
So, "We have run out of groceries and provisions" is grammatically and idiomatically correct.
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A. None of these
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B. Who
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C. Whose
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D. That
Explanation
"That" is used as a relative pronoun for things like "shop."
Correct sentence: "Your shop that will probably be shutdown next year is really old."
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A. Whom
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B. Which
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C. None of these
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D. Whose
Explanation
"Which" is used for things (like "shop") in relative clauses.
The correct sentence is: "The shop which I go to is closed."
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A. None of these
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B. You will be buying fruits
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C. You will not buy fruits
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D. You will have buying fruits
Explanation
You means تم Not means نہیں Buy خریدنا means Fruits پھل
This is a sentence of Future Indefinite Tense (Subject +will/shall + not + verb + object)
You will not buy fruits is the correct option.
AGM 05-01-2023
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A. Some
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B. None of these
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C. Plenty
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D. Any
Explanation
In negative sentences, "any" is used with uncountable nouns like sugar.
Since the sentence is negative (have not got), "any" is the correct choice.
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A. Much, loaf
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B. Much, peace
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C. None of these
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D. Many, Loaf
Explanation
How much of bread do I have to pay for a loaf?
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A. so that, before
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B. in order to; before
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C. so that, at
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D. for, by
Explanation
She hurried to the supermarket so that she might get some things before it closed.
So that means تاکہ
Before means پہلے
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A. Went
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B. Go
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C. goes
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D. going
Explanation
This is a sentence of Past Indefinite Tense.
Usually first form of verb is used with did.
Go is the first form of verb.
He did not go there.
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
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