A. The day
B. All
C. Shined
D. None of these
Explanation
The correct form is " shone ," as " shine " is an irregular verb and " shined " is typically used in the past tense in American English for a different meaning. The sentence should be: " The sun shone all the day " or " The sun shone all day. "
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A. None of these
B. Rain
C. To
D. Currently
Explanation
The word " currently " is unnecessary when using " is expected to ," as it already indicates a future event. The sentence should be " It is expected to rain " without " currently ," which is redundant in this context.
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A. None of these
B. Bed
C. Lay
D. Late
Explanation
The correct sentence should be " I lay in bed late " if referring to a past action , but the correct form should be " I lie in bed late " for present tense . " Lay " is the past tense of " lie ," so using it here creates an error in tense consistency.
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A. Arrived
B. May
C. None of these
D. Be
Explanation
The correct sentence should be " My brother may arrive tomorrow ," using the base form " arrive " after " may ." " May " is a modal verb that should be followed by the base form of the verb, not the past tense "arrived."
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اگر میں سو جاؤں تو براہِ کرم مجھے اُٹھائیں۔
A. wake
B. waked
C. wakes
D. will wake
Explanation
If I fall asleep please wake me up .
اگر میں سو جاؤں تو پلیز مجھے جگا دیں
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A. Indefinite Pronoun
B. None of these
C. Pronoun
D. Relative Pronoun
Explanation
" Who " introduces the clause " who was going to market " and relates it to " Hyder ".
This makes " who " a relative pronoun .
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A. For the visitors
B. None of these
C. The visitors
D. At the visitors
Explanation
The definite article ' THE ' is used before nouns when the noun is specific. 'The' is used with noncount nouns. The above-given sentence is in the past tense and the past tense describes an action or event that occurred in the past. We should not use any unnecessary words before the past tense.
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A. Exclamatory sentence
B. Sentence of request
C. Assertive sentence
D. Interrogative sentence
Explanation
The sentence "Walk slowly" is a request or a command , making it a type of imperative sentence.
Imperative sentences are used to give orders, instructions, or advice.
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A. didn't
B. don't
C. doesn't
D. can't
Explanation
My brother likes pop music, but I don't.
The subject "I" pairs with "do not" (or "don't" for the contraction).
"Don't" is the correct negative form for "do" when the subject is "I" in the present tense.
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A. Phonology
B. Semantic
C. Syntax
D. Morphology
Explanation
Syntax:
The study of how words are arranged to form sentences and the rules that govern sentence structure.
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