-
A. Practice
-
B. Practicing
-
C. Practices
-
D. Practiced
Explanation
The subject "Saleem" is singular.
For singular third-person subjects in present tense, we use the verb + s form.
So, the correct sentence is: Saleem practices piano every day.
-
A. Subject
-
B. Direct object
-
C. Both A and B
-
D. None of the above
Explanation
Transitive verbs require a direct object to complete their meaning (e.g., "She kicked the ball").
The subject is needed to start the sentence, but it is not specifically required by transitive verbs to complete their meaning.
-
A. Give
-
B. Gave
-
C. Giving
-
D. None of these
Explanation
"Which you gave me" = a relative clause giving more info about "the book."
The verb "give" is in the past tense ("gave") because the action happened in the past — the book was given earlier.
You lost the book → past tense
Someone gave you the book → also past tense
-
A. You will have made beautiful painting
-
B. You have made beautiful painting
-
C. You had made beautiful painting
-
D. None of these
Explanation
Present perfect tense = have/has + past participle
"You" takes "have", and "made" is the past participle of "make"
So, the correct sentence is: You have made beautiful painting.
-
A. Had finished
-
B. Finish
-
C. Finishes
-
D. Finished
Explanation
Had finished (if used in a past perfect context, like “They had finished their work before the deadline.”)
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0