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Pronoun Test 37

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Pronoun Test 37
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  • Question 1
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blank with a suitable option:
    You can't _______ your car outside the hospital.
    Solution
    Answer : C

    Present Tense is used:
    • To talk about an action that is happening right now
    • To talk about habitual actions or occurrences
    • To talk about facts

    Here in the question, we see that the speaker is expressing the fact that the car cannot be parked outside the hospital.
    As the speaker is presenting a fact, therefore the correct tense to use here is Simple Present Tense.

    Here the sentence is negative (i.e "can't"),  and the sentence in the Simple Present Negative is formulated as :
    "can't" / "doesn't"  +  "not"  +  [root form of the verb]

    Here the verb is "park" [root form of the verb].
    Therefore from among the options the most suitable word to fill the blank is "park".

    Thus, the correct complete sentence is:
    You can't PARK your car outside the hospital.
  • Question 2
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blank with the most appropriate word.
    Millions of people ____to London for her Funeral when she died. 
  • Question 3
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blanks with the most appropriate option:
    So, the invisible man ______ into the shop and _____ down.
  • Question 4
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blank with the most appropriate option:
    I didn't know anyone in the city where I ______ to get a job.
    Solution
    The given sentence is in the past tense and hence we must fill in the blank with the past tense too. The sentence describes the situation when the action was happening or took place in the past and as the action hasn't ended, we must use the continuous tense.
    Option A - 'Did try' can't be used here, as we use 'did' to reaffirm that the action is completed in the past. However, as explained above, the action hasn't been completed (because the sentence uses an infinitive verb - to get). It means that the action of getting a job was going on and wasn't yet completed. Thus option A is incorrect.
    Option C - 'Would try' is used in the conditional sentences or in the future tense. 'Would' indicates possibility. Thus option C is incorrect.
    Option D - 'Have tried' is used in the present perfect tense. Thus option D is incorrect.
    Option E - 'Shall try' is used in the simple future tense. Thus option E is incorrect.
    Option B - 'Was trying' can be used to explain the sentence in the past continuous tense. Thus option B is the correct answer.
    'I didn't know anyone in the city where I was trying to get a job.' 
  • Question 5
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blank with the most appropriate word.
    '______they come by train?'
    "No, they came by plane.'
  • Question 6
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blank with the most appropriate word.
    I_____in Paris when I was six.
  • Question 7
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blanks with the most appropriate option:
    "Why _______ you go to the market?"
    "I ______ no time."
    Solution
    The given question and answer are in the past tense because the answer explains why the person didn't go in the past.
    Option A - 'Do' is used in the present tense. Thus option A is incorrect.
    Option B - 'Will' is used in the future tense. Thus option B is incorrect.
    Option C - 'Did' is in past tense, but it is incorrect because it doesn't match the response to the question. If the person had no time, why would he go to the market? That's why 'did' can't be used here. Thus option C is incorrect.
    Option D - 'Didn't' is correct as the person asks why the other didn't go to the market, also it matches with the response. However, we can't use 'hadn't' as the sentence is already a negative sentence. Thus option D is incorrect.
    Option E - 'Why didn't you go to the market?' is in the past tense and is grammatically correct. Also, we can use 'had' here as it is in the past tense and a positive helping verb can be used in the negative sentence. Thus option E is the correct answer.
    "Why didn't you go to the market?"
    "I had no time."
  • Question 8
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blank with the most appropriate option:
    A policeman ______me crossing the street yesterday.
    Solution
    As the given sentence has the word 'yesterday', we must fill in the blank with the past tense.
    Option A - 'Seen' is used in perfect tenses with 'had/has/have', as we don't have any of these in the sentence, we can't use 'seen' here. Thus option A is incorrect.
    Option C - 'Has seen' is incorrect. As the given sentence has the word 'yesterday', we can't use present perfect tense here. Thus option C is incorrect.
    Option D - 'Will see' is used in the future tense. Thus option D is incorrect.
    Option E - 'Had seen' is the past perfect tense to represent that the action was done before another action in the past. As the given sentence has only one action, we must use the simple past tense only. Thus option E is incorrect.
    Option B - 'Saw' is the past form of the verb 'see' which can be used in the simple past tense. Thus option B is the correct answer.
    'A policeman saw me crossing the street yesterday.'
  • Question 9
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blank with a suitable verb form:
    He probably ________ be back in time for dinner.
  • Question 10
    1 / -0
    Fill in the blanks with the most appropriate option:
    A: "I'll drink tea from this tin mug."
    B: "Where _____ you ______ it?"
    Solution
    When person A said, "I'll drink tea from this tin mug" it means that he had already found the mug.
    Hence, person B must have asked about the mug in the past tense.
    Option B - 'Where do you find it?' This is used in simple present tense. It means where do you often/always find this mug. Here, the mug is already found by person A, so we need the question in the past tense and not in the present tense. Thus option B is incorrect.
    Option C - 'Where did you found it?' An auxiliary and a verb in the past form can't be used together in a sentence. When an auxiliary is in the past form (did), the verb should be in its original form (find). Thus option C is incorrect. 
    Option D - 'Where were you found it?' 'Were' is used to explain the state of being and 'did' is used to explain the tense of an action. As the question represents the action of finding the mug, we can't use 'were'. Thus option D is incorrect.
    Option E - As the action has already been done, we can't use 'are' as it represents the present tense. Thus option E is incorrect.
    Option A - 'Where did you find it?' is correct, as 'did' represents action and since it represents past tense too, we will use the verb in its original form 'find'. Thus option A is the correct answer.
    "Where did you find it?"
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