English, asked by 4971jeevanthika, 1 day ago

1. Choose the right pattern.

1. The wall collapsed.
a) SV
b) SVO
c) SVIODO

2. During the war, many people lost their homes.
a) SVO
b) SVIODO
c) ASVO

3. I promised the children a trip to the zoo.
a) SVO
b) SVDOIO
c) SVIODO


4. In 1998, Frank moved to London.
a) ASVA
b) ASVO
c) SVIODO

5. Pooja hired a bicycle.
a) SV
b) SVO
c) SVA

(note: s = subject, v= verb,o=object,i=indirect object,d=direct object,a=adjective)
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Answers

Answered by mtaj5499
7

Answer:

कवि किस प्रकार आगे बढ़ने के लिए कहते हैं

Attachments:
Answered by aryansuts01
1

Answer:

Concept:

Grammar's description of phrases according to the quantity and kind of clauses in their syntactic structure is known as phrase construction or paragraph and component formation. This division is a characteristic of traditional grammar.

Given:

Choose the right pattern.

1. The wall collapsed.

a) SV

b) SVO

c) SVIODO

2. DURING THE WAR, MANY PEOPLE LOST THEIR HOMES.

a) SVO

b) SVIODO

c) ASVO

3. I PROMISED THE CHILDREN A TRIP TO THE ZOO.

a) SVO

b) SVDOIO

c) SVIODO

4. In 1998, Frank moved to London.

a) ASVA

b) ASVO

c) SVIODO

5. Pooja hired a bicycle.

a) SV

b) SVO

c) SVA

Find:

find the right responses to the questions that are asked.

Answer:

1. option (a) SV

According to the grammatical principle of subject-verb agreement, the verb and the subject must agree in number. The third person singular form of present tense verbs in English (subjects denoted by the pronouns HE, SHE, IT) is indicated by adding a S or ES.

2. option (c) ASVO

3. option (c) SVIODO

Subject, Verb, Indirect Object, and Direct Object make up this sentence structure. The terms "IO" and "DO" are distinct noun phrases. The IO is the one who receives the DO. The IO is typically a human recipient.

4. option (a) ASVA

A subject and its verb must be both singular or plural in order for there to be subject-verb agreement: A singular verb needs a singular subject.

5. option (b) SVO

A sentence structure known as subject-verb-object (SVO) in linguistic typology places the subject first, followed by the verb and the object.

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