English, asked by bhagavannelapatla, 9 months ago

17. Have you got time to discuss your
work now or are you ...... to leave?
a.thinking
b.round
c.planned
d.about​

Answers

Answered by stefangonzalez246
8

Have you got time to discuss your  work now or are you about to leave?

Explanation:

  • If a sentence like this arises, we need to check which word we can use and compare with the sentence until we get a clear answer.
  • We can try with the four options given.
  1. Have you got time to discuss your  work now or are you thinking to leave?
  2. Have you got time to discuss your  work now or are you round to leave?
  3. Have you got time to discuss your  work now or are you planned to leave?
  • As we can see its not suitable.
  • Therefore while trying 'about', it suits perfectly as the next word is 'to' as the question requires present tense.
Answered by krithikasmart11
1

Answer:

Have you got time to discuss your work now or are you about to leave.

Explanation:

In above mentioned sentence we have to use the best suitable word from the list . According to this , About [option D] is the most preferable one.

a)Have you got time to discuss your work now or are you thinking to leave?

b) Have you got time to discuss your work now or are you round to leave ?

c)Have you got time to discuss your work now or are you planned to leave?

These are not suitable for the sentence.

#SPJ2

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