English, asked by arshdeepsidhu07855, 4 months ago

conjunction both Raghu – raspberry intelligent​

Answers

Answered by LiteCoral
0

Explanation:

NOTE: The word 'both' refers to two related people or things together in a sentence.

Option A - 'But' is used to add a sentence to a sentence, which is usually different than the first clause. In short, it used to explain contrasting ideas in one sentence. For example, 'I was going to go to school, but I went for a movie.' As 'intelligent' and 'hardworking' are not contrasting ideas, we can't use 'but' here. Thus option A is incorrect.

Option C - 'Since' is used to explain an action that started at a given time in the past and is ongoing in the present and might continue in the future. For example, 'I haven't gone to London since 2008.' As the given sentence doesn't explain the duration, we can't use 'since' here. Thus option C is incorrect.

Option D - 'Or' is used to connect different possibilities or options in a sentence. For example, 'I want to go the market or the museum.' The given sentence doesn't explain options and hence we can't use 'or' here. Thus option D is incorrect.

Option B - 'And' is used to combine two related clauses of equal grammatical rank in one sentence. For example, 'I like strawberries and blueberries.' As the given sentence has two similar ideas/qualities, we can use 'and' here. Thus option B is the correct answer.

'Aman is both intelligent and hardworking

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