English, asked by jaspreetkaur208, 7 months ago

Rajiv has a talent …………music but refrains ………..playing in public. (insert suitable prepositions) Rewrite the sentence.​

Answers

Answered by pragyan07sl
0

Answer:

Preposition- For, from

Rajiv has a talent for music but refrains from playing in public.          

Explanation:

  • Prepositions go before words to connect them to local words.
  • "Above", "about", "underneath", "for", "from", "in", "inside", "into", "of", "to", "until", and "with", "on" are normal relational words.
  • Bunches of relational words go before words to let us know where or when things are.
  • Not all relational words let us know where or when things are.
  • Relational words play different parts as well.
  • For instance, they might show possession (e.g., a collar of the dog) or purpose (e.g., a tool for digging).
  • A "relational word" thus signifies "situated previously."
  • A relational word sits before a word (either a thing or a pronoun) to show that word's relationship to another close by word

The single word preposition "for" is used in the context:

  • 'planned to help or help somebody/something.'
  • It is utilized for saying who or what is planned to get something or get its advantage

The simple & single word preposition "from" is used:

  • For something (to something) is used to show the scope of something
  • For something (to something) is used to show the state or type of something/someone before a change
  • Utilized while having or perceiving an effect between two individuals or things.

Hence, the prepositions to be used in the blanks are "for" and "from".

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Answered by rajagrewal768
0

Answer:

For and from

Rajiv has a talent For music but refrain from playing in public .

Explanation:

Prepositions serve as connectors in sentences, joining nouns, pronouns, or phrases to other words. They serve as a link between the subjects, predicates, verbs, and contexts of a phrase. Prepositions are typically brief phrases that come right before nouns. You may occasionally see prepositions in front of gerund verbs.

Both the words since and for convey duration up to the present, although their usage varies.

For + a duration, we say:

For thirty years, we have called this home.

I have been here waiting for three hours.

In other situations, we utilise from:

Tomorrow at eight o'clock, I'll be here.

He is employed from 8 until 5 p.m.

FINAL ANSWER - For and from

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