India Languages, asked by ahsass121, 7 months ago

The term "Mahatma' means a great soul. So, the phrase
Mahatma Gandhi means Gandhi, (a) .................... (a, an, the, any) great
soul. At first he repudiated the title and begged his friends
not (b)...................(on, at, to, above)
call him so. Sometimes, in the midst of severe disappointments, (c) .............(then, when, where, how)
people called him by that exalted title he said emphatically, "I do not wish that people (d).............(shall, will, would, should) give me that honour any more. I am (e)..............(a, some, any, the) opposite of Mahatma, I am alpatma".​

Answers

Answered by thebrainliest17
11

Answer:

a. the great....

b. to

c. where

d. should

e. the

Explanation:

do mark it as a brainliest answer...

Answered by NirmalPandya
2

Complete question: Fill in the blanks with the correct word mentioned in the brackets.

The term "Mahatma' means a great soul. So, the phrase Mahatma Gandhi means Gandhi, (a) .................... (a, an, the, any) great soul. At first, he repudiated the title and begged his friends not (b)...................(on, at, to, above) call him so. Sometimes, in the midst of severe disappointments, (c) .............(then, when, where, how) people called him by that exalted title he said emphatically, "I do not wish that people (d).............(shall, will, would, should) give me that honour any more. I am (e)..............(a, some, any, the) opposite of Mahatma, I am alpatma".​

Answer:

The corrected sentences will be -

The term "Mahatma' means a great soul. So, the phrase Mahatma Gandhi means Gandhi, (a) a great soul. At first, he repudiated the title and begged his friends not (b) to call him so. Sometimes, in the midst of severe disappointments, (c) when people called him by that exalted title he said emphatically, "I do not wish that people (d) should give me that honour any more. I am (e) the opposite of Mahatma, I am alpatma".​

  • In place (a), the indefinite article "a" is used. The phrase "great soul" is not indicating any particular person and the word "great" starts with a consonant. So the indefinite article "a" is used.
  • In place (b), the preposition "to" is used. While expressing an action which combines two verbs, the preposition "to" is used before the root form of a verb.
  • In place (c), "when" is used as a conjunction. To determine the time of action, the conjunction "when" is used to create a complex sentence.
  • In place (d), the modal verb "should" is used. When someone states what ought to be done according to his/her opinion, the modal verb is used before the root form of a verb.
  • in place "e", the definite article "the"is used. The indefinite article "the" is used to mention a particular person, place, or anything.

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