Q2: A fair crack of the whip
A) Severe punishment B) A good luck check C) A period of importance D) Failure of administration
Q3: To talk one’s head off
A) To talk loudly B) Talk in whispers C) To talk to oneself D) Talk excessively
Q4: To wrangle over a donkey's shadow [SBI PO 1984]
A) Act in a foolish way B) To quarrel over trifles C) Waste time on petty things D) To do something funny.
Answer:
Q1: To turn over a new leaf [Railways, 1995]
Answer: A) To change completely one’s course of action.
Q2: A fair crack of the whip
Answer: B) A good luck check
Q3: To talk one’s head off
Answer: D) Talk excessively
Q4: To wrangle over a donkey's shadow [SBI PO 1984]
Answer: B) To quarrel over trifles
b. Comma
c. Period
d. Exclamation point
b. the meaning behind events and characters’ actions
c. writing that is vague and uncertain
d. a central message about life
A subordinate clause is a part of a sentence that adds additional information but can't stand alone. When a subordinate clause is used as an adverb or adverbial clause, it modifies a verb in the sentence, giving information about when, where, how, why, etc., the action happened.
A subordinate clause is a clause in a sentence that gives additional information but can't stand alone. For example, in a sentence with an adverbial subordinate clause, the clause would modify a verb in the sentence. Consider the sentence below:
He read a book after he finished his chores.
Here, 'after he finished his chores' is a subordinate clause used as an adverb because it tells us when the action (read) happened. It's indicating the time, hence modifying the verb 'read', which is typical of adverbial clauses.
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