Choose the correct relative pronoun: ‘The woman ___ car was stolen reported the matter.’
Choose an option to check your answer.
'Whose' shows possession between the woman and the car.
It introduces a relative clause modifying 'woman.'
Practice GIKI Engineering Computing questions with answers and explanations.
Choose an option to check your answer.
'Whose' shows possession between the woman and the car.
It introduces a relative clause modifying 'woman.'
Choose an option to check your answer.
The pronoun is the object of the preposition 'to.'
Formal standard English therefore uses 'whom.'
Choose an option to check your answer.
'That' can refer to a thing and functions as the subject of the relative clause.
The clause identifies which book is meant.
Choose an option to check your answer.
Repeating 'Ayesha' makes the actor clear, while 'her' naturally refers to Sana.
The other sentences contain ambiguous pronoun references.
Choose an option to check your answer.
Singular 'they/their' is widely accepted for an indefinite or gender-neutral antecedent.
It avoids unnecessary gender assumptions.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The pronoun functions as the object of 'invite.'
Formal grammar therefore uses the objective form 'whom.'
Choose an option to check your answer.
The pronoun is the subject of the verb 'is.'
Subject position requires 'who.'
Choose an option to check your answer.
'Neither' is grammatically singular in formal agreement.
The singular possessive 'his' matches the masculine plural antecedent individually.
Choose an option to check your answer.
'Either' means one or the other of two choices.
It is the correct determiner for a free choice between two items.
Choose an option to check your answer.
'Each other' expresses a mutual action between two people.
Both friends give and receive help.
Choose an option to check your answer.
The pronoun is part of the compound subject of the verb 'completed.'
Subject position requires the nominative form 'I.'
Choose an option to check your answer.
'Documents' is plural and presented as near the speaker.
The plural demonstrative 'These' is correct.