TET ENGLISH CASES 5

 







English Cases Tests πŸ‘‰ ✨ 1 Notes,  2,  3,  4,  5, ✨ πŸ‘ˆ


TET ENGLISH CASES 5 πŸ‘‡



1. In “The teacher gave her students their assignments and praised them,” what case is “students”?

  • Objective Case
  • Dative Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Nominative Case

2. In the same sentence, “their” belongs to which case?

  • Possessive Case
  • Dative Case
  • Objective Case
  • Nominative Case

3. “The poet described his love as the light of his life.” What case is “his” in “his love”?

  • Nominative Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Objective Case
  • Dative Case

4. In that same line, “life” is in which case?

  • Nominative Case
  • Objective Case
  • Dative Case
  • Possessive Case

5. “He told his brother a story about himself.” What case is “himself”?

  • Possessive Case
  • Nominative Case
  • Reflexive Case
  • Dative Case

6. “O friend, lend me your ear!” What case is “friend”?

  • Nominative Case
  • Objective Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Vocative Case

7. In “He showed me the path of righteousness,” what case is “me”?

  • Nominative Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Dative Case
  • Objective Case

8. In “She gifted her sister her favourite book,” what case is “book”?

  • Objective Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Nominative Case
  • Dative Case

9. “The man who forgot his umbrella got wet.” What case is “who”?

  • Nominative Case
  • Objective Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Dative Case

10. “I saw the boy whose dog barked loudly.” What case is “whose”?

  • Possessive Case
  • Nominative Case
  • Dative Case
  • Objective Case

11. In “The child hurt herself while running,” what case is “herself”?

  • Reflexive Case
  • Objective Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Nominative Case

12. “The artist painted his dream upon the canvas.” What case is “canvas”?

  • Possessive Case
  • Nominative Case
  • Objective Case
  • Dative Case

13. “He sent her a letter expressing his gratitude.” What case is “her”?

  • Nominative Case
  • Dative Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Objective Case

14. “The tree shed its leaves in autumn.” What case is “its”?

  • Possessive Case
  • Objective Case
  • Dative Case
  • Nominative Case

15. “The king gave his people freedom and loved them dearly.” What case is “them”?

  • Objective Case
  • Nominative Case
  • Dative Case
  • Possessive Case

16. “She blamed herself for the mistake.” What case is “herself”?

  • Nominative Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Dative Case
  • Reflexive Case

17. “The priest offered the gods their prayers and blessings.” What case is “gods”?

  • Dative Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Nominative Case
  • Objective Case

18. “The dog wagged its tail and followed its master.” What case is “master”?

  • Objective Case
  • Dative Case
  • Nominative Case
  • Possessive Case

19. “He forgave his enemies and himself too.” What case is “himself”?

  • Reflexive Case
  • Objective Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Dative Case

20. “The students gave their teacher a standing ovation.” What case is “teacher”?

  • Nominative Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Dative Case
  • Objective Case

21. “The woman whose son won the prize is proud.” What case is “son”?

  • Possessive Case
  • Dative Case
  • Objective Case
  • Nominative Case

22. “The captain called the soldiers to himself.” What case is “soldiers”?

  • Nominative Case
  • Objective Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Reflexive Case

23. “I gave my friend my book, but he lost it.” What case is “it”?

  • Objective Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Dative Case
  • Nominative Case

24. “The bird built its nest under the bridge.” What case is “nest”?

  • Possessive Case
  • Nominative Case
  • Dative Case
  • Objective Case

25. “The queen addressed her people with grace.” What case is “people”?

  • Nominative Case
  • Objective Case
  • Dative Case
  • Possessive Case

26. “The poet wrote his verses by himself.” What case is “himself”?

  • Reflexive Case
  • Objective Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Dative Case

27. “We gave the beggar some food, and he blessed us.” What case is “beggar”?

  • Dative Case
  • Objective Case
  • Possessive Case
  • Nominative Case

28. “The boy who lost his pen borrowed mine.” What case is “mine”?

  • Possessive Case
  • Objective Case
  • Dative Case
  • Nominative Case

29. “The man called his son and gave him a ring.” What case is “him”?

  • Objective Case
  • Dative Case
  • Nominative Case
  • Possessive Case

30. “The teacher asked herself why the students failed.” What case is “herself”?

  • Reflexive Case
  • Objective Case
  • Dative Case
  • Possessive Case

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