Questions Related to leadership
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remains
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to remain
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remained
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nothing
A
Correct answer
Explanation
'A lot of work' is treated as a singular subject, so it takes the singular verb 'remains' (A). The sentence indicates work that is still pending or left to be done. 'Remained' would be past tense, and 'to remain' is grammatically incorrect here.
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helping
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help
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to help
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helped
B
Correct answer
Explanation
With 'will' to express future intention, we use the bare infinitive form of the verb. 'I will help you' (B) is correct. 'Helping' and 'helped' are wrong verb forms, and 'to help' incorrectly adds the infinitive marker after 'will'.
C
Correct answer
Explanation
When referring to the entire group of people, we use 'All' (C) with a plural noun ('men'). 'Every' and 'Everyone' are followed by singular verbs and are used differently, while 'Most' would only refer to a portion, not the whole.
D
Correct answer
Explanation
When referring back to 'none of' or a negative quantity, we use 'none' (D). 'I saw none of my friends' is the correct construction. 'Nobody' and 'no one' stand alone as pronouns, and 'no' cannot be used in this position.
B
Correct answer
Explanation
This is an indirect yes/no question embedded in a larger sentence. We use 'if' (B) to introduce such embedded questions. 'Ask him if he likes it' is correct. 'That' would be used for statements, not questions.
B
Correct answer
Explanation
The sentence is in present simple tense (indicated by 'very well' showing a current state). We need the base form 'know' (B) for the first person singular 'I'. 'Knows' is for third person, 'knowing' is present participle, and 'knew' is past tense.
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am belong
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belong
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belonging
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am belonging
B
Correct answer
Explanation
The verb 'belong' is a stative verb that cannot be used in continuous forms. 'I belong to the baseball team' (B) is correct in present simple. 'Am belonging' and 'belonging' are grammatically incorrect, and 'am belong' has the wrong auxiliary.
A
Correct answer
Explanation
Furniture is an uncountable noun, so it must be used with "much" rather than "many." "Many" is used with countable nouns (e.g., many chairs). "More" is a comparative and doesn't fit grammatically, and "atleast" should be two words (at least) but is still incorrect here.
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receiving
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received
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to receive
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receive
B
Correct answer
Explanation
The present perfect tense ("has received") is used with "just" to describe a very recent action. "Receiving" is incorrect because it needs "has been" for perfect progressive. "To receive" is infinitive and doesn't fit the auxiliary "has." "Receive" is base form and doesn't work with "has."
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more young
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more younger
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very younger
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much younger
D
Correct answer
Explanation
Comparatives of short adjectives take -er, but they can be intensified with "much." "Young" becomes "younger" in comparative form, not "more young." "More" is used with longer adjectives (more beautiful), not short one-syllable words.