Transform It Right! Smart English Grammar Exercises for Students IX, X, XI, XII

Transform It Right! Smart English Grammar Exercises for Students

IX, X, XI, XII


আজ এগুলো পাতলাপুর ব্যাচে হলো

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29/07/2025


✅ 1. Imperative Sentence to Passive (Request Form)

Q: Please call the police.

Ans: You are requested to call the police.

 


✅ 2. Imperative Sentence to Passive (Order Form)

Q: Call the police at once.

Ans: You are ordered to call the police at once.

 


✅ 3. Negative Imperative to Passive (Forbid Form)

Q: Don't kill the birds.

Ans: You are forbidden to kill the birds.

 


✅ 4. Passive Voice (: "to make")

Q: I am to make a telephone call.

Ans: A telephone call is to be made by me.

 


✅ 5. Modal "have to" in Passive Voice


Q: I have to help the man.

Ans: The man has to be helped by me.

 

✅ 6. Present Continuous Passive Voice


Q: The bell is sounding.

Ans: The bell is being sounded.

 

✅ 7. Negative Imperative to Passive (Forbid Form)

Q: Don't watch TV.

Ans: You are forbidden to watch TV.

 

✅ 8. Narration Change (Suggestion)

Q: Gita said to Mita, "Let us help this man."

Ans: Gita suggested to Mita that they should help that man.

 

✅ 9. Narration Change (Exclamatory Sentence)


Q: Rohim said , "Hurrah! India has won the match."

Ans: Rohim exclaimed with joy  that India had won the match.

 

✅ 10. Verb Change: "Make a decision"

Q: I make a decision to kill him.

Ans: I decided to kill him.

 

✅ 11. Degree Change (Superlative → Positive)

Q: Rahim is one of the greatest fighters.

Ans 1: Very few fighters are as great as Rahim.

Ans 2: Rahim is greater than most other fighters.

 

✅ 12. Degree Change (Superlative → Comparative and Positive)

Q: Ram is one of the best boys in the class.

Ans 1: Very few boys in the class are as good as Ram.

Ans 2: Ram is better than most other boys in the class.

 

✅ 13.To -- Interrogative Sentence 

Q: He loves his parents.

Ans: Does he not  love his parents?

 

✅ 14. Complex to Simple Sentence

Q: As soon as Ram reached the station, the train left.

Ans: No sooner had Ram reached the station than the train left.

No sooner did Ram reach the station than the train left.


✅ 15. 'Too...to' → 'So...that' Form

Q: She was too weak to work.

Ans: She was so weak that she could not work.

 

✅ 16. Only Ram can do it. (Begin with "None but")

Ans: None but Ram can do it.

 

✅ 17. Gerund Transformation

Q: He could not but cry.

Ans: He could not help crying.

 

✅ 18. Gerund Transformation

Q: He could not help laughing.

Ans: He could not but laugh.

 

✅ 19. Infinitive Sentence (Purpose)

Q: He went to Agra. He wanted to visit the Taj Mahal.

Ans: He went to Agra to visit the Taj Mahal.

 

✅ 20. Present Participle Phrase

Q: I met my friend. I told her about an incident.

Ans: Meeting my friend, I told her about an incident.

 

✅ 21. Complex → Simple (Though)

Q: Though he is rich, he is unhappy.

Ans: In spite of being rich, he is unhappy.

 

✅ 22. When-Clause → Simple or Compound

Q: When the thief saw the police, he left the place.

Ans 1: Seeing the police, the thief left the place.

Ans 2: The thief saw the police and left the place.

 

✅ 23. Adverb to Adjective

Q: She laughed pleasantly.

Ans: She gave a pleasant laugh.

 

✅ 24. Adverb to Noun

Q: I answered quite confidently.

Ans: I gave a confident answer.

 

✅ 25. Verb to Noun

Q: I was prepared to sit there.

Ans: I had  preparation to sit there.

 

✅ 26. Adjective to Noun

Q: She was silent.

Ans: She kept/maintained silence.

 

✅ 27. Noun Form

Q: I love the hills.

Ans: I have love for the hills.

 

✅ 28. Adverb to Adjective

Q: The train drew slowly into the station.

Ans: The train had a slow entry into the station.

The train drew into the station in a slow manner.











(এগুলো লিখতে হবে না )

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Rules : 


✅ 1–3. Imperative Sentence to Passive Voice

Rule:

For requests, use:

→ “You are requested to + base verb.”

For orders/commands, use:

→ “You are ordered to + base verb.”

For prohibitions (negative imperative), use:

→ “You are forbidden to + base verb.”

Examples:

Please call the police. → You are requested to call the police.

Call the police at once. → You are ordered to call the police at once.

Don't kill the birds. → You are forbidden to kill the birds.

 

✅ 4. Passive Voice (with “to be to”)

Rule:

“am/is/are to + verb” → Passive: “am/is/are + to be + past participle.”

Example:

I am to make a telephone call. → A telephone call is to be made by me.

 

✅ 5. Passive with Modal “Have to”

Rule:

“have to/has to + verb” → Passive: “have to/has to + be + past participle.”

Example:

I have to help the man. → The man has to be helped by me.

 

✅ 6. Present Continuous Passive Voice

Rule:

“am/is/are + verb-ing” → Passive: “am/is/are + being + past participle.”

Example:

The bell is sounding. → The bell is being sounded.

 

✅ 7. Negative Imperative to Passive (Repeated Forbid Form)

(Same as Rule 3)

Example:

Don't watch TV. → You are forbidden to watch TV.

 

✅ 8. Narration: Suggestion

Rule:

“Let us + verb” → Indirect: “suggested that + subject + should + base verb.”

Example:

Gita said to Mita, "Let us help this man."

→ Gita suggested to Mita that they should help that man.

 

✅ 9. Narration: Exclamatory Sentences

Rule:

“Hurrah!” → “exclaimed with joy that...”

Change tense to past and pronouns accordingly.

Example:

Rohim said, "Hurrah! India has won the match."

→ Rohim exclaimed with joy that India had won the match.

 

✅ 10. Verb Transformation (Phrasal Verb to Simple Verb)

Rule:

Change phrasal structure to its simple verb form.

Example:

I make a decision to kill him. → I decided to kill him.

 

✅ 11–12. Degree of Comparison (Superlative → Positive/Comparative)

Rule:

Superlative → Positive: Very few + plural noun + as + adj. + as...

Superlative → Comparative: ... is + adj.-er than most other...

Examples:

Rahim is one of the greatest fighters.

→ Very few fighters are as great as Rahim.

→ Rahim is greater than most other fighters.

 

✅ 13. Assertive to Interrogative

Rule:

Add “Does/Do/Did + subject + not + base verb?”

→ Used for emphatic or rhetorical questions.

Example:

He loves his parents. → Does he not love his parents?

 

✅ 14. Complex to Simple (Time Clauses)

Rule:

“As soon as...” → “No sooner had/did... than...”

Examples:

As soon as Ram reached the station, the train left.

→ No sooner had Ram reached the station than the train left.

→ No sooner did Ram reach the station than the train left.

 

✅ 15. ‘Too...to’ → ‘So...that’

Rule:

“too + adj. + to + verb” → “so + adj. + that + subject + cannot/could not + verb”

Example:

She was too weak to work.

→ She was so weak that she could not work.

 

✅ 16. Only → None but

Rule:

“Only + noun” → “None but + noun”

Example:

Only Ram can do it. → None but Ram can do it.

 

✅ 17–18. Gerund Transformation

Rule:

“Could not but + verb” ↔ “Could not help + verb-ing”

Examples:

He could not but cry. → He could not help crying.

He could not help laughing. → He could not but laugh.

 

✅ 19. Infinitive (Purpose)

Rule:

Combine two actions using “to + verb” to show purpose.

Example:

He went to Agra. He wanted to visit the Taj Mahal.

→ He went to Agra to visit the Taj Mahal.

 

✅ 20. Present Participle Phrase

Rule:

Combine two actions (same subject) using “verb+ing” at the beginning.

Example:

I met my friend. I told her about an incident.

→ Meeting my friend, I told her about an incident.

 

✅ 21. Complex to Simple (Though → In spite of)

Rule:

“Though + clause” → “In spite of + noun/gerund”

Example:

Though he is rich, he is unhappy.

→ In spite of being rich, he is unhappy.

 

✅ 22. When-Clause → Simple or Compound

Rule:

Simple: Use participle: “Seeing...”

Compound: Use “and” to join actions.

Examples:

When the thief saw the police, he left the place.

→ Seeing the police, the thief left the place.

→ The thief saw the police and left the place.

 

✅ 23–24. Adverb to Adjective/Noun

Rule:

Change “verb + adverb” → “give + adj. noun” or “give + noun”

Examples:

She laughed pleasantly. → She gave a pleasant laugh.

I answered quite confidently. → I gave a confident answer.

 

✅ 25–27. Verb/Adjective to Noun

Rule:

Change action/quality to its noun form.

Examples:

I was prepared to sit there. → I had preparation to sit there.

She was silent. → She kept/maintained silence.

I love the hills. → I have love for the hills.

 

✅ 28. Adverb to Adjective

Rule:

Replace “adverb” with a noun phrase using “adjective + noun.”

Example:

The train drew slowly into the station.

→ The train had a slow entry into the station.




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