. . . . . . . . S. D. O is . . . . . . . . officer of . . . . . . . . very high rank. A. the, a, a B. an, an, a C. an, a, a D. a, the, the

[amp_mcq option1=”the, a, a” option2=”an, an, a” option3=”an, a, a” option4=”O is . . . . . . . . officer of . . . . . . . . very high rank. A. the, a, a B. an, an, a C. an, a, a D. a, the, the” correct=”option1″]

The correct answer is: A. the, a, a

  • The is used before a singular noun that is specific or unique. In this case, the noun is “officer” and it is specific because it refers to a particular officer, S. D. O.
  • An is used before a singular noun that begins with a vowel sound. In this case, the noun is “officer” and it begins with a consonant sound, so “an” is not the correct article to use.
  • A is used before a singular noun that begins with a consonant sound. In this case, the noun is “rank” and it begins with a consonant sound, so “a” is the correct article to use.

The other options are incorrect because they use the wrong articles. Option B uses “an” before the noun “officer,” but “an” is only used before singular nouns that begin with a vowel sound. Option C uses “an” before the noun “rank,” but “an” is only used before singular nouns that begin with a vowel sound. Option D uses “a” before the noun “officer” and “the” before the noun “rank,” but this is not the correct order of articles to use.

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