Correct option is C
Correct Answer: C — A-C & B-D
After interchanging for (A) with begun (C) and colours (B) with comprise (D):
Correct sentence:
The team has already begun to work on its Christmas collection, which will comprise bags, table decor, baubles for the Christmas tree, all in Christmassy colours.
Meaning of Highlighted Words (English + Hindi + Example)
for (A)
English Meaning: Used to indicate purpose or belonging
Hindi Meaning: के लिए
Example: This gift is for you.
Position Analysis (Original):
“The team has already for to work…”
Incorrect because after “has already,” a past participle verb is required, not a preposition.
After interchange:
“…baubles for the Christmas tree…”
Now “for” correctly shows purpose or association.
colours (B)
English Meaning: Different shades or hues
Hindi Meaning: रंग
Example: The dress comes in bright colours.
Position Analysis (Original):
“…which will colours bags…”
Incorrect because “will” must be followed by a base verb, not a noun.
After interchange:
“…all in Christmassy colours.”
Correct noun usage after the preposition “in.”
begun (C)
English Meaning: Past participle of “begin”; started
Hindi Meaning: शुरू किया
Example: She has begun her studies.
Position Analysis (Original):
Placed after “baubles,” it breaks the sentence structure.
After interchange:
“The team has already begun to work…”
Correct structure: has + past participle.
comprise (D)
English Meaning: To consist of; to include
Hindi Meaning: शामिल करना, से मिलकर बनना
Example: The committee comprises five members.
Position Analysis (Original):
“…Christmassy comprise.”
Incorrect because “comprise” is a verb and cannot follow an adjective like this.
After interchange:
“…which will comprise bags…”
Correct structure: will + base verb.
Why (A-C) and (B-D) Are Correct
Original incorrect structures:
“has already for to work”
“will colours bags”
“Christmassy comprise”
After correct interchange:
“has already begun to work”
“will comprise bags”
“Christmassy colours”
All grammatical structures become correct:
Auxiliary + past participle
Modal + base verb
Preposition + noun
Final Answer:
Option C — A-C & B-D