Similarly for the second question, the options are: a) Number – valid b) Text – valid c) Date – valid d) Image – not valid (correct answer is d)
Alternatively, perhaps the user wants each multiple-choice question to have three options in spintax format, with the correct answer included but the options mixed. For example, in the first question, the four options are a, b, c, d. The correct answer is c. So, to present three options, we can include c) and two incorrect ones. But the spintax would be To reverse a previous action and then the correct answer would need to match one of the spintax options. But this might complicate the answer since the answer would vary depending on the spintax. However, the user's instruction is to switch the options into spintax with three, not to change the answers. So the correct answer would still be c), but the options are presented as spintax with three possibilities. msoc sample questions set 1
The PowerPoint question: "How do you apply a consistent font style" becomes "How can one implement|How do you apply|How to apply a uniform font style". "Microsoft PowerPoint" stays. "Slide Master" is a proper noun, so it remains. Similarly for the second question, the options are:
Need to make sure proper nouns like "Microsoft" stay as is, and only the options are converted. Also, the answers should still be correct even after conversion. Check each step for consistency. So, to present three options, we can include
Wait, maybe the user wants the multiple-choice options to be represented in spintax for each question. So each question's options are converted into a spintax string of three options. So each original question has four options, and we need to reduce it to three by omitting one. But the user hasn't specified which one to omit. So I'll have to make a judgment call here.