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(1) The wizard had magic spell on her & she turned into lizard
(2) The wizard had magic spell on her & she turned to lizard
(3) The wizard had magic spell on her & she turned lizard
(4) The wizard had magic spell on her & she turned out lizard
OK ! Take a deep breath all. :) Shouldn't it be "cast a magic spell" and "a lizard" ?
" The wizard cast a magic spell on her and she turned into a lizard. "
Right?
"her" refers to who ? the wizard or another female? because this changes the structure and meaning of the sentence? "herself" if the wizard was under the effect of the spell and "her" if the effect is on another female
The context and phrasing of this statement is confusing.
The wizard had magic spell on her & she turned into lizard is the best choice because we use turn into to mean that someone/something have changed from one state into another. However, I don't think that it is completely correct because the sentence is missing the article (a) before the word lizard. It should be: The wizard had magic spell on her & she turned into a lizard.
(1) The wizard had magic spell on her & she turned into lizard
The1st one is the correct one.
This wizard changed into a completely different being, so we have to use "into" in this sentence.
A wizard is male; a witch is female.
And I think "magic spell" is countable, so you must add the article "a" before it. The word "lizard" is countable, too.
1. Number2,3,4 are not correct.
2. no.1 needs article before 'lizard'..
none of the answers above are correct grammaticaly.
First one is the correct answer.
Number (1) is the correct one. Meaning= to be changed or transformed.
The answer is number one [ The wizard had magic spell on her & she turned into lizard ]
. The wizard had magic spell on her and she turned into lizard
Number one is true