I have two questions:
1/
RonPurewal Wrote:(2). "being" starts off a comma + present participle modifier, which, although properly modifies Charles Lindbergh, is not a consequence of the previous clause.[/color]
in general, you shouldn't start a modifier with "being".
check whether you can eliminate "being"!
Being very reluctant to do X, Jim...
--> Very reluctant to do X, Jim...
I'm probably making a mistake here, but: I think we cannot delete "being" in choice (D), right?
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The sentence structure of choice (D) like this:
[element A] is the reason that [element B]
--> e.g. [heavy rain last night] is the reason that [clothes hanging outside are wet].
Thus, [element A] and [element B] should both be objects or things that happen. However, if "being" in choice (D) is taken away, [element A] becomes a modifier.
--
2/
Well, I have to acknowledge that the phrase "...is the reason that..." itself is wrong, as Ron point out that it makes the clause goes after it modifiers "reason".
hmm, so it leads to another question that JaneC643 had asked: If we change "the reason that" to "the reason why". Is "the reason why" acceptable in GMAT?