"to+verb" isn't a verb. (try writing a sentence with "to+verb" as the main verb; it won't work.) that's the right part of the sentence, though.
"is" is the verb. (x is likely to make someone do something.)
liu1993918 Wrote:It is difficult to spot an error in one sentence and eliminate other choices with the same error, because those choices are in different structure. It seems to me that I have to read the answers one by one.
RonPurewal Wrote:Jamie Wrote:Ron--
When is it okay for one to use "being"? could you please give me an example?
i have this sense of urgency to eliminate an ans choice with "being" in it
please help!!!
thanks,
jamie
you're actually asking the wrong question; the question you should be asking is when you should eliminate "being".
the answer to that question is, ROUGHLY, that you should avoid "being" when expressing the IDENTITY or CHARACTERISTICS of some individual or thing. this is because "being" is usually unnecessary in such cases; there are simpler modifiers (such as appositives) that, while absolutely impossible to use in spoken language, are better in written language.
example:
being a cigar aficionado, john has strong opinions on when to use single-guillotine cigar cutters rather than double-guillotine cutters. --> bad.
a cigar aficionado, john has strong opinions on when to use single-guillotine cigar cutters rather than double-guillotine cutters. --> good. notice that we can simply omit the "being" here.
you don't want to omit "being" here, because it's not expressing identity: in the context of (e), it's a necessary verbal. (nice litmus test: try omitting it and see whether the sentence is still viable, perhaps with minor modifications. here, it isn't.)
so, to sum up:
if "being" expresses IDENTITY or CHARACTERISTICS, then kill it.
otherwise, evaluate it on the same merits as you would any other verb.
RonPurewal Wrote:llzzyy234 Wrote:I know option (D) is wrong because "misinterpreting" should be "misinterpret".
I just want to confirm whether in "... makes them likely to ..." "them" is also wrong, since "Executives’ being" is a possessive.
yep.
possessives are adjectives, not nouns, so executives' is not an appropriate antecedent for a pronoun.