RonPurewal Wrote:this is sloppy writing.
are you sure this is an OFFICIAL problem?
* first of all, "during his first term" should be placed in front of the sentence (with a comma afterward) for the sake of clarity.
placed where it is, it destroys the clarity of any modifier, even the ostensibly correct answer.
* second, the posts mentioned aren't "posts within the Democratic party"; they're posts in the Senate itself.
this is a BIG mistake, and is not the sort of mistake that would be committed by the official problem writers. no way.
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(a), (b), and (e) are clearly wrong.
i will withhold judgment on (c) and (d) until you tell me where you got the problem.
i will also provide EXTREMELY terse explanations of those three wrong answers. if you want more details, tell me where you got this problem, because i sincerely doubt that it's official.
(a)
can't have "that" after comma
(b)
"which" incorrectly applies to "first term"
(e)
ridiculous
horrible
awful
excuse me, 2 questions plz
Ron, at my post, u've proved me the view that the structure "N of N" and its usage of relative clause. (u tolded me that the usage of verb of relative nouns "which/that" depends on the meaning of the reltive clause) Is that application also similar to this prep problem?(DI was appointed to several posts within the D during his first term, whic includes.....) I wonder whether the usage of "withn" and "during" is similar to the usage of "of".
If possible, does "which include (plural)" clearly indicate to the several posts(plural)??
the meaning is clear in the latter modifier clause, so can we identify that the clause directly modify "several posts"?
I come with a idea of JUMP to think the usage of modifiers.
badly illustrated, I hope for your instruction. thx