hm? that's a purely objective, rational line of thought -- basically, are we talking about the actual abilities/capabilities of someone/something?
there's no reason why native speakers of english would have any advantage in considering that issue.
RonPurewal Wrote:goelmohit2002 Wrote:Can some one please tell what is wrong with D and E ?
B I think is breaking the idiom...so .....so that
(e) is unidiomatic. you can't mix "enough" and "so that".
the correct idiom is "enough to...". you can't "double up" with another idiom.
as for (d), i'm not sure whether you're allowed to insert "not" between "enough" and "to".
i don't think that you are.
if anyone has seen a legitimate source in which this happens (i.e., "enough not to..."), please let us know.
RonPurewal Wrote:the word "one" does not appear in choice D.
RonPurewal Wrote:in general, "so [adj/adverb] that [complete sentence]" is used when "[complete sentence]" has a DIFFERENT SUBJECT than the original sentence.
e.g., When I came back from vacation, I was so tan that my friends didn't even recognize me.
(subject changes from "i" to "my friends")
if the subject is still the same, then "so [adj] as to [verb]" is a more efficient way to write the construction.
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