RonPurewal Wrote:vengaair3000 Wrote:I eliminated E first time as i understood it as
Prospecting for gold during the California gold rush was a relatively easy task since erosion, prehistoric glacier(Or from certain point of time....)
Doesnt it change the meaning of original sentence?not an issue here, since the other four choices are all grammatically incorrect -- they either have bad parallelism or aren't sentences at all (run-ons or fragments).
madhavbatra Wrote:Hi, can you please help me understand how the other four choices are run-ons or fragments as im unable to identify these issues in the four wrong options.
thanks.
madhavbatra Wrote:RonPurewal Wrote:vengaair3000 Wrote:I eliminated E first time as i understood it as
Prospecting for gold during the California gold rush was a relatively easy task since erosion, prehistoric glacier(Or from certain point of time....)
Doesnt it change the meaning of original sentence?not an issue here, since the other four choices are all grammatically incorrect -- they either have bad parallelism or aren't sentences at all (run-ons or fragments).
Hi, can you please help me understand how the other four choices are run-ons or fragments as im unable to identify these issues in the four wrong options.
thanks.
alexei600 Wrote:Dear Instructor,
Is there an easier rule that can be learnt from this question re: "because of" use. I am still strugling seeing why A and B are wrong.
thanks
Prospecting for gold during the California gold rush was a relatively easy task, because of erosion, prehistoric glacier movement, and ancient, gold-bearing riverbeds thrust to the surface by volcanic activity put gold literally within reach for anybody with a pan or shovel
this is "because OF + CLAUSE".
prep + CLAUSE is not a valid sentence structure
manassingh Wrote:Does this rule(Prep + Clause is not valid sentence structure) apply in all cases ?
Just to confirm - is this a preposition ? I am confused
Prospecting for gold during the California gold rush was a relatively easy task,
RonPurewal Wrote:manassingh Wrote:Does this rule(Prep + Clause is not valid sentence structure) apply in all cases ?
yes.Just to confirm - is this a preposition ? I am confused
Prospecting for gold during the California gold rush was a relatively easy task,
whoa, no. the preposition in this case is "of".
it seems that you ought to go look up the definition of a preposition -- the best way for you to do this is to use a search engine; there will no doubt be hundreds, if not thousands, of good websites carrying definitions of basic grammatical terms such as this one.
tim Wrote:"ancient" and "gold-bearing" both modify the riverbeds; the comma is there to keep you from thinking the gold was ancient. As for the parallelism, there are three things that are parallel, NONE of which are "volcanic activity". The parallel elements of course are joined by commas and an "and":
erosion
prehistoric glacier movement, and
ancient, gold-bearing riverbeds thrust to the surface by volcanic activity
RonPurewal Wrote:madhavbatra Wrote:Hi, can you please help me understand how the other four choices are run-ons or fragments as im unable to identify these issues in the four wrong options.
thanks.
i've yellowed out modifiers to make the below discussion easier.
(a)
Prospecting for gold during the California gold rush was a relatively easy task, because of erosion, prehistoric glacier movement, and ancient, gold-bearing riverbeds thrust to the surface by volcanic activity put gold literally within reach for anybody with a pan or shovel.
this is "because OF + CLAUSE".
prep + CLAUSE is not a valid sentence structure.
(b)
Prospecting for gold during the California gold rush was a relatively easy task, because of erosion, prehistoric glacier movement, and volcanic activity that thrust ancient, gold-bearing riverbeds to the surface, and putting gold literally within reach of anybody with a pan or shovel.
there's nothing parallel to the boldface construction; "and" requires that there be some parallel construction earlier in the sentence.
(c)
Prospecting for gold during the California gold rush was a relatively easy task, owing to erosion, prehistoric glacier movement, and volcanic activity that had thrust ancient, gold-bearing riverbeds to the surface, and putting gold literally within reach of anybody with a pan or shovel.
same problem as in (b).
also, "owing to" is sketchy and informal -- i wouldn't use that in a formal sentence, unless i were actually writing about someone literally owing something (like money) to someone else.
(d)
Prospecting for gold during the California gold rush was a relatively easy task, since erosion, prehistoric glacier movement, and volcanic activity that thrust ancient, gold-bearing riverbeds to the surface, putting gold literally within reach for anybody with a pan or shovel.
"since" is a subordinating conjunction, so the words after "since" should constitute a sentence by themselves.
in this example, those words are NOT a complete clause; they're just a noun (X, Y, and Z), followed by two modifiers (the "that" modifier and the "comma + ing" modifier).