RonPurewal Wrote:DennaMueller Wrote:I'm still confused as to why 'B' could not be the correct answer. It used the past perfect 'had been'.
in (b), the past perfect is inappropriately matched with the OTHER verb, which is in the present tense.
either of the following two constructions would be appropriate:
...by the time they reach adulthood, they have been attacked...
...by the time they reached adulthood, they had been attacked...
you can't "mix and match" between these - i.e., reach + had been is wrong, as is reached + have been.
RonPurewal Wrote:that version would be grammatically correct, although of course it's nonsense (it's impossible for a study to make such an exact prediction).
RonPurewal Wrote:you're welcome... but, are you the same person who asked the question?
RonPurewal Wrote:rustom.hakimiyan Wrote:1) I originally picked B because I thought that the modifier "who were born in the country" had to be separated by commas in order for it to refer to BOTH men and women. In option C -- "born in the country" is touching "women" so I thought that the statement incorrectly implied that the attacks were related to men(not necessarily born in the country) and women who were born in the country.
* punctuation isn't tested on this exam. end of story.
* if a modifier follows "x and y", common sense prevails in assigning the modifier.
e.g., Sheryl likes rock music and men with long hair --> it's clear that "with long hair" only applies to "men".
in this sentence, it's equally clear that "born in the country" applies to both men and women.
Sage Pearce-Higgins Wrote:No, we can't. If the 'who were born' modifier were ambiguous in answer E, so would be the 'born in' modifier in answer C.