wgutx08 Wrote:I still feel totally lost about this question. "A source of debate" would mean something that is viewed differently by the colonials and the English? So we are supposed to look for a statement on which, the colonials believe, they would disagree with the English?
But what the English think about all these is nowhere mentioned in the text, so what are we supposed to pick?
I get that E is the sentence following the "debated" in L9. But both sentences together only tell us that the colonials claim a greater loyalty during their debate, they did not tell us that this topic is a subject of debate or that the English disagreed with them!
So B could also be the answer--- for example:
Colonials: you Englishmen are way to committed to parliamentary representation.
English: no we are not, you guys are not committed enough.
Colonials: Whatever, but WE are the ones who are more loyal to the English political tradition!
English: OK I won't disagree with that.
I guess the only potential subject of debate we know about would be the meaning of "constitution". But even in this case, we don't know if the colonials are aware of the difference.
...please help.....
Thanks for explaining your question so well--it makes it a lot easier to help.
As you foreshadow, I think the issue is your interpretation of the question stem. Something being the "source of a debate" is different than what's actually debated. For example, I could say that the source of my debates with my wife are that we both are stubborn and know-it-alls, but the debate could be about, oh, I don't know, whether to allow our kid to play with a bucket of beans inside the house. (I mean, I know it's fun for him, but I don't want to spend my life picking up beans.)
So, here, we're asked what the Colonials would have said is a reason they're debating--not necessarily
what they're debating.
In the imaginary dialogue you suggested (which is a fun way of thinking about RC questions), the following is well-supported by the passage:
Colonials: We're more English than those English! That's why we keep debating them about how to interpret the role of Parliament and a constitution.
That clear it up?