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givemeanid
Guest
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'demand that' requires subjunctive verb tense. That means 'verb' followed by the infinitive form without 'to'. The only choice with the subjunctive is B. 'demand that X be Y'.
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Dan Bernstein
MGMAT STAFF
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givemeanid, that is exactly correct! Luci, this subjunctive form is probably not familiar to a nonnative English speaker, but here is a brief synopsis.
In modern American English, the Simple Present Subjunctive is used in clauses beginning with the word that that express formal commands or requests. This construction requires the "bare infinitive," or the infinitive of the verb without the word "to." This explains the need for demand that the money be in the correct answer choice: demand (expresses command) that (introduction to clause) the money (subject) be (bare infinitive). -dan |
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ksc311
Guest
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is the pronoun 'it' ambiguous in all the choices?
also, are there any other errors in the other choices besides the subjunctive? |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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if you want further comments on this question, please post the TEXT of the question, along with the text of all the answer choices, into the forum thread. please do not use image hosting for verbal questions.
thank you. |
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Guest
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The budget for education reflects the administration's demand that the money is controlled by local school districts, but it can only be spent on teachers, not on books, computers, or other materials or activities.
A. the money is controlled by local school districts, but it can only be spent B. the money be controlled by local school districts, but it allows them to spend the money only C. the money is to be controlled by local school districts, but allowing it only to be spent D. local school districts are in control of the money, but it allows them to spend the money only E. local school districts are to be in control of the money, but it can only spend it A. the money is controlled ..., but it can, it refers to the money. looks good B. the money be controlled ..., but it allows them , it refers to the money . not right D. if the choice is"local school districts be in control of the money, but it allows them",is it right? thanks |
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Jonathan Schneider
Instructor
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Yes, that would be a correct rephrasing of D. When we have a verb that expresses intent/desire, we have two options: the infinitive, or the word "that" plus the subjunctive. This rephrasing would use one of each (not breaking parallelism because you have two separate verbs that begin these clauses).
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