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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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You can't use a phrase starting with "because" as a NOUN. Choices A and C are of the form "NOUN did not mean that...," so A fails this test. "Fact," on the other hand, is clearly a noun, so you're good there.
For the same reason, you can't say "the reason for X is because Y", since the form there is "the reason for X is NOUN." (There's also a redundancy issue.) Incidentally, the GMAT would probably shorten the correct answer even further, to "That King Alfred occupied and fortified London in 886 did not mean that..." This construction, starting with "That..." is called a noun clause; it's rather tricky. D is a run-on, and C and E both contain an "it" that doesn't refer to anything in particular. |
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