Choose the correct form: ‘Of the two proposals, this is the ___.’
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Traditional formal usage uses the comparative when only two items are compared.
Therefore, 'the better' is appropriate.
Practice PMS questions with answers and explanations.
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Traditional formal usage uses the comparative when only two items are compared.
Therefore, 'the better' is appropriate.
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'Extremely' modifies the adjective 'informative.'
Adverbs can modify adjectives as well as verbs.
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'Highly' is the conventional adverb meaning greatly or very much.
'High respected' is not standard English.
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'Well' can function as an adjective meaning healthy.
After 'feeling,' it correctly describes the patient's condition.
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In the original sentence, 'often' could modify either 'revise' or 'perform.'
Its uncertain attachment creates a squinting modifier.
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The pronoun is the object of the preposition 'to.'
Formal standard English therefore uses 'whom.'
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The correlative structure uses comparative forms in both clauses.
'Better' is the irregular comparative of 'good.'
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'That' can refer to a thing and functions as the subject of the relative clause.
The clause identifies which book is meant.
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'More useful' is the correct comparative form of a multi-syllable adjective.
Using both 'more' and an -er form would be redundant.
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Repeating 'Ayesha' makes the actor clear, while 'her' naturally refers to Sana.
The other sentences contain ambiguous pronoun references.
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Singular 'they/their' is widely accepted for an indefinite or gender-neutral antecedent.
It avoids unnecessary gender assumptions.
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The pronoun functions as the object of 'invite.'
Formal grammar therefore uses the objective form 'whom.'