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In the following question, a sentence is given with four words marked as (A), (B), (C) and (D). These words may or may not be placed in a correct order. Four options with different arrangements of these words have been provided. Mark the option with the correct arrangement as the answer. If no rearrangement is required, mark option (5) as your answer.
Who(A) are you to actions(B) your children(C) for the same rebuke(D) you have done?
A - C
B - D
B - C
A - D
No arrangement
- The original sentence reads: "Who are you to actions your children for the same rebuke you have done?"
- Let's look at all options to find the correct arrangement of words:
- Option 1 (A - C): Swapping "Who" (A) and "your children" (C) makes the sentence: "Your children are you to actions who for the same rebuke you have done?" This doesn't make sense.
- Option 2 (B - D): Swapping "actions" (B) and "rebuke" (D) makes the sentence: "Who are you to rebuke your children for the same actions you have done?" This makes logical sense.
- Option 3 (B - C): Swapping "actions" (B) and "your children" (C) makes the sentence: "Who are you to your children actions for the same rebuke you have done?" This doesn't make complete sense.
- Option 4 (A - D): Swapping "Who" (A) and "rebuke" (D) makes the sentence: "Rebuke are you to actions your children for the same who you have done?" This doesn't make sense.
- Option 5: No arrangement needed. The original sentence doesn't make any sense in this form.
Based on these evaluations, Option 2 is the correct choice.
By: Parvesh Mehta ProfileResourcesReport error
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