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Directions: You are provided with four sentences followed by four options. All the options suggest ways in which the given four sentences can be combined into a single sentence. Identify the option that suggests the best possible way, contextually and grammatically, to combine the given sentences implying the same meaning.
Theresa May’s misgivings are shared by the Labour Party too ; Theresa May vowed to end what she calls “rip-off energy prices” by the six biggest energy suppliers ; Theresa May used the phrase again on October 12th when her government published a draft legislation proposing caps on prices charged to millions of electricity and gas customers ; Theresa May has turned the phrase “our broken energy market” into a mantra.
Theresa May used the phrase again on October 12th when her misgivings are shared by the Labour Party too and her government published a draft legislation proposing caps on prices charged to millions of electricity and gas customers where she vowed to end what she calls “rip-off energy prices” by the six biggest energy suppliers.
Theresa May’s misgivings to end what she calls “rip-off energy prices” by the six biggest energy suppliers are shared by the Labour Party too and she used it again on October 12th when her government published a draft legislation proposing caps on prices charged to millions of electricity and gas customers and turned the phrase “our broken energy market” into a mantra.
Theresa May vowed to end what she calls “rip-off energy prices” by the six biggest energy suppliers by using the phrase on October 12th that is shared by the Labour Party too when her government published a draft legislation proposing caps on prices charged to millions of electricity and gas customers and turned the phrase “our broken energy market” into a mantra.
Theresa May has turned the phrase “our broken energy market” into a mantra, using it again on October 12th when her government published a draft legislation proposing caps on prices charged to millions of electricity and gas customers and where she vowed to end what she calls “rip-off energy prices” by the six biggest energy suppliers, with her misgivings being shared by the Labour Party too.
Theresa May has turned the phrase “our broken energy market” into a mantra but by the Labour Party has misgivings May vowed to end what she calls “rip-off energy prices” by the six biggest energy suppliers when she used the phrase again on October 12th when her government published a draft legislation proposing caps on prices charged to millions of electricity and gas customers.
Correct answer is (d). Option A: the entire sentence is grammatically wrong and keeps shifting between the past and present tense respectively. Option B: This sentence seems to convey that Theresa May is not sure if she wants to put an end to the high energy prices. This is opposite to what has been stated in the original paragraph and is incorrect. Option C: This sentence seems to convey that the first time Theresa May used the phrase was on October 12th and that the phrase is shared by the Labour Party. This changes the meaning of the entire sentence and is incorrect. Option E: This is contextually absurd and makes no sense. Option D: The sentence is perfect both grammatically and contextually. Hence, option D is correct.
By: Gaurav Rana ProfileResourcesReport error
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