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Select the alternative that will improve the underlined part of the sentence in case there is no improvement select “No
improvement”
I am very much pleased to see you here today.
No improvement
very pleasing
very pleased
too much pleased
- Option 1: No improvement
- This option suggests that the original sentence does not need any changes. However, "very much pleased" is slightly awkward in this context.
- Option 2: very pleasing
- "Very pleasing" suggests that something else is causing satisfaction or delight. It doesn't fit well as it shifts the meaning.
- Option 3: very pleased
- This option is grammatically correct. "Very pleased" is the standard expression to convey strong satisfaction.
- This is the correct choice.
- Option 4: too much pleased
- "Too much" usually indicates excess and is not grammatically correct in this context. "Very pleased" is the idiomatic form.
By: santosh ProfileResourcesReport error
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