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15. In his research paper, Dr. Frosh, medical director of the Payne Whitney Clinic, distinguishes mood swings.which may be violent without their being grounded in mental disease, from genuine manic-depressive psychosis. (A) mood swings, which may be violent without their being grounded in mental disease, from genuine manic-depressive psychosis (B) mood swings, perhaps violent without being grounded in mental disease, and genuine manic-depressive psychosis , (C) between mood swings, which may be violent without being grounded in mental disease, and genuine manic-depressive psychosis (D) between mood swings, perhaps violent without being grounded in mental disease, from genuine manic-depressive psychosis (E) genuine manic-depressive psychosis and mood swings, which may be violent without being grounded in mental disease Answer to Question 15 The best choice is C because it uses the idiomatically correct expression distinguishes between x and y and because it provides a structure in which the relative clause beginning which may be violent clearly modifies mood swings. The other choices use distinguishes in unidiomatic constructions. Additionally, their in A is intrusive and unnecessary, and the modifier of mood swings in B and D (perhaps violent) is awkward and less clear than the more developed clause which may be violent.
dreadpower
1。定从省略多见于省略(which/that+ is/are/was/were),有情态动词时似乎不该省略。 而如果理解perhaps violent without being grounded in mental disease为省略which is,就变成which is perhaps violent without being grounded in mental disease,读的就非常不爽。
解释地真好
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