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99. Just as reading Samuel Pepys’s diary gives a student a sense of the seventeenth century—of its texture and psyche—so Jane Freed’s guileless child‑narrator takes the operagoer inside turn-of-the‑ century Vienna. (A) so Jane Freed’s guileless child narrator takes the operagoer (B) so listening to Jane Freed’s guileless child narrator takes the operagoer (C) so the guileless child narrator of Jane Freed takes the operagoer (D) listening to Jane Freed’s guileless child narrator takes the operagoer (E) Jane Freed’s guileless child narrator takes the operagoer to her opera 这个题目我选了D,just as....,应该可以跟 D这种用法吧,还有就是so too+倒装。太匪夷所思了。 "Just as ..., so ..." is the common usage, the part after "just as" and "so" must be parallel. "so" can be understood in some cases when there is no other choices available. i.e. "reading Samuel Pepys’s diary gives ...", parallel with "listening to Jane Freed’s guileless child narrator takes ..." The answer of this question should be B, if I'm not mistaken. |