258. The British sociologist and activist Barbara Wootton once noted as a humorous example of income maldistribution that the elephant that gave rides to children at the Whipsnade Zoo was earning annually exactly what she then earned as director of adult education for London.
(A) that the elephant that gave rides to children at the Whipsnade Zoo was earning
(B) that the elephant, giving rides to children at the Whipsnade Zoo, had been earning
(C) that there was an elephant giving rides to children at the Whipsnade Zoo, and it earned
(D) the elephant that gave rides to children at the Whipsnade Zoo and was earning(A)
(E) the elephant giving rides to children at the Whipsnade Zoo and that it earned
Choice A, the best answer, uses the idiomatic construction noted... that and clearly focuses on the salient information—a comparison of annual earnings. In B, the structure of noted... that the elephant, giving rides..., had been earning falsely implies that the reader already knows about the elephant—that
is, that the existence of this particular elephant is not new
information. Also, the past perfect had been improperly places the elephant’s earning in the past, prior to Wootton’s; consistent verb tense is needed to show that the actions are simultaneous. Choice
C may be faulted for distortion of meaning and diminished clarity
because it suggests that the point of Wootton’s example was the
elephant’s very existence; comparative earnings are presented (after and) as
incidental detail. Choice D is awkward and inexact; the whole
circumstance that Wootton “noted” is best expressed in a clause that
begins with that. Choice E does not use the idiomatic construction noted that x; therefore, and that it earned has no parallel construction to which it can be joined.
不太理解,麻烦nn帮我解释一下,谢谢!! |