Notice (8): Use of undefined constant title - assumed 'title' [APP/Controller/UrlsController.php, line 235]Code Context$qsData = json_decode($output)->question;
$metadata = [
title => "Best CAT Coaching In Delhi - " . implode(' | ', $qsData->topic_tags),
$slug = 'cat-verbal-grammar-usage-modifier-directionsnbspchoose-the-correct-sentence-642188170' $output = '{"success":true,"question":{"_id":"zvi7PPkdaNBpFYtuQ","name":"modif8","common_data":"","questions":[{"type":"MCQ","index":0,"statement":"<p><strong>Directions: </strong>Choose the correct sentence.</p>\n","instructions":"","options":[{"index":0,"statement":"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should only be light traffic.</p>\n","is_correct":false,"feedback":""},{"index":1,"statement":"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should be only light traffic.</p>\n","is_correct":true,"feedback":"<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Correct! Only is properly modifying light. Option 1 - A modifier that is placed too close to a word that it does not intend to modify is known as a misplaced modifier. If there should only be light traffic, light traffic is all that should occur from Airline to 47th; there can be no one walking, no rain, no anything except light traffic. Option 3 - Only is a misplaced modifier. Only appears to modify should in this construction. If there only should be light traffic, then the speaker is characterizing light traffic as an ought, something that would be the case in the best of all possible worlds, rather than describing the actual state of traffic on that route, which may in fact be light or heavy or somewhere in between.</p>\n"},{"index":2,"statement":"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there only should be light traffic.</p>\n","is_correct":false,"feedback":""}],"num_of_options":3,"num_of_correct_options":1,"correct_response":"{\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should only be light traffic.</p>\":false,\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should be only light traffic.</p>\":true,\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there only should be light traffic.</p>\":false}","feedback":"{\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should only be light traffic.</p>\":\"\",\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should be only light traffic.</p>\":\"<p style=\\\"text-align: justify;\\\">Correct! Only is properly modifying light. Option 1 - A modifier that is placed too close to a word that it does not intend to modify is known as a misplaced modifier. If there should only be light traffic, light traffic is all that should occur from Airline to 47th; there can be no one walking, no rain, no anything except light traffic. Option 3 - Only is a misplaced modifier. Only appears to modify should in this construction. If there only should be light traffic, then the speaker is characterizing light traffic as an ought, something that would be the case in the best of all possible worlds, rather than describing the actual state of traffic on that route, which may in fact be light or heavy or somewhere in between.</p>\",\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there only should be light traffic.</p>\":\"\"}","general_wrong_feedback":"<p>Wrong! <em><strong>Modifiers</strong></em> breathe life into sentences. <strong><em>A sentence without a modifier: </em></strong><em>The herb is sold throughout the country</em><strong><em>. </em></strong><strong><em>A sentence with a modifier: </em></strong><em>Known for its curative purposes, the herb is sold throughout the country. </em>Without modifiers, sentences would be no fun to read. Carefully chosen, well-placed modifiers allow your writing to express your unique take on the situation you are capturing through words.</p>\n\n<p><em><strong>Dangling Modifier </strong></em>-<strong><em> </em></strong>Here the sentence has a modifier but the doer or the subject is not clear. Hence, the sentence is dangling. <em><strong>Example:</strong></em></p>\n\n<ul>\n\t<li>Having completed the task, the book was read.</li>\n</ul>\n\n<p>Here the doer is some person who is not mentioned at all. So we rewrite the sentence as: <strong><em>Having completed the task, he/she read the book. </em></strong></p>\n\n<p>A <em><strong>misplaced modifier</strong></em> is simply a word, a phrase or a clause describing something but not placed near the word it is supposed to modify. Instead, it is placed just in the wrong place. Some modifiers, especially simple modifiers – only, just, nearly, barely, slip into the wrong place in a sentence. <strong><em>Example:</em></strong></p>\n\n<ul>\n\t<li>I want somebody to deliver these documents <strong><em>with good character.</em></strong></li>\n</ul>\n\n<p>Now the phrase ‘with good character’ can only refer to the person. But, here the implication is that the documents should have good character! We rectify this by placing the modifier (phrase) correctly. (Correct). I want somebody <strong><em>with good character to</em></strong> deliver these documents. (Correct)</p>\n"}],"state":"DRAFT","topic_tags":["CAT","Verbal","Grammar","Usage","Modifier"]}}' $islogin = (int) 0 $qsData = object(stdClass) { _id => 'zvi7PPkdaNBpFYtuQ' name => 'modif8' common_data => '' questions => array( (int) 0 => object(stdClass) {} ) state => 'DRAFT' topic_tags => array( (int) 0 => 'CAT', (int) 1 => 'Verbal', (int) 2 => 'Grammar', (int) 3 => 'Usage', (int) 4 => 'Modifier' ) }UrlsController::question() - APP/Controller/UrlsController.php, line 235 ReflectionMethod::invokeArgs() - [internal], line ?? Controller::invokeAction() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 499 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 193 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 118
Notice (8): Use of undefined constant desc - assumed 'desc' [APP/Controller/UrlsController.php, line 236]Code Context$metadata = [
title => "Best CAT Coaching In Delhi - " . implode(' | ', $qsData->topic_tags),
desc => !empty($qsData->common_data) ? substr(strip_tags($qsData->common_data), 0, 200) . '...' : $qsData->questions[0]->statement ? substr(strip_tags($qsData->questions[0]->statement), 0, 200) . '...' : 'Best CAT coaching CAT preparation and Personalised learning with unlimited classes, from Alchemist'
$slug = 'cat-verbal-grammar-usage-modifier-directionsnbspchoose-the-correct-sentence-642188170' $output = '{"success":true,"question":{"_id":"zvi7PPkdaNBpFYtuQ","name":"modif8","common_data":"","questions":[{"type":"MCQ","index":0,"statement":"<p><strong>Directions: </strong>Choose the correct sentence.</p>\n","instructions":"","options":[{"index":0,"statement":"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should only be light traffic.</p>\n","is_correct":false,"feedback":""},{"index":1,"statement":"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should be only light traffic.</p>\n","is_correct":true,"feedback":"<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">Correct! Only is properly modifying light. Option 1 - A modifier that is placed too close to a word that it does not intend to modify is known as a misplaced modifier. If there should only be light traffic, light traffic is all that should occur from Airline to 47th; there can be no one walking, no rain, no anything except light traffic. Option 3 - Only is a misplaced modifier. Only appears to modify should in this construction. If there only should be light traffic, then the speaker is characterizing light traffic as an ought, something that would be the case in the best of all possible worlds, rather than describing the actual state of traffic on that route, which may in fact be light or heavy or somewhere in between.</p>\n"},{"index":2,"statement":"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there only should be light traffic.</p>\n","is_correct":false,"feedback":""}],"num_of_options":3,"num_of_correct_options":1,"correct_response":"{\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should only be light traffic.</p>\":false,\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should be only light traffic.</p>\":true,\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there only should be light traffic.</p>\":false}","feedback":"{\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should only be light traffic.</p>\":\"\",\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there should be only light traffic.</p>\":\"<p style=\\\"text-align: justify;\\\">Correct! Only is properly modifying light. Option 1 - A modifier that is placed too close to a word that it does not intend to modify is known as a misplaced modifier. If there should only be light traffic, light traffic is all that should occur from Airline to 47th; there can be no one walking, no rain, no anything except light traffic. Option 3 - Only is a misplaced modifier. Only appears to modify should in this construction. If there only should be light traffic, then the speaker is characterizing light traffic as an ought, something that would be the case in the best of all possible worlds, rather than describing the actual state of traffic on that route, which may in fact be light or heavy or somewhere in between.</p>\",\"<p>If you follow Airline Avenue to East 47th Street, there only should be light traffic.</p>\":\"\"}","general_wrong_feedback":"<p>Wrong! <em><strong>Modifiers</strong></em> breathe life into sentences. <strong><em>A sentence without a modifier: </em></strong><em>The herb is sold throughout the country</em><strong><em>. </em></strong><strong><em>A sentence with a modifier: </em></strong><em>Known for its curative purposes, the herb is sold throughout the country. </em>Without modifiers, sentences would be no fun to read. Carefully chosen, well-placed modifiers allow your writing to express your unique take on the situation you are capturing through words.</p>\n\n<p><em><strong>Dangling Modifier </strong></em>-<strong><em> </em></strong>Here the sentence has a modifier but the doer or the subject is not clear. Hence, the sentence is dangling. <em><strong>Example:</strong></em></p>\n\n<ul>\n\t<li>Having completed the task, the book was read.</li>\n</ul>\n\n<p>Here the doer is some person who is not mentioned at all. So we rewrite the sentence as: <strong><em>Having completed the task, he/she read the book. </em></strong></p>\n\n<p>A <em><strong>misplaced modifier</strong></em> is simply a word, a phrase or a clause describing something but not placed near the word it is supposed to modify. Instead, it is placed just in the wrong place. Some modifiers, especially simple modifiers – only, just, nearly, barely, slip into the wrong place in a sentence. <strong><em>Example:</em></strong></p>\n\n<ul>\n\t<li>I want somebody to deliver these documents <strong><em>with good character.</em></strong></li>\n</ul>\n\n<p>Now the phrase ‘with good character’ can only refer to the person. But, here the implication is that the documents should have good character! We rectify this by placing the modifier (phrase) correctly. (Correct). I want somebody <strong><em>with good character to</em></strong> deliver these documents. (Correct)</p>\n"}],"state":"DRAFT","topic_tags":["CAT","Verbal","Grammar","Usage","Modifier"]}}' $islogin = (int) 0 $qsData = object(stdClass) { _id => 'zvi7PPkdaNBpFYtuQ' name => 'modif8' common_data => '' questions => array( (int) 0 => object(stdClass) {} ) state => 'DRAFT' topic_tags => array( (int) 0 => 'CAT', (int) 1 => 'Verbal', (int) 2 => 'Grammar', (int) 3 => 'Usage', (int) 4 => 'Modifier' ) }UrlsController::question() - APP/Controller/UrlsController.php, line 236 ReflectionMethod::invokeArgs() - [internal], line ?? Controller::invokeAction() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 499 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 193 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 118
Type : MCQ
Directions: Choose the correct sentence.
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