<p>on official guide:
Jane Eyre must make many difficult choices, (like when she forces) herself to leave the house of Mr. Rochester.
A like when she forces
B and, as an example, when she forces
C for example, by forcing
D as exemplified by when she forces
E including forcing</p>
<p>E is the right answer and why? Is there any difference in literal meaning between A and E?</p>
<p>And can i find an explicit explanation on the official guide?
thanks</p>
<p>E is best because it’s the shortest grammatically correct answer</p>
<p>“like” (a preposition in A) makes a comparison as in “he used to have a car like mine.” A noun or pronoun follows the preposition not “when she forces.” Also, “like” implies that Jane Eyre didn’t actually force herself to leave Mr. Rochester’s house, but something similar. “Including” suggests that forcing herself to leave was one of the difficult choices she had to make.</p>
<p>Yes, if you’ve bought the BB there’s a link to the answer explanations at the start of each practice test to [Welcome</a> to the Official SAT Study Guide Book Owner’s Area](<a href=“College Board - SAT, AP, College Search and Admission Tools”>SAT Study Guide – SAT Suite | College Board) for free answer explanations etc.</p>
<p>A is also wrong because “when she forces” does not modify choices as well as the gerund “forcing”.</p>