<p>In Anglor, Cambodia's ancient city, a (cleverly) designed reservoir, five miles long and one mile wide, (supplied) fish and helped farmers (to produce) three crops of rice annually. No Error</p>
<p>what answer is it? I was thinking it could be no error. but then I thought that to produce was redundant?? I do not get redundancy.... SILVERTURTLE, CRAZYBANDIT, FOGCITY please someone help me.....</p>
<p>Both “to produce” and “produce” are acceptable complements to “helped.” There appears to be no error. If one were to criticize “to produce,” it would not be on grounds on redundancy – which implies semantic repetition – but merely due to speculated idiomatic nonconformity.</p>
<p>I recommend a cell phone, by the way.</p>
<p>Only replying because I am a classic Maroon 5 fan. Not so fond of their newest album though. Songs About Jane is their masterpiece.</p>
<p>And I would say NO ERROR. Just use this piece of advice - If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.</p>
<p>Id say No Error along with everyone else.</p>
<p>i would say no error because even if it has an error (help… to) is an idiom</p>
<p>here is another question.</p>
<p>of all the students in my class, nobody, not even me is excited.</p>
<p>shouldn’t it be not even I?</p>
<p>Yes, “not even I” is correct, because the phrase must be in the same case (nominative here) as the noun for which it is an appositive, “nobody.” Also, a comma must follow “I.”</p>