<p>@thequestionmark: so both q’s (more than/revising) were no error?</p>
<p>Oh and about the butterfly one… I just remembered…</p>
<p>It said “each of the colors came from a single cell” or something like that. The verb should be singular, if it was singular, I put no error. If it was plural, I put the verb… I just don’t remember.</p>
<p>Edit: Yes, I would say no error. Or I would definitively say that all the errors being pointed out are misguided.</p>
<p>^It was singular, and no error.</p>
<p>OK, so our CC count is up to 4 for no error on the 35 question passage.</p>
<p>Truck safety
Rhino
Revising
Butterfly</p>
<p>Feel free to comment.</p>
<p>Butterfly question was no error</p>
<p>Revising wasn’t ‘no error.’ It was the error.</p>
<p>^^^ …until she had revised them should be the correct way to write it out</p>
<p>“The subsidiary adjective clause can take both the “ing” and “ed” forms.” Does this mean we’re missing something?</p>
<p>i only had 3 no errors for the 35 question section…i remember finding definitive errors for the rest-- i dont recall the revising question, what exactly was it?</p>
<p>What was the sentence for truck question ? I may have had no error, but I don’t really remember it.</p>
<p>nooo all of those that are listed are no error…</p>
<p>btw, the truck one was the “need not” one</p>
<p>Millancad, it was something about truck drivers and their safety i dnt remember the exact question either, but i remember putting No Error for that one</p>
<p>btw-- take a look at this for the rhino question</p>
<p>[OG-10</a>, Qs - 251 …](<a href=“http://www.beatthegmat.com/og-10-qs-251-t10581.html]OG-10”>http://www.beatthegmat.com/og-10-qs-251-t10581.html)</p>
<p>going by what the link says, than the sentence should have used greater than? but that might be too nitpicky. i personally put E…</p>
<p>I doubt CB would test us on that obscure grammar fact. It wasn’t even towards the end of the section it was in the middle.</p>
<p>Okay. I think I put no error for the truck one.</p>
<p>did anyone find out the answer for the eyeglasses one?</p>
<p>@ van_sant</p>
<p>“The number of fish is greater than 100.
There are more than 100 fish.” </p>
<p>@Jtran and Muldberrypie</p>
<p>I repeat: The subsidiary adjective clause can take both the “ing” and “ed” forms.</p>
<p>This becomes very apparent when you REARRANGE the sentence - </p>
<p>I never slept after eating.
After eating, I never slept.</p>
<p>After and before are like adjectives; they describe the state of the subject. This is a subtle point - then again, it’s also nice to have a parent with a masters in linguistics.</p>
<p>Which one was that one?</p>
<p>It’s just an example sentence, because I cannot remember the wording of the Mary one.</p>
<p>thequestionmark is talking about the revising question; I hope you’re right!</p>