Some writing questions.

<li><p>During the summer months, several thousand people
a day visit the park, which is known for its waterfalls
and rock formations.<a href=“A”>/u</a> During the summer months, several thousand
people a day visit the park, which is known
for its waterfalls and rock formations.
(B) Known for its waterfalls and rock formations,
several thousand people a day visit the park
during the summer months.
(C) Several thousand people a day visit the park
during the summer months known for its
waterfalls and rock formations.
(D) Several thousand people had visited the park
a day, which is known for its waterfalls and
rock formations during the summer months.
(E) During the summer months, knowing its
waterfalls and rock formations, several thousand
people a day visit the park.</p></li>
<li><p>Chinese watercolors have become more popular than
American and European artists who are their
contemporaries.<a href=“A”>/u</a> American and European artists who are their
contemporaries
(B) contemporary American and European artists
(C) those by contemporary American and European
artists of the period
(D) those of American and European pictures of the
same period
(E) those by contemporary American and European
artists</p></li>
</ol>

<p>i read cb’s explanations,but they’re very vague. that’s why cbs explanations suck. boooooooo cb!
someone help?</p>

<ol>
<li>During the summer months, several thousand people
a day visit the park, which is known for its waterfalls
and rock formations.</li>
</ol>

<p>(A) During the summer months, several thousand
people a day visit the park, which is known
for its waterfalls and rock formations.</p>

<p>The correct answer (I think).</p>

<p>(B) Known for its waterfalls and rock formations,
several thousand people a day visit the park
during the summer months.</p>

<p>Wrong because of modifier - "several thousand people" aren't "known for its waterfalls etc.". The park is "known for its waterfalls etc.", so "the park" should be directly after the comma.</p>

<p>(C) Several thousand people a day visit the park
during the summer months known for its
waterfalls and rock formations.</p>

<p>Wrong - run-on sentence, and the subject for "known for its waterfalls etc." is unclear, is it the people or the park or the summer months?</p>

<p>(D) Several thousand people had visited the park
a day, which is known for its waterfalls and
rock formations during the summer months.</p>

<p>Wrong b/c of modifier - "a day" is not "known for its waterfalls etc."</p>

<p>(E) During the summer months, knowing its
waterfalls and rock formations, several thousand
people a day visit the park.</p>

<p>Wrong tense "knowing its waterfalls etc." plus it is really awkward.</p>

<ol>
<li>Chinese watercolors have become more popular than
American and European artists who are their
contemporaries.</li>
</ol>

<p>(A) American and European artists who are their
contemporaries</p>

<p>The subject is "Chinese watercolors", which should be compared to the watercolors of the American/European artists, NOT the artists themselves. </p>

<p>(B) contemporary American and European artists</p>

<p>The subject is "Chinese watercolors", which should be compared to the watercolors of the American/European artists, NOT the artists themselves. </p>

<p>(C) those by contemporary American and European
artists of the period</p>

<p>Wrong - I don't know the exact grammatical rule being broken here. "...of the period" Of what period? It cannot be of the same period because the Americans/Europeans are contemporaries of the Chinese. </p>

<p>(D) those of American and European pictures of the
same period</p>

<p>Wrong - The original sentence states that American/European artists are their contemporaries, so they are not in the same time period.</p>

<p>(E) those by contemporary American and European
artists</p>

<p>Correct - the subject "those" refers to watercolors.</p>

<p>i believe the answers are A and E</p>

<p>A/E are definitely right</p>

<p>yeah A & E are the right answers,but i picked D for the second one =/</p>

<p>Haha I know what test this comes from, cuz I just did it =D</p>

<p>A/E are the answers, and that's what the answer key says as well.</p>

<p>It can't be D for the second one. </p>

<p>The European and Americans are the Chinese' contemporaries.</p>

<p>n. pl. con·tem·po·rar·ies
1. A person of the present age.</p>

<p>Therefore, they are NOT "of the same period"</p>

<p>Yeah, I got A and E. Woot Woot!</p>

<p>it's A and E.</p>

<p>A is more difficult to explain. i never learned any of this stuff in school, it just comes naturally. i dunno, it sounds right.</p>

<p>i can explain the second one though. you can't compare a chinese watercolor to a person. so it has to say those. E is definitely the most clear. the of the period thing is just pointless and confusing.</p>

<p>doesn't E denotes some kind of action though?
those by american ....</p>