View Full Version : Blockbuster Grammar Test Flawed
lixluke
01-22-09, 02:12 PM
6. Select the best word to complete the sentence:
They _______________ the incident to find the guilty.
investigated
investigating
investigate
investigates
You can only choose one of the answers, but 2 of them are proper answers.
cosmictraveler
01-22-09, 02:18 PM
investigated :)
spidergoat
01-22-09, 02:27 PM
or investigate
Yep both are valid.
What is the point if this exercise ?
leopold99
01-22-09, 03:40 PM
in my opinion the only way 'investigate' could be proper is if 'the' was dropped and an 's' added to 'incident'.
Fraggle Rocker
01-22-09, 08:17 PM
* * * * MODERATOR'S NOTE * * * *
Here is my response to inquiries regarding the formatting error in the bulletin board engine. I have deleted all other posts on this issue to keep the thread on topic.Originally Posted by leopold99: edit: problem with formatting here. in the reply box there is a space between 'if' and 'the' but it doesn't appear in the post. I got your report on that. Don't worry about it, it happens all the time. The word processing component of this bulletin board engine has a few quirky features. Apparently it thinks there really is a space in there and there's no way to argue over it. You can't put in more than one space because it always condenses them back to a single.
One space Two spaces Three spaces Four spaces Five spaces
They all display as one space.
When you're typing a reply, scroll down into the post chain and take a look at it. It's all in a different font with different formatting, and the spacing is not the same as the final display.
Captain Kremmen
01-23-09, 10:02 AM
Investigated is clearly OK.
Investigate, possibly.
You could use it in a storyboard.
The police are called to a man's house.
They investigate the incident to find the guilty.
They charge the man and his wife with the crime.
Fraggle Rocker
01-23-09, 11:43 AM
6. Select the best word to complete the sentence. . . .
You can only choose one of the answers, but 2 of them are proper answers.I agree. Both the present indicative and past indicative are grammatically correct. In a news report you would probably see the past tense because a "news report" by definition generally (but not always) speaks of something that has already occurred. In a textbook on civics you might see the present tense in a description of how police work is customarily performed.
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