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Senior Manager
Joined: 07 Jul 2005
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William Shakespeare, though long considered as being one of [#permalink]
02 Jul 2006, 16:01
Question Stats:
0% (00:00) correct
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William Shakespeare, though long considered as being one of the finest writers in English or any other language, was the subject of speculation over the years that he was not the real author of works attributed by him.
1. William Shakespeare, though long considered as being one of the finest writers in English or any other language, was the subject of speculation over the years that he was not the real author of works attributed by him.
2. William Shakespeare, though long considered as one of the finest writers in English or any other language, has been the subject of speculation over the years that he was not the real author of works attributed to him.
3. William Shakespeare, though long considered to be one of the finest writers in English or any other language, was the subject of speculation over the years that he was not the real author of works attributed to him.
4. William Shakespeare, though long considered one of the finest writers in English or any other language, has been the subject of speculation over the years that he was not the real author of works attributed to him.
5. William Shakespeare, though long considered to be one of the finest writers in English, was over the years the subject of speculation that he had not been the real author of works attributed by him.
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SVP
Joined: 25 Nov 2004
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Re: SC: shakespeare [#permalink]
02 Jul 2006, 16:11
its blind D. donot even pay a single second to any other ACs.
quick tip: when a question has considered, the correct one is the one that has "bare consider (or considered)".
"consider as, consider to be, consider being" are always wrong.
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CEO
Joined: 20 Nov 2005
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Schools: Completed at SAID BUSINESS SCHOOL, OXFORD - Class of 2008
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Dead set D.
"considered" don't need "as" or infinitive or "to be" etc.
_________________
SAID BUSINESS SCHOOL, OXFORD - MBA CLASS OF 2008
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Current Student
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Another (D). The present perfect tense reconfirms what MA says.
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VP
Joined: 14 May 2006
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Re: SC: shakespeare [#permalink]
06 Jul 2006, 08:40
MA wrote: its blind D. donot even pay a single second to any other ACs.
quick tip: when a question has considered, the correct one is the one that has "bare consider (or considered)".
"consider as, consider to be, consider being" are always wrong.
Agree with you 100%... Learned this couple days back... really a HUGE help to eliminate wrong choices and is very often used on GMAT!!!
D is 100% correct
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Re: SC: shakespeare
[#permalink]
06 Jul 2006, 08:40
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