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(A) we can see the subject as it was at
(B) we can see the subject as it had been at past perfect not required
(C) we can see the subject as if at if is an conditional not correct

(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
(E) the subject can appear to us as though at
both option D & E have modifier error

OPTION A is correct

Bunuel
12 Days of Christmas GMAT Competition with Lots of Fun

The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

(A) we can see the subject as it was at
(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
(C) we can see the subject as if at
(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
(E) the subject can appear to us as though at


 


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The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

(A) we can see the subject as it was at
- seems fine. "as it was" implies just how the subject was at the time when the picture was clicked.

(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
- "Had been" is past perfect, which means it denotes the past of the past, which means it must have changed after, or points to a series of events but there is nothing else. Example: He looked exactly how he had been on his birthday before he fell sick.
- I would prefer A.

(C) we can see the subject as if at
- "as if"? the subject IS at the moment of capture, "as if" sounds doubtful

(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
- no, the subject is not appearing to us, the subject is no longer there in that form, we are looking at the photo

(E) the subject can appear to us as though at
- similar issue as D.

Answer: A

Note: Attempted this as a part of the Christmas challenge (answers not revealed yet). Let me know if there is an error.
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The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time;
once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it,
we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

Quote:
(A) we can see the subject as it was at
The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.
Is a correct sentence and is in active voice.

Quote:
(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
The use of was is correct in A.
Incorrect

Quote:
(C) we can see the subject as if at
Usage of if is incorrect

Quote:
(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
A is better and is in active voice.
Incorrect

Quote:
(E) the subject can appear to us as though at
The Use of though is incorrect

IMO A
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The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.


(A) we can see the subject as it was at
correct option..'the moment of capture' provides the time reference; so the simple past is correct

(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
'the moment of capture' provides the time reference; so the past perfect tense is not required

(C) we can see the subject as if at
use of 'as' for comparison requires a verb in the later half of the comparison as well

(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
changes the meaning vis-a-vis the original stimulus

(E) the subject can appear to us as though at
changes the meaning vis-a-vis the original stimulus

Hence, the correct option is (A)
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The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

(A) we can see the subject as it was at
- past tense to denote an event in past. We can gives a meaning issue. It should be the subject can (same as B)
(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
- had been in wrong with "has been" to refer an event in the past. We can see is not right. Its like saying with passage of time+ we can see. Shouldn't it be "with the passage of time, the subject can appear"
(C) we can see the subject as if at
as if is not correct as per meaning (same as B)
(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
- concise and clear. past tense did is correct
(E) the subject can appear to us as though at
- as though at is not correct
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The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

(A) we can see the subject as it was at-- the meaning of was used here in the sense of 'equal to' and hence conveys the correct meaning. Also the focus is on how persons perceive hence active tense is preferred here due to which we do not pick D even though it is written clearly
(B) we can see the subject as it had been at---had been is wrong because we are talking about point in time in past
(C) we can see the subject as if at--- as if at does not convey the sense of being at the time of capture
(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at---- if we remove the modifier in the comma pair, it seems redundant to use 'subject' twice. Once a subject has been captured, the subject can appear....
(E) the subject can appear to us as though at---- if we remove the modifier in the comma pair, it seems redundant to use 'subject' twice. Once a subject has been captured, the subject can appear....

Ans A
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Bunuel
12 Days of Christmas GMAT Competition with Lots of Fun

The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

(A) we can see the subject as it was at
(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
(C) we can see the subject as if at
(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
(E) the subject can appear to us as though at


 


This question was provided by Experts'Global
for the 12 Days of Christmas Competition

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Explanation:
The intended meaning of the sentence is that the advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time. Further, it says that once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, one can see the subject as it had been at the moment of capture. Here, past perfect is used to describe the earlier of two actions i.e. as the subject had been at the time of capture before it was captured. Only option (B) conveys the intended meaning while being grammatically correct.

ANSWER B.
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Answer is A. Edited for correct OA. OE is already posted.
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Bunuel
12 Days of Christmas GMAT Competition with Lots of Fun

The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

(A) we can see the subject as it was at
(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
(C) we can see the subject as if at
(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
(E) the subject can appear to us as though at


 


This question was provided by Experts'Global
for the 12 Days of Christmas Competition

Win $25,000 in prizes: Courses, Tests & more

 

(A) we can see the subject as it was at - Correct
(B) we can see the subject as it had been at - Incorrect usage of had been
(C) we can see the subject as if at - Incorrect - this option literally suggest time travel
(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at - Incorrect- Meaning issue as if subject is going to appear from thin air
(E) the subject can appear to us as though at - Incorrect - Meaning issue related to appearance of the subject
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option D . the sentence is using passive voice. also perfect tense and then perfect tense.
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answer is D
The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

(A) we can see the subject as it was at
(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
(C) we can see the subject as if at
(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
(E) the subject can appear to us as though at
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The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

The stimulus means ---> advent of photography has enabled people to see the subject as it was at the moment of the capture of the photograph.

(A) we can see the subject as it was at
right meaning; simple past tense is correctly used along with a time marker

(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
use of time marker in the end ; so, past perfect tense is not required

(C) we can see the subject as if at
use of 'as' in a wrong manner

(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
redundancy through use of 'can' and appear..'we can see' is better way of conveying the meaning

(E) the subject can appear to us as though at
we can see' is better way of conveying the meaning

IMO, (A) is correct
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The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

(A) we can see the subject as it was at
right meaning (conveyed through use of simple past in the end)

(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
use of past perfect tense is not required since timing of the action conveyed through the phrase 'at the moment of capture'

(C) we can see the subject as if at
'as if at' --> wrong way of comparing

(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
convoluted manner of conveying the meaning

(E) the subject can appear to us as though at
convoluted manner of conveying the meaning..use of 'we can see' is more direct and appropriate

Thus. (A) is the correct choice
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(A) we can see the subject as it was at Correct

(B) we can see the subject as it had been at Incorrect use of Past Perfect Continuous

(C) we can see the subject as if at Incorrect 'as if at' changes the meaning, the sentence meant we can see the subject as the subject was at the moment of capture

(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at Incorrect the subject can appear changes the meaning i.e. it is not in the hands of subject to appear however it wants to be

(E) the subject can appear to us as though at Incorrect the subject can appear changes the meaning i.e. it is not in the hands of subject to appear however it wants to be
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The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

as usage:
'as' should be followed by noun or a clause or a phrase.

as if/though followed by noun: He consider himself as a CEO material, even though he is an intern.
as if/though followed by a clause: They consider him as though he is the savior of the city.
He is the savior of the city, by itself can be sentence.
as if/though followed by a prepositional phrase: They were shouting as though( they were) in panic.
The usage of as if and though are fine when it maintains the same time both on the left hand side and right hand side of the comparison.

As comparison means exactly same. The picture was taken already. The sentence should convey the meaning that the subject, in the picture, looked(past) the same at the time when young(past). Example of correct usage:

Paul appears(present) same as he normally is(present).

'as if/though at the moment of capture' means we can see the subject(present time) as if/though when the picture/film was captured(past). But the sentence intend to say that 'we can see the subject as it was (past) at the time of capture (past)'.




(A) we can see the subject as it was at
'as it was at' is the correct idiom usage to compare between 2 past time. Note the time of the capture is a past event. 'as it(subject) was' refers to the past. AS comparison is correct. Keep.

(B) we can see the subject as it had been at
'had been' means it is a greater past event happened before another past event which occurred later.
So the AS comparison is not correct( comparison between greater past and past event) since it requires an exact match. Eliminate.


(C) we can see the subject as if at
Incorrect As comparison here, which is between 'can see'(present tense).... and 'at the moment of capture'(past event). Eliminate

(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at
As comparison is again is incorrect 'can appear' (present tense) as 'it did at the moment of capture(past)'. Eliminate

(E) the subject can appear to us as though at
Incorrect As comparison here, which is between 'can appear'(present tense) and 'at the moment of capture'(past event). Eliminate

So the best answer choice is A.
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It's providing the information about past two past sentence so we use had/had been to sentence which happen before the other.

So Ans- B

Posted from my mobile device
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The advent of photography has changed how people perceive reality and time; once a subject has been captured on film, no matter how the passage of time affects it, we can see the subject as it was at the moment of capture.

"the subject can appear" does not logically convey the intended meaning. Eliminated D & E

(A) we can see the subject as it was at - Correct
(B) we can see the subject as it had been at - "we can see" is in present tense. "Had been" is not required
(C) we can see the subject as if at - Awkward phrasing
(D) the subject can appear to us as it did at - Eliminated
(E) the subject can appear to us as though at - Eliminated
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