Mavisdu1017
AndrewN hello expert, much thanks for your fast response. And could you illuminate why A is wrong? Is “ believe to be” an idiom? Thanks.
It has to do with the context of the sentence,
Mavisdu1017. In the sentences above, both the species/type and the belief are tentative. That is, the belief is not a
conviction that something is true, but is speculative in nature. Also, the belief is that the sea worm, to focus on just one question, may be
a member of a previously unseen or unstudied (at least,
at close range) species, not that the organism
is a never-before-seen-at-close-range species. In the sentence,
The biologist believes that the sea worms are a species never before seen, we have to ask ourselves,
How is the biologist convinced that the sea worms belong to a new species? By contrast, in the sentence,
The biologist believes the sea worms to be of a species never before seen, the speculative nature of the belief comes through. In the question at hand, the stacked pronouns in (A) (
ones that), combined with the conflicting information surrounding this belief—is it more grounded (
are a species) or speculative (
never before seen)?—give us a few reasons to doubt that it is the best way to convey the idea. In (E), the picture is more consistent, the belief speculative, through and through—
believes to be of a species never before seen...That said, this is a quite nuanced question that hinges more on meaning, a question that I would not worry too much about. You are unlikely to see another like it for every 500 questions you study.
- Andrew