mundasingh123
Following the split in 1980 ,
the chances of a spree ballet reunion, as per fans ,were more likely than tank tops and short pants making a comeback.
A. the chances of a spree ballet reunion, as per fans, were more likely than tank tops and short pants making a comeback.
B. spree ballet reunion chances were as likely to tank tops and short pants making a comeback.
C. fans thought spree ballet reunion is as likely as tank tops or short pants making a comeback
D. the chances of a spree ballet reunion were most likely as tank tops and short pants making a comeback
E. fans thought the chances of a Spree ballet reunion were as likely as tank tops and short pants making a comeback.
When you see an introductory phrase followed by a comma, the first thing you should think about is modification - does whatever that phrase is describing immediately follow the comma.
In this question, that normally right thinking would lead you astray, since the introductory phrase doesn't really modify anything.
So, we need to turn to other issues to decide upon the correct choice. Fortunately, 4 of the answers are clearly wrong, so we should end up in the right place at the end of the day.
We see the awkward "as per fans" in the original sentence and eliminate (A).
(B) contains the idiomatically incorrect "were as likely to..."; we know that "as likely" should be followed by "as", not "to" (in a comparison).
(C) is missing the "a" in "fans thought [a] spree ballet reunion...".
(D) has the awkward phrasing "were most likely as" - again, we need "as likely as".
Accordingly, only (E) survives our scrutiny and must be the correct choice.