Guillotined on highly questionable charges at the height of the Reign of Terror, Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794), now universally recognized as the “Father of Chemistry,” who named both “oxygen” and “hydrogen”, proved that sulfur was an element, contributed to the formulation of what we now know as the metric system, was raised as a nobleman and educated in the leading scientific theories of his day.
Analysis of the sentence:
Subject: Antonie Lavoisier.
Verb: was raised, educated.
Pronouns: who
Parallel lists: 1) who named both O2 and H2, proved that sulfur was an element, contributed to formulation of metric system.
2) was raised as a nobleman and educated in the leading scientific theories of his day.
Modifiers: 1) Guillotined on highly questionable charges at the height of the Reign of Terror
2) now universally recognized as the “Father of Chemistry”
Meaning: This sentence states facts about one Mr. Antonie Lavoisier.
Error analysis: The original sentence has a subject verb pair, pronouns has proper antecedents and parallel lists are properly formed. However, the modifiers are misplaced distorting the meaning of the sentence to mean that-
Antoine Lavoisier was raised as a nobleman and educated in the leading scientific theories of his day
because he was Guillotined on highly questionable charges at the height of the Reign of Terror. This obviously is wrong!
So lets check the other answer choices:
A has meaning issue so eliminated.
B) Antoine Lavoisier(subject 1) (1743-1794),
naming both “oxygen” and “hydrogen”,
proving that sulfur was an element, and
contributing to the formulation of what we now know as the metric system, (when using verb+ing form the choice wrongly makes us to expect an effect of all these actions, which is wrong)
now universally recognized as the “Father of Chemistry,”- There is no verb for the subject.
he was raised as a nobleman and educated in the leading scientific theories of his day, until he was guillotined on highly questionable charges at the height of the Reign of Terror.
This means that he was raised and educated until he was guillotined on highly questionable charges. This is nonsensical . Clearly, B can be eliminated.
(C) Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794), raised as a nobleman and educated in the leading scientific theories of his day, now universally recognized as the “Father of Chemistry,” until guillotined on highly questionable charges at the height of the Reign of Terror, naming both “oxygen” and “hydrogen”, proving that sulfur was an element, and contributing to the formulation of what we now know as the metric system.
This choice is a mess, there is no point even in discussing this. Among other issues, there is no subject verb pair Eliminated(D) Raised as a nobleman and educated in the leading scientific theories of his day, Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794), now universally recognized as the “Father of Chemistry,” named both “oxygen” and “hydrogen”, proved that sulfur was an element, and contributed to the formulation of what we now know as the metric system, until he was guillotined on highly questionable charges at the height of the Reign of Terror.
This option rectifies the original sentence by re-positioning the modifiers correctly. This now unambiguously states the facts.Correct(E) Now universally recognized as the “Father of Chemistry,” Antoine Lavoisier (1743-1794) was raised as a nobleman and educated in the leading scientific theories of his day,
naming both “oxygen” and “hydrogen”,
proved that sulfur was an element, and contributing to the formulation of what we now know as the metric system, until guillotined on highly questionable charges at the height of the Reign of Terror.
This choice has parallelism issues as highlighted and also distorts the meaning in the same way as choice B does Eliminated