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1. Unable to distinguish between the use of a conditional "that would" vs infinitive "to allow" What would be the correct usage here or is that a meaningless split?

2. "Instead of" is a prepositional phrase and as such must be followed by a noun / noun phrase. I'm unable to decipher whether "typed up using a computer" in B is a noun phrase or an action phrase? In my opinion, the participle "using" is modifying "typed up" which is a verb and hence B is incorrect.

3. In C, can we eliminate using "are allowed" which is incorrect tense? Since we are talking of a hypothetical event, "would" should have been used. (But if that is the case, I'm unable to understand how E is right or is it that infinitive and "that + conditional verb" are both acceptable usage?

4. X rather than Y is the correct idiom. In E, we have a noun phrase (handwritten form) and Y (action phrase). How are these two parallel or am I missing something here?
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1. Unable to distinguish between the use of a conditional "that would" vs infinitive "to allow" What would be the correct usage here or is that a meaningless split?

2. "Instead of" is a prepositional phrase and as such must be followed by a noun / noun phrase. I'm unable to decipher whether "typed up using a computer" in B is a noun phrase or an action phrase? In my opinion, the participle "using" is modifying "typed up" which is a verb and hence B is incorrect.

3. In C, can we eliminate using "are allowed" which is incorrect tense? Since we are talking of a hypothetical event, "would" should have been used. (But if that is the case, I'm unable to understand how E is right or is it that infinitive and "that + conditional verb" are both acceptable usage?

4. X rather than Y is the correct idiom. In E, we have a noun phrase (handwritten form) and Y (action phrase). How are these two parallel or am I missing something here?

Wondering about the same. Why is E parallel?
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