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Difficulty:
(N/A)
Question Stats:
60%
(00:42)
correct 40%
(00:56)
wrong
based on 12
sessions
History
Date
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Not Attempted Yet
Religious beliefs of Thomas Hardy are debatable but, but no one can dispute his compelling literary genius exemplified by far from the madding crowd or Tess of the d'ubervilles. A. but no one can dispute his compelling literary genius B. but none can dispute his compelling literary genius C. but not a one can dispute his compelling literary genius D. but no person can dispute his compelling literary genius E. but none can dispute to his compelling literary genius
This one is an interesting SC. It uses two buts side by side. Any comments.
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I ignored the first BUT In the introductory part, we have BELIEFS while the underlined part NO ONE shows some person, which is the problem. It is not compared corretly with the his literary genius
This question is a *****. This doesn't looks like a real gmat question.
Please quote the source of this question.
Moderator: Please do not offend other users! There a few experts who can reliably determine whether the question looks like a real GMAT question or not.
Religious beliefs of Thomas Hardy are debatable but, but no one can dispute his compelling literary genius exemplified by far from the madding crowd or Tess of the d'ubervilles. A. but no one can dispute his compelling literary genius B. but none can dispute his compelling literary genius C. but not a one can dispute his compelling literary genius D. but no person can dispute his compelling literary genius E. but none can dispute to his compelling literary genius
This one is an interesting SC. It uses two buts side by side. Any comments.
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When 'none' and 'no one' are not followed by 'of', they mean 'nobody' . The differences are: (1) 'none' is more formal than 'no one' or 'nobody', (2) 'none' is usually treated as a plural noun, while 'no one' is always a singular noun
will choose B. E is out because idiom is dispute with..Dispute to is wrong. His is ambigous in A,D and C because it has two referral nouns...
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block above for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.