It was nearly impossible to diagnose the girl’s illness even after three hospitalizations, several months of therapy, and a near mental breakdown because no one medical professional – neither her therapist nor her doctors – were able to see the full scope of her symptoms.
(C) 2008 GMAT Club - [t]v05#37[/t]
* neither her therapist nor her doctors – were able to see
* not even her therapist nor her doctors – were able to see
* including her therapist and her doctors – were able to see
* not even her therapist nor her doctors – was able to see
* neither her therapist nor her doctors – was able to see
Neither/ nor- the subject closes to the verb should agree with the subject.
Here See is the verb and doctors is the subject. Hence the correct choice should be were
I picked A. OA is E and explanation below:
This sentence tests the correct use of the phrase neither...nor as well as subject-verb agreement when subject and verb are split across a parenthetical phrase. The words no one before the hyphen indicate that the parenthetical expression must contain a negative expression, the word neither. Neither is idiomatically paired with the word nor. Also, the subject of the clause – no one medical professional – requires the singular verb was.
1. Were is a plural verb that does not agree with the singular no one medical professional.
2. Not even cannot be correctly idiomatically paired with nor, and were is an incorrect verb.
3. Were is a plural verb and does not agree with the singular subject of the clause; also, the word including does not sufficiently respond to the words no one, which come before the hyphen.
4. The words not even are not idiomatically correct when paired with the word nor.
5. The phrase neither...nor is idiomatically correct, and the singular verb was agrees with the subject no one medical professional.
The correct answer is E.
Can some one point what is wrong in my answer explanation?