Official ExplanationAfter Alexander the Great ascended the throne following his father’s death, he quickly
began invading nearby regions, to spread into lands to be influenced by the Greek culture for thousands of years after the fall of Ancient Greece.
A. began invading nearby regions, to spread into lands to be influencedB. began, by invading nearby regions, to spread into lands for influenceC. began to invade nearby regions, spreading into lands that were to be influencedD. began, after invading nearby regions, spreading into lands which are to be influencedE. would begin to invade, through spreading nearby regions, into lands for influenceA review of our answer choices shows a split on the verb forms of “invade” and “spread.” We must also determine how “influence” is used in the sentence. Because all the differences in our options are connected, we need to look at them as a whole, so we’ll look at each choice in turn. The dependent clause at the beginning of the sentence (in the non-underlined portion) tells us the sentence is about Alexander the Great, and that is the antecedent for “he.” Now that we know that, we can ignore the dependent clause.
Option A: He quickly began invading nearby regions, to spread into lands to be influenced by the Greek culture for thousands of years after the fall of Ancient Greece.The comma before the prepositional phrase is odd and unnecessary. It is also unclear if Alexander invaded those regions to influence other cultures or to be influenced himself. But since he was Ancient Greek, that doesn’t make any sense. This ambiguous and awkward wording must be avoided.
Option A cannot be the best answer. Option B: He quickly began, by invading nearby regions, to spread into lands for influence by the Greek culture for thousands of years after the fall of Ancient Greece.By enclosing one prepositional phrase in commas it becomes nonessential. Without that phrase, the sentence says that “he began to spread into lands for influence by the Greek culture.” Once again, it seems like Alexander was trying to be influenced by Ancient Greece, which makes no sense.
This cannot be the correct answer.Option C: He quickly began to invade nearby regions, spreading into lands that were to be influenced by the Greek culture for thousands of years after the fall of Ancient Greece.This sentence makes sense. Alexander began to invade other regions, and his spread into other lands caused his culture to influence other cultures. The wording “that were to be influenced” is a little awkward. “Were to be” does properly indicate that this influence would happen in the future and not just while he was invading. However, there are perhaps better ways of stating that.
We’ll return to this answer choice after we review the others. Option D: He quickly began, after invading nearby regions, spreading into lands which are to be influenced by the Greek culture for thousands of years after the fall of Ancient Greece.We have the present tense “are to be influenced,” and the present tense is wrong in this sentence. That would mean the influence would just now be starting, which is definitely not the correct meaning.
This cannot be the correct answer.Option E: He quickly would begin to invade, through spreading nearby regions, into lands for influence by the Greek culture for thousands of years after the fall of Ancient Greece.Once again, this sentence makes it unclear if he was trying to be influenced by Greek culture, which doesn’t make sense. The phrase “through spreading nearby regions” also doesn’t make sense. That means that Alexander invaded by spreading the regions. How does one spread a region? That is nonsensical.
Option E cannot be the correct answer.While Option C does have some slightly awkward wording, it is not ungrammatical. Option C is the best answer.