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abhee84
in option D, is 'but rather' correct usage?


not x but Y
or
not X but rather Y

Both above are correct usages.
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abhi19051990
Hi

Can someone please highlight the usage of "but rather" in general and also mention a few examples?


It wasn’t a drought but more of a dry spell. -ALONE BUT IS OK- contrast
It wasn’t a drought but rather more of a dry spell.-PHRASE BUT RATHER is ok( contrast of drought and replacement for dry spell)
It wasn’t a drought. But, it was rather more of a dry spell. - but is used as a contrast to the previous sentence, not in combination with rather. rather is used for replacement/preference) - different structure
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What about the change from plural (subjects) to singular (a person/a subject)?
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41396302717
What about the change from plural (subjects) to singular (a person/a subject)?
There is no change from plural "subjects" to singular "subject".
The sentence is a perfect parallel construct, which should be read as:

need to like their subjects not X but rather Y.
Here X = as a person and Y= as a subject.
The objects of comparison are both singular nouns i.e. subject and person.
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IMO d
Option (a) : Idiom error not as x but as y is the correct idiom
Option (b) : Should means moral obligation and is wrong in this context + not like but should like is not parallel
Option (c) : Wordy
Option (e) : Changes meaning
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