Argument Driving sentence.

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Argument Driving sentence.

by [email protected] » Wed Nov 28, 2012 8:09 pm
. Balzac drank more than fifty cups of coffee a day and died of caffeine poisoning; furthermore, caffeine did not seem to bother Samuel Johnson, the great writer and lexicographer, who was reported to have drunk twenty-five cups of tea at one sitting.

[A] furthermore, caffeine did not seem to bother

however, caffeine did not seem to bother

[C] however, caffeine did not seem to have bothered

[D] furthermore, caffeine did not seem to have bothered

[E] in addition, caffeine did not seem to bother


The given OA is B.

I came down to [spoiler]B & C, and took C[/spoiler]. Remember, 'have bothered' is Simple present tense.

bothered - Simple Past Tense

had bothered - past perfect tense

have bothered - simple present tense because there is no other way to write the verb 'bother' in the above sentence, other than using the 'have'.

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Source: — Sentence Correction |

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by Bill@VeritasPrep » Wed Nov 28, 2012 11:25 pm
"Have bothered" is actually present perfect, which doesn't make sense since all of our other verbs are in simple past.
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