Licensed Practitioner

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Licensed Practitioner

by harsh.champ » Fri Feb 19, 2010 6:34 am
The impostor eluded detection for so long because she conducted herself as though she were a licensed practitioner.

A. as though she were a licensed practitioner.
B. as though she was a licensed practitioner.
C. like she was a licensed practitioner.
D. like as if she was a licensed practitioner.
E. as if she was a practitioner with a license.
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by money9111 » Fri Feb 19, 2010 7:24 am
I'm going to choose C, because Like is used to compare, while "as" is used to introduce a series or examples.
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by nox104 » Fri Feb 19, 2010 7:27 am
I would go with C too.

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by thephoenix » Fri Feb 19, 2010 7:29 am
harsh.champ wrote:The impostor eluded detection for so long because she conducted herself as though she were a licensed practitioner.

A. as though she were a licensed practitioner.
B. as though she was a licensed practitioner.
C. like she was a licensed practitioner.
D. like as if she was a licensed practitioner.
E. as if she was a practitioner with a license.
IMO A

i think here we are not comparing two nouns but how she conducted herself so we need as

since its a subjenctive case verb will be plural...were.......was in B makes it wrng

E wordier was singular

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by prinit » Fri Feb 19, 2010 7:37 am
harsh.champ wrote:The impostor eluded detection for so long because she conducted herself as though she were a licensed practitioner.

A. as though she were a licensed practitioner.
B. as though she was a licensed practitioner.
C. like she was a licensed practitioner.
D. like as if she was a licensed practitioner.
E. as if she was a practitioner with a license.
My pick is E. I'm not convinced with C, because of two components that are getting compared do not seem to be same.
IMO E is a bit wordy but as if fits the bill here. OA pls

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