Hi, experts. Please share your thoughts. Appreciated
Independent contractors pay higher taxes and paid less consistently than are statutory employees, but they, unlike statutory employees, are freely allowed to perform the same type of work for multiple businesses.
(A)taxes and paid less consistently than are statutory employees, but they, unlike statutory employees, are freely allowed to
(B)taxes and are paid less consistently than statutory employees; unlike statutory employees, though, independent contractors are free to
(C)taxes, are paid less consistently than statutory employees, and, unlike statutory employees, they may freely
(D)taxes and are paid less consistently than are statutory employees; in addition, unlike statutory employees, independent contractors can freely
(E)taxes and paid less consistently than are statutory employees; moreover, unlike statutory employees, they are allowed to
OA:B
My question is (B)taxes and are paid less consistently than statutory employees; unlike statutory employees, though, independent contractors are free to
"are paid less consistently than statutory employees " how is it be parallel?
Please explain. Million thanks in advance.
comparison question
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OA: Independent contractors pay higher taxes and are paid less consistently than statutory employees.toro86717498 wrote:My question is (B)taxes and are paid less consistently than statutory employees; unlike statutory employees, though, independent contractors are free to
"are paid less consistently than statutory employees " how is it be parallel?
Please explain. Million thanks in advance.
Here, the portions in blue imply the following comparison:
Independent contractors pay higher taxes [than statutory employees pay] and are paid less consistently than statutory employees [are paid].
The words in brackets are omitted, but their presence is implied.
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My students have been admitted to HBS, CBS, Tuck, Yale, Stern, Fuqua -- a long list of top programs.
As a tutor, I don't simply teach you how I would approach problems.
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- ceilidh.erickson
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If your question is whether "independent contractors pay... and are paid" is parallel, this is a very common question.
Many students mistakenly assume that "parallelism" means that everything has to be exactly the same. That's not the case - active verbs can be parallel to passive verbs, past tense can be parallel to present tense, etc. The only rule is that each parallel piece must fit with the ROOT PHRASE:
Independent contractors:
a) pay
and
b) are paid
--> one active verb, one passive verb, but both fit the subject.
You could also have parallelism with different verb tenses:
Independent contractors:
a) now pay
but
b) used to pay (in the past)
--> one present tense, one past tense, but both fit the subject.
Parallelism with different types of modifiers:
Independent contractors:
a) qualified
and
b) hard-working,
pay higher taxes...
--> one is a past participle, the other is a present participle, but both modify "contractors."
Many students mistakenly assume that "parallelism" means that everything has to be exactly the same. That's not the case - active verbs can be parallel to passive verbs, past tense can be parallel to present tense, etc. The only rule is that each parallel piece must fit with the ROOT PHRASE:
Independent contractors:
a) pay
and
b) are paid
--> one active verb, one passive verb, but both fit the subject.
You could also have parallelism with different verb tenses:
Independent contractors:
a) now pay
but
b) used to pay (in the past)
--> one present tense, one past tense, but both fit the subject.
Parallelism with different types of modifiers:
Independent contractors:
a) qualified
and
b) hard-working,
pay higher taxes...
--> one is a past participle, the other is a present participle, but both modify "contractors."
Ceilidh Erickson
EdM in Mind, Brain, and Education
Harvard Graduate School of Education
EdM in Mind, Brain, and Education
Harvard Graduate School of Education