Unless the conservator

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Unless the conservator

by BTGmoderatorDC » Wed Jan 31, 2018 9:52 pm
Unless the conservator can find a way to protect the photographs in the archives from light and air, these precious historical documents have deteriorated and will continue to do so both in color and in fine detail.

A. have deteriorated and will continue to do so
B. will continue to deteriorate
C. have been and will continue to deteriorate
D. will continue to deteriorate, as they already have,
E. will be deteriorating yet more

What is wrong with other options?

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by ErikaPrepScholar » Thu Feb 01, 2018 6:53 am
This sentence expresses a conditional - unless x happens, y will happen. The possible future event y depends on whether x happens. Here, x is the conservator finding a way to preserve the photographs, while y is the photographs deteriorating. So the photographs deteriorating is the possible future event. This means we should use the future tense - we can eliminate A and C for using past perfect. (Note: we can also eliminate C for "have been ... deteriorate", which isn't a tense at all - this would only been correct if it were "have been deteriorating and will continue to deteriorate.)

D includes both "continue to deteriorate" and "as they already have". This is redundant. "Continue" tells us that the deterioration has already started to occur, so we don't need to say it again. Eliminate. (Note: we can eliminate A and C for the same reason - there's no need to say that the photographs "have deteriorated" or "have been deteriorating" if we are already saying that they will "continue" to deteriorate.)

E is tricky. It replaces "continue" with "yet more" and changes from simple future ("will continue") to future progressive ("will be deteriorating"). Progressive tenses should only be used if there is a reason - we use them when something else happens while we are doing something. For example, my phone rang while I was running. My dog always barks while I am vacuuming. When the alarm goes off, I will be sleeping. Here, nothing else is going to happen while the photographs "will be deteriorating", so there is no reason to use a progressive tense. We can eliminate E and pick B.
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