The correct answer is D because the original sentence contains a dangling modifier - the introductory phrase "Having completed the audit" does not clearly identify who performed the action, making it ambiguous. By changing the sentence to include "the auditors" as the subject, the modifier now correctly refers to the noun that immediately follows it, creating a clear and logical connection between the action and the doer. The original sentence incorrectly implies that the financial statements completed the audit, which is illogical and violates the basic rule that a dangling modifier must have a clear antecedent. Other options likely fail because they either leave the dangling modifier unresolved, create new grammatical errors, or make unnecessary changes that don't address the core problem of missing or unclear agency in the sentence.
The main subject of the sentence is "The CEO" (singular noun).
The phrase "along with her senior management team" is a prepositional phrase that modifies the subject but does not change the verb agreement.
Since the main subject "CEO" is singular, the verb must be in singular form. The singular form of "to be" in present tense is "is."
The correct answer is A) is, because the main subject "The CEO" is singular, and prepositional phrases introduced by "along with" do not change the subject-verb agreement.
[The sentence uses a comma before 'however', which is incorrect. A comma cannot join two independent clauses - this creates a comma splice.]
[When using a conjunctive adverb like 'however', 'yet', or 'moreover' to join two independent clauses, a semicolon must be used instead of a comma.]
[While 'however' and 'yet' are both conjunctive adverbs, 'yet' is a coordinating conjunction that can follow a comma when joining independent clauses. Since we're using a semicolon, either word works, but 'yet' is more concise and direct for contrasting ideas.]
The error is corrected by replacing the comma after 'productivity' with a semicolon and replacing 'however' with 'yet', making the sentence: "The data suggests that remote working has increased productivity; yet employees are demanding more flexible benefits." Therefore, the answer is D.
The correct answer is "for" because the preposition "for" is used to indicate purpose or allocation, and in this context it correctly shows that the funds are being allocated with the purpose of developing rural infrastructure. The phrase "allocate for" is the standard and grammatically correct collocation in English when indicating what something will be used towards. Other prepositions like "to," "towards," or "in" would either be grammatically incorrect with "allocate" or would create awkward phrasing that doesn't properly convey the intended meaning of purpose. This is a matter of proper preposition usage, where certain verbs require specific prepositions to maintain grammatical correctness.
The sentence uses "Neither...nor" which is a correlative conjunction structure connecting two subjects: "the manager" and "the employees"
When "neither...nor" connects subjects, the verb agrees with the subject closest to it. In this case, "the employees" (plural noun) is closest to the blank.
Since the nearest subject "the employees" is plural, the verb must be in plural form. "Are" is the plural form of the verb "to be," while "is" is singular.
The correct answer is B) are, because the plural noun "employees" is positioned closest to the verb in the "neither...nor" construction, requiring the plural verb form "are" for grammatical agreement.