JbhB682 Wrote:Hi Experts - in option B - can the adverb (one day) refer to the present participle adjective (competing) ? ...
If the adverb (one day) refers to the present participle adjective (competing) - how then to eliminate option B ?
The short answer is "No, 'one day' cannot refer to 'competing companies.'"
In (B), I think "one day" is modifying the only verb after the last comma: "may be partners." Note that even if we changed the word order to put "one day" before "competing companies," it would still describe the verb "may be partners."
So there are two problems with this:
(1) Both "one day" and "the next" modify "may be partners," so the companies are doing the same thing at the two different times, which is contrary to the whole point of companies doing different things at different times. In correct answer (A), "one day" modifies "compete" and "the next" modifies "may be partners," so it's clear that the companies' activities differ over time.
(2) In (B), "competing companies" is the only subject, so it goes with both "one day" and "the next":
competing companies ... may be partners in both time frames. This is illogical, because the companies are not competing when they are cooperating, and vice versa. Both "compete" and "may be partners" need to be parallel verbs to get this meaning across.