jlucero Wrote:niharika.jain03 Wrote:This question can be solved by elimination.
A: "they" does not have a clear antecedent. The subject is the main modifying clause is "sales" and not stores.
B: "which" is not the ideal relative pronoun as "that" would be preferred. Also the tense "closing" is incorrect.
C: Sounds decent.
D: wordy, weird, tense, everything
E: the announcement was about closing down not having poor sales.
Two things:
B) "that" would be incorrect. We are not closing 1/4 of the stores that accounted for bad sales. We are closing 1/4 of all stores; the reason is that we have had bad sales.
C) sounds decent is not the same as having no grammatical errors. Lots of answer choices sound decent but are wrong.
RonPurewal Wrote:You're welcome.
About 10% of your success in SC will come from knowing how things work. The other 90% will come from not making things more complicated than they actually are.
basically, there are 2 possibilities:
1/
the sentence is written from the present point of view:
the company has announced (or, just announced) ... that it is closing (or will close) the stores ... that have accounted for the poor sales figures
the sentence describes an announcement made in the past -- about something that was going on at that time in the past -- so a present construction wouldn't make sense here.
RonPurewal Wrote:It's quite possible for a recent (past) announcement to concern something that's still going on, or something that still hasn't happened yet.
Yesterday, Rhonda told me that she is / she will be getting married soon.