The first detailed study of magpie attacks in Australia indicates that by the time they had reached adulthood, 98 percent of men and 75 percent of women born in the country have been attacked by the birds.
a.) by the time they had reached adulthood, 98 percent of men and 75 percent of women born in the country have been attacked by the birds.
b.) by the time they reach adulthood, 98 percent of men and 75 percent of women, who were born in the country, had been attacked by the birds
c.) by the time they reached adulthood, 98 percent of men and 75 percent of women born in the country had been attacked by the birds
d.) 98 percent of men and 75 percent of women that were born in the country were attacked by the birds by the time they reach adulthood
e.) 98 percent of men and 75 percent of women who were born in the country, by the time they reached adulthood had been attacked by the birds
OA: C
I answered E for this question, but now that I look back and reread the problem with Answer E, I understand why this answer choice is a bit awkward. However I can't find anything grammatically incorrect with the sentence.
Looking at the answer choices, my first instinct is to eliminate choices A, B, and C because the fourth word, "they", seems problematic to me. I know that sometimes sentences can have a construction of this type. I don't recall the technical names for a sentence like this, but an example would be: "After he went to the park, Johnny decided to go home." But despite knowing this, I still think the "they" in A,B,C is ambiguous since it can refer to either the "magpie attacks". Of course, logically, magpie attacks cannot reach adulthood, so I further assume that the question was trying to imply that -- by the time magpies reach adulthood, they attack 98% of men and 75% of women. Since the intent of the sentence is unclear, "they" is incorrect.
I am guessing my reasoning is incorrect since I got the problem wrong, but I can't figure out why. I think the problem might be that there are some sentences where a pronoun doesn't have the clearest antecedent, but the sentence is still grammatically correct and the pronoun is clear enough because of the context - but I can't figure out when these cases hold true. Can you perhaps provide some examples?
Another problem I have is - in choices A,B,C (and in fact D and E), do the "they"'s refer to the men/women, or the percents?
Lastly, in sentences like D and E, is "that" or "who" the proper word to describe "98 percent of men and 75 percent of women"? I know that "who" should only be used for people but am not sure if we should be describing the percentages or the men/women in this case.
Thanks!