Now generally regarded as a forgery, the Kensington Rune Stone, a 90-kilogram slab of inscribed rock discovered in Minnesota in 1898, was said to have recorded an encounter between Native Americans and Norse explorers in 1362 and thus was cited as evidence that Europeans explored North America in pre-Columbian times.
was said to have recorded an encounter between Native Americans and Norse explorers in 1362 and thus was cited as evidence that Europeans explored
was said to record an encounter between Native Americans and Norse explorers in 1362, thus being cited as evidence for European exploration of
said to have recorded an encounter between Native Americans and Norse explorers in 1362, and thus cited as evidence for European exploration of
which was said to record an encounter between Native Americans and Norse explorers in 1362, and thus cited as evidence that Europeans explored
which, said to have recorded an encounter between Native Americans and Norse explorers in 1362, was thus cited as evidence for Europeans exploring
题目分析:
略。
选项分析:
A选项:Correct. 本选项在语法和逻辑上均是正确的。to have recorded中的have表示先时性,不表示完成时,即,record这一事件发生在said这一事件之前。这里改为to record也没有问题。添加have只是突出先发生,并非必须添加。
B选项:首先,名词短语 for European exploration of North America in pre-Columbian times需改为同位语从句that Europeans explored North America in pre-Columbian times,这点考查了名词和从句的区别。显然地,“证据”是一个事实,并不仅仅在发生的时候才是evidence,在发生之后也依然是evidence,所以explore在本选项中是一个事实,没有时间终止点。
其次, thus being cited as evidence(伴随状语)需改为合句and thus was cited as evidence。这是因为,“被认为记录下了美国土著和挪威探险者”和“被声明为欧洲人探险的证据”分别在讨论the Kensington Rune Stone在两个方面的情况,两者没有明显的强弱之分,不应使用主从句关系,应该用合句来表示。
C选项:名词短语 for European exploration of North America in pre-Columbian times错误同(B)。另外, 本选项缺少谓语动词。said和cited是过去分词短语。
D选项:本选项没有谓语动词。
E选项:evidence的修饰语部分是介词短语for Europeans exploring North America in pre-Columbian times的核心词为Europeans(exploring North America in pre-Columbian times是现在分词短语,是Europeans的定语),这在逻辑上是不合理的。证据应该是一个事件,而不是“欧洲人”。
"to ___" —> same timeframe as the larger sentence/context in which it appears
"to have ___ed" —> earlier than the timeframe of the larger sentence/context
E.g.,
You appear to be injured. (It seems that you're injured right now.)
vs.
You appear to have been injured at work. (You may still be hurt; you may be OK now. The injury happened earlier.)
The Neanderthals don't exist anymore—and the main sentence is in the present (it's about what appears to be the case NOW)—so we definitely need "to have ___".
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