Before the climax of the dispute between King Henry and Archbishop Thomas of Canterbury was reached at Clarendon, the archbishop had resisted the king in a matter of arbitrary taxation and had fallen further in the king’s disfavor.
A – was reached at Clarendon, the archbishop had resisted
B – was reached at Clarendon, the archbishop resisted
C – had reached at Clarendon, the archbishop had resisted
D – had reached at Clarendon, the archbishop resisted
E – reached at Clarendon, the archbishop had resisted
Right Answer: A
Error Identification
Identifier | Fix |
Was reached, reached, had reached | Tense |
Had resisted, resisted | Tense |
Explanation:
The shifting verb forms across the options identifies verb tense issues. Exploring the underlying meaning of the sentence, we notice that the sequence of events are such : the archbishop had resisted, fallen further in favor; then, the situation reached climax. Therefore past perfect tense should be used and the had + past participle form must be applied on the verb ‘resisted’.
A – This uses the correct verb forms.
B – ‘resisted’ is incorrect, since the use of past perfect tense is required.
C – The use of ‘had reached’ is illogical since this is not grammatically correct. The chronologically earlier action is the one that must use the had + past participle form.
D – The use of ‘had reached’ is illogical since this is not grammatically correct. The chronologically earlier action is the one that must use the had + past participle form; ‘resisted’ is incorrect, since the use of past perfect tense is required.
E – ‘Before the climax …. reacher…” since ‘climax’ cannot be a logical ‘doer’ or the action. Passive voice is required for the sentence to be logical.