I don't understand the issue of the Subject-Verb of answer D. Why is that Oneida is singular and not plural?
From my understanding of the text, Oneida are a faction and not a single person, therefore should be plural.
In my head, the reasoning goes: "The Portuguese are; The English are; The Oneida are;". Could someone explain what is wrong with my reasoning? I still agree with answer C though
From my understanding of the text, Oneida are a faction and not a single person, therefore should be plural.
In my head, the reasoning goes: "The Portuguese are; The English are; The Oneida are;". Could someone explain what is wrong with my reasoning? I still agree with answer C though
Statistics : Posted by PTD1995 • on 30 Jun 2008, 04:49 • Replies 49 • Views 52107










