KyleWiddison wrote:
This question does not seem super reflective of what you would see on the GMAT.
The past perfect appears in the sentence (past perfect is used to show the earlier of two past events or to place an event before a time marker in the sentence), but the past perfect isn't tested at all - it's in the non-underlined portion of the sentence and aren't any variations in the choices that leverage the past perfect at all.
The only variations in the choices are related to concision (twice v two times
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