Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: QPR
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:
This is a sentence rearrangement question. You are given a fixed opening "The question" followed by three jumbled parts labelled P, Q and R. Your task is to choose the order in which these parts should appear to form one smooth, grammatically correct and meaningful sentence.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:
A sentence that begins with "The question" usually continues with a singular verb "is". Among the parts, only Q begins with "is whether we", which naturally follows "The question". After this phrase, we need a verb phrase and then a complement, resulting in "The question is whether we are on the right path to the goal." This suggests Q followed by P and finally R, giving the sequence Q P R.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Step 1: Attach each part mentally after "The question". "The question is whether we" (Q) sounds complete as the beginning of an indirect question, while "The question are on the right path" (P) is ungrammatical.Step 2: Since "The question" is singular, it must take "is" not "are", so Q must come immediately after the fixed start.Step 3: After "is whether we", we need a verb phrase that fits "we". Part P, "are on the right path", perfectly completes "whether we".Step 4: Finally we add R, "to the goal", which naturally follows "on the right path" and completes the idea: "on the right path to the goal".Step 5: The full correct sentence is therefore "The question is whether we are on the right path to the goal." This corresponds to the order Q P R.
Verification / Alternative check:
Check each option quickly. RPQ would give "The question to the goal are on the right path is whether we", which is clearly wrong. QRP would give "The question is whether we to the goal are on the right path", which is ungrammatical. PRQ would give "The question are on the right path is whether we to the goal", where "are" disagrees with "The question" and the structure is confused. Only QPR yields a smooth and logical sentence.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Options that place P immediately after "The question" create subject verb disagreement because "The question are" is incorrect. Options that put R too early lead to phrases like "whether we to the goal", which lacks a verb. The only arrangement that respects both grammar and meaning is Q followed by P and then R.
Common Pitfalls:
Sometimes test takers quickly choose an option that seems to end with "to the goal" because it sounds meaningful, without checking the middle part for subject verb agreement and proper clause structure. A reliable method is to first fix the subject and its verb, then attach remaining parts in a way that respects normal English word order.
Final Answer:
The correct order of the parts is Q P R, so option C is correct.
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