Adam Tyson wrote:My first problem with answer D, klaq15, is "inevitably." The author talks about risks, and tells us that regions with low levels of subduction may have a high risk of earthquakes. That doesn't sound like it's inevitable, just that it's possible. That's why the use of "likely" in answer E is so much more attractive - it's in keeping with the language in the rest of the paragraph, and so adding it to the paragraph doesn't change anything but only expands on or enhances what is already there.
Consider a prephrase here, a prediction for what we are looking for. What could we add to that last paragraph that would continue with the same idea, and which would not bring in new information or change the tone? I'd go with something like "if there's a lot of grinding, it could be worse than if the angle is steep." That looks like answer E to me!
Hi Adam - I was able to get this question right but only after having ruled out (E) on first round because of the "is likely", having viewed it as rather strong language for this inference q. But after going over the other answers and not finding anything that fit, I went back to the passage and then re-read (E) and then it clicked. As you said, within the context of the last paragraph, (E) is not really that strong. Would that be a correct interpretation?
The reason why I ask is that if one just went on the tone of language - as an earlier poster had suggested (ruling out certain answer choices based on language ( "always", "any" , "inevitably, etc ), then (C)'s "could suffer' would have been attractive but ultimately incorrect.
Any thoughts on this? Thanks...