- Fri Jan 04, 2019 6:59 pm
#61627
I read that sentence a little differently than you did, jwheeler, and your reading appears to be what is causing you a problem. The immediate antecedent for "its focus" is "legal education". The word "much" refers to the portion of that education that can give a student the wrong impression. Put another way, the sentence is saying:
Legal education has a focus on judicial decisions and analysis of cases, and much of it can give a law student the wrong impression.
Your reading was apparently "much of legal education is focused on judicial decisions and analysis of cases, which can give a law student the wrong impression." I don't think that's what the sentence means, grammatically speaking.
With that corrected read of the sentence in question, I think you would agree that we can now select answer E?
Here's an analogous claim, which I hope will help:
Much of his upbringing, with its focus on hard work and discipline, was physically and emotionally demanding.
I would read this as meaning that his upbringing was focused on hard work and discipline, and that much of it was physically and emotionally demanding. It would be a mistake to interpret this as meaning that much of his upbringing was focused on hard work and discipline, and that portion of it that had such a focus was demanding, leaving room for the majority of his upbringing being fun and carefree. Upbringing is the immediate antecedent of "its focus".
Adam M. Tyson
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