Question:

Choose the sentence that is grammatically correct.

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When using abbreviations, choose “a” or “an” based on the sound, not the letter. For example, “an MBA” (em-bee-ay) but “a B.Sc.” (bee-ess-see).
Updated On: Aug 13, 2025
  • I shall be doing a MBA online, and continue with my present job.
  • I shall do a MBA online, and continue with my present job.
  • I shall do an MBA online, and continue with my present job.
  • I shall do an MBA online, but continuing with my present job.
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The Correct Option is C

Solution and Explanation

Let us analyze each option step-by-step:

(A) Incorrect because “a MBA” is grammatically wrong. Since “MBA” begins with a vowel sound (“em”), the correct article is “an MBA.” Furthermore, “shall be doing” indicates a future continuous tense, but the second clause “continue” is in base form without parallel tense structure, leading to awkwardness.

(B) Incorrect due to article misuse — it says “a MBA” instead of “an MBA.” While the tense and structure are fine, the article error makes it incorrect.

(C) Correct — It uses “shall do” (simple future tense) which aligns with “continue” (base form) for parallelism, and it correctly uses “an MBA” because the abbreviation starts with a vowel sound.

(D) Incorrect — While the article usage is correct (“an MBA”), the structure “but continuing” introduces a participial phrase that is not parallel to the first clause “shall do.” This makes the sentence grammatically unbalanced. Thus, option (C) is the most grammatically correct and stylistically balanced.
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