Question:

Find the correct option for following :
Bana Pass / after / named / is / great / a / soldier.

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When arranging jumbled sentences, look for: 1. A clear subject (who or what the sentence is about). 2. The main verb (action or state of being). 3. Logical connections between phrases (e.g., "named after someone"). 4. Correct use of articles (a, an, the) and prepositions. "Bana Pass" (subject) "is named" (verb) "after a great soldier" (prepositional phrase answering 'after whom?'). This structure forms a coherent sentence.
  • A Bana Pass is named after great soldier.
  • Great soldier is named after a Bana Pass.
  • Bana Pass is named after a great soldier.
  • Pass is named after a great Bana soldier.
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The Correct Option is C

Solution and Explanation

Concept: This question requires arranging jumbled words/phrases into a grammatically correct and meaningful sentence. Step 1: Identify the subject, verb, and object/predicate The words and phrases are: "Bana Pass", "/", "after", "/", "named", "/", "is", "/", "great", "/", "a", "/", "soldier."
Potential Subject: "Bana Pass" (a proper noun, likely referring to a place).
Verb structure: "is named" (passive voice construction).
Prepositional phrase: "after a great soldier" (explaining who or what it's named after). Step 2: Construct a logical sentence Combining these elements logically: Subject ("Bana Pass") + Verb ("is named") + Prepositional Phrase ("after a great soldier"). This forms: "Bana Pass is named after a great soldier." Step 3: Evaluate the given options
(1) A Bana Pass is named after great soldier. This sentence is grammatically awkward. "Great soldier" usually requires an article like "a" or "the" if it's singular and countable, or it refers to a specific great soldier known by name (not the case here). The option also adds an "A" before "Bana Pass" which might be acceptable if "Bana Pass" is one of several, but typically proper names of passes don't take "A" unless used generically.
(2) Great soldier is named after a Bana Pass. This reverses the meaning. It implies the soldier is named after the pass, which is less common than a place being named after a person. Also, "Great soldier" without an article sounds less natural.
(3) Bana Pass is named after a great soldier. This sentence is grammatically correct and logically sound. "Bana Pass" is the subject, "is named" is the passive verb, and "after a great soldier" provides the reason. The article "a" is correctly used before "great soldier."
(4) Pass is named after a great Bana soldier. This option changes "Bana Pass" (a specific name) to just "Pass" and qualifies "soldier" with "Bana". This changes the emphasis and might not be the intended meaning if "Bana Pass" itself is the entity. Step 4: Conclusion Option (3) "Bana Pass is named after a great soldier." is the most grammatically correct and contextually sensible sentence formed from the given words/phrases. It correctly uses articles and presents a common way geographical features are named.
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