Which order of sentences of the given sentence should be used in your paragraph?
When properly sequenced, the sentences given below form a coherent paragraph. Each sentence is alphabetic. A single letter represents one word (succeeding words in sentences) in Arabic. I have to choose the most logical order of sentences from among the given choices to construct a coherent paragraph.
(a) Similarly, turning to caste, even though being lower caste is undoubtedly a separate cause of disparity, its impact is all the more greater when lower-caste families happen to be poor.
(b) Being in privileged class can help an individual overcome many obstacles that obstruct women from less thriving classes.
What relates low class women with gender exclusion and poverty in India?
It will cause social problems and incarceration for poor people as a result of discrimination against some poor women. (d)
Surely, that inequality and gender inequality does not exist so much in class as it would explain it. (e)
I identified the opening sentence as (e), then I thought as the paragraph needs to be logically connected, the next one must be (a) Similarly, turning to caste…. Why does both gender and caste contribute to inequality and inequality in society? What will happen if I see the answer above?
Which order I know well is EBDCA? What is the English language?
I think there are multiple ways to order these sentences and still have the paragraph make sense (or rather: they are repetitive enough that the paragraph will be a bit awkward no matter which order you choose), but I think they want you to reason as follows: E
- should come first, because it’s introduce the thesis, and would be redundant if it came after B, C, or D.
- Why does A come last? It introduces a new variable (caste, as opposed to both gender and class) that is not ignored by all the others. I see one sentence as being just as important B and DB in context except for’similarly, turning to caste,’and then going right back to
- the previous topic. “. in which both statements are in context, the sentences ought to be preceded in addition to each other and not both./or, as in one. in another. The preceding sentence is the first. In both cases,’s’ or both. in the new example.
- C should come after D, since C implies that “being low class” is a “kindof deprivation”; and D is the sentence that introduces it as such.
- So we have two possible Orders, EBDCA and EDBCA and what would they be. At the root, the ordering with DC is better than the ordering with DBC as C refers directly to the topics discussed in D (even using the word “these”, which in this case means the just-mentioned)
EBDCA is a best option for
customer.