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question this format improves the chances that attendees can attend gen…

Question

question
this format improves the chances that attendees can attend generally sessions.
the best placement for the underlined word would be:
a where it is now.
b after the word improves.
c after the word chances.
d after the word can.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

The word "generally" is an adverb, and we need to place it to modify the noun "sessions" appropriately. The correct form should be an adjective "general" to describe "sessions", but since we are moving the adverb "generally", we need to check where it fits grammatically. However, if we consider the intended meaning (to describe "sessions" as general sessions), the adverb "generally" is incorrect here, but if we assume it's a typo and we need to place the adverb, actually, the correct adjective form "general" should be used, but among the options, we analyze the placement. Wait, no—wait, the underlined word is "generally", which is an adverb. But "sessions" is a noun, so we need an adjective. But the question is about placement of the adverb. Wait, maybe the intended is to have "general" (adjective) for "sessions", but the word given is "generally" (adverb). But the options are about placement. Let's check each option:

  • Option A: "generally" as adverb modifying "attend" (since it's after "attend")? No, "attend generally sessions" is wrong.
  • Option B: "improves generally the chances" – no, adverb placement wrong.
  • Option C: "chances generally that..." – no.
  • Option D: Wait, no—wait, maybe the mistake is that "generally" should be "general" (adjective) for "sessions", but the question is about placing the adverb. Wait, maybe the question has a typo, but among the options, the correct placement to make sense (even with the adverb, though it's incorrect, but for placement) – no, actually, the correct adjective is "general", so "general sessions". But the word is "generally", so maybe the question is to place the adverb, but that's incorrect. Wait, maybe the intended is that "generally" is a mistake, and we need to place "general" (adjective) before "sessions", but the options are about "generally". Wait, perhaps the question is to place the adverb "generally" in a position, but actually, the correct answer is that "generally" is an adverb, and it should be replaced with "general" (adjective), but since the options are about placement, maybe the intended is that the adverb is misplaced, and the correct placement is... Wait, no, let's re-express the sentence with each option:

A: This format improves the chances that attendees can attend generally sessions. (adverb after attend, modifying attend? But "attend sessions" – "generally" can't modify "sessions" as adverb.

B: This format improves generally the chances that attendees can attend sessions. (adverb modifying improves – wrong, "improves" is a verb, adverb can modify it, but "improves generally the chances" is awkward.

C: This format improves the chances generally that attendees can attend sessions. (adverb modifying chances – wrong.

D: This format improves the chances that attendees can generally attend sessions. (adverb modifying "attend" – "can generally attend" – that makes sense, as "generally" modifies "attend". Wait, but the original sentence has "attend generally sessions" which is wrong. If we place "generally" after "can", we get "can generally attend sessions" – which is "attendees can generally attend sessions" – that makes sense (adverb modifying "attend"). So the best placement is after "can", so option D? Wait, no—wait, the original sentence is "attend generally sessions" – which is incorrect. If we move "generally" after "can", we get "can generally attend sessions" – which is correct (adverb modifying "attend"). So the correct option is D? Wait, no, let's check:

Original sentence: "attend generally sessions" – wrong.

Option D: "attendees can generally attend s…

Answer:

D. after the word can.