Question:

Instructions: A sentence has been broken into four parts. Choose the part that has an error.

(a) The sound was taken up by another dog, and then another and another,
(b) till, borne on the wind which now sighed softly through the pass,
(c) a wild howling began, which seemed to come from all over the country,
(d) as far as the imagination could grasp them through the gloom of the night.

Show Hint

The error is a capitalization slip on a proper noun, not a grammar mistake.
Updated On: Jul 16, 2026
  • a
  • b
  • c
  • d
Show Solution
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The Correct Option is B

Solution and Explanation

This is a sentence-error-spotting question built from a narrative passage, and the error here is a capitalization slip rather than a grammar mistake, so you have to read carefully for proper nouns.

  1. (a): "The sound was taken up by another dog, and then another and another," is grammatically complete and correctly punctuated as the opening clause. No error.
  2. (b): "till, borne on the wind which now sighed softly through the pass," contains the error. In this passage, "the Pass" refers to a specific, named mountain pass established earlier in the narrative, not just any generic pass. Because it refers to one particular, identifiable location, it functions as a proper noun here and should be capitalized as "the Pass."
  3. (c): "a wild howling began, which seemed to come from all over the country," flows correctly from (b) and contains no grammatical fault.
  4. (d): "as far as the imagination could grasp them through the gloom of the night" completes the sentence coherently, wrapping up the description of the howling spreading through the dark.

Since (b) is the part carrying the uncapitalized proper noun, option B is correct.

Let's summarize:

  • Not every error in these questions is a grammar mistake, watch for capitalization of proper nouns that refer to specific, previously established places.
  • Read the full passage's context (even from just these four parts) to figure out whether a common noun is actually functioning as a proper noun.

When you're unsure, reread the part in isolation and ask if it names something specific and unique rather than something generic.

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