English, asked by sarikabaid73, 10 hours ago

fill in the blanks with suitable preposition who is eligible – promoted there??

Answers

Answered by COMMANDED
1

Answer:

The preposition ‘for’ usually conveys the reason or cause behind something. In the given context it would mean ‘to get’. In the given statement to be appointed in the particular post one needs to be eligible to get it. Thus the eligibility is the requirement for the post. Therefore ‘for’ is the suitable preposition. Hence option D is correct. On the other hand, ‘to’ is used to indicate a movement from one point to the other, which is not the case here. Thus option A is incorrect. Whereas ‘on’ and ‘upon’ are both used to speak about something being on top of a surface or object. The same, when used in the statement, would make ‘the post’ an object on top of which Pradeep appears ineligible. Since ‘the post’ is neither a surface nor an object that one can sit on, options B and C are incorrect.

Answered by singhsahilsanskar
0

Answer:

Correct option is D)

The preposition ‘for’ usually conveys the reason or cause behind something. In the given context it would mean ‘to get’. In the given statement to be appointed in the particular post one needs to be eligible to get it. Thus the eligibility is the requirement for the post. Therefore ‘for’ is the suitable preposition. Hence option D is correct. On the other hand, ‘to’ is used to indicate a movement from one point to the other, which is not the case here. Thus option A is incorrect. Whereas ‘on’ and ‘upon’ are both used to speak about something being on top of a surface or object. The same, when used in the statement, would make ‘the post’ an object on top of which Pradeep appears ineligible. Since ‘the post’ is neither a surface nor an object that one can sit on, options B and C are incorrect.

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