<p>For a beginner’s tool kit, (A)(choose one) of the new saws (B)(with) an aggressive tooth pattern, as these are very sharp, cut (C)(quickly), and (D)(easily controlled). (E)No error"</p>
<p>Does this sentence even make sense? I cannot make sense of it. Can someone explain to me where are the subject and verb in this sentence? thank you</p>
It’s a command: “[You] choose.”
If the word “as” is also confusing you, in this context it means “since” or “because.”
In the imperative verb mood, the subject can be an implied “you”:
(YOU) Get the hell out of my kitchen!
In your example, the subject is an implied “you” and the verb is “choose” (for the first clause).
Answer - D should be ‘are easily controlled’ for parallelism.