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Does the following sentence have correct grammar?

English Language & Usage Asked by Vinz on December 24, 2020

This failure to seperate results in the formation of a gamete that has two chromosomes when they should only have one.

This sentence has been bugging me for the last hour and I am still not sure which is correct:

  • results in or resulted in
  • formation or forming
  • have or have had

I’d appreciate some help so I can understand this better, thank you in advance.

One Answer

It depends.

If this sequence of events actually happened and you are writing about it (e.g. a lab report), then use "resulted," "had," and "have had."

If this sequence of events is hypothetical, you should use "results," "has," "have."

"Formation" is correct regardless of whether the situation is hypothetical or real.

Also, "seperate" is supposed to be spelled "separate."

Therefore, use this sentence if the situation was real:

This failure to separate resulted in the formation of a gamete that had two chromosomes when they should only have had one.

and this one when it is hypothetical:

This failure to separate results in the formation of a gamete that has two chromosomes when they should only have one.

Answered by user392938 on December 24, 2020

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