Correct option is C
Let's match them one by one:
(A) Patients in India do not always carry their health records,
This is setting up a situation — what happens
when patients don't carry records?
→
(E)
leaving doctors to piece the puzzle together during a visit.
This fits
perfectly — the sentence becomes:
(A-E): Patients in India do not always carry their health records, leaving doctors to piece the puzzle together during a visit.
(B) Medical professionals are better off attending to patients by saving time
This sounds incomplete — it needs a method
how time is saved. Let's try with:
→
(F)
to store transcripts locally on the devices and upload periodically.
This sounds like a tech solution that
saves time, so combining the two:
(B-F): Medical professionals are better off attending to patients by saving time to store transcripts locally on the devices and upload periodically.
Incorrect – this is grammatically awkward. The phrase "saving time to store..." doesn’t make sense. You save time
by doing something, not
to do something.
So
B-F is incorrect.
(C) The summer season brings with it a profusion of flowers that are not only visually
This is clearly an incomplete
not only... but also sentence.
→
(D)
stunning but also have a special significance in Indian culture.
Yes! This matches syntactically and logically.
(C-D): The summer season brings with it a profusion of flowers that are not only visually stunning but also have a special significance in Indian culture.
Correct Answer: (c) A-E & C-D
This is the only option where both sentence pairs are
grammatically and logically correct.
Explanation:
·
A-E forms a cause-effect structure: not carrying records → doctors have to infer.
·
C-D forms a complete "not only... but also" sentence structure.
·
B-F is grammatically flawed, hence not valid.