This question originates from a MG CAT problem about the domestic cat's descendance from african wildcat. I wonder how far can the word 'that' be from the noun that it tries to modify?
The incorrect choice D says:
"Having descended from the African wildcat approximately 4,000 years ago, the domestic cat has had an exceedingly short time for its genetic evolution that has scarcely been sufficient for the marked physical changes that transformed the animal"
'in a short time for its generic evolution that has scarcely been sufficient', the modifier starting with 'that' is considered ambiguous because it's not clear whether it refers to 'time' or 'evolution'.
Now, here is part of an Official Guide SC problem:
".. hope to create a standardized way of distributing songs and full-length recordings on the Internet that will protect copyright holders and foil the many audio pirates..."
Why is it acceptable here to have a 'that' so far off the noun ('way') it tries to modify? Does it not cause ambiguity to have 'songs', 'recordings', 'Internet' stuffed between 'that' and 'way'?
Why the difference between the two usages?