Correct Answer:
B. behind
Explanation:
The correct answer is behind because standing 'behind' a person is a standard English idiom that means offering them full support and solidarity.
- Step 1 (Idiomatic Analysis): In political and social contexts, saying a group is 'behind' a leader implies that they trust, back, and support that leader's decisions completely.
- Step 2 (Grammatical Fitness): The preposition 'behind' creates a logical, positive sentence structure that fits standard metaphorical expressions of unity.
- Incorrect Options:
- against is incorrect in this specific choice context because while grammatically possible, the intended structure of this classic test phrase emphasizes support via alignment.
- front is incorrect because 'front' requires the additional preposition 'in' (in front of) to function correctly in this spatial structure.
- besides is incorrect because 'besides' means 'in addition to' or 'apart from', which makes no sense in this context (confused with 'beside', meaning next to).