Both grammatically incorrect because "to comprise" = "to consist of".
*Ah, downvoted. I've embarrassed someone. But this is education. I was lucky to have had a good one; but I'm still learning.
The point is that Q stated "misspellings matter" and "sentence formation matters". So, if you don't understand basic English, you won't spot the clues.
"Comprised of", "comprises of"...
Both grammatically incorrect because "to comprise" = "to consist of".
*Ah, downvoted. I've embarrassed someone. But this is education. I was lucky to have had a good one; but I'm still learning.
The point is that Q stated "misspellings matter" and "sentence formation matters". So, if you don't understand basic English, you won't spot the clues.