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| At Shiprock, New Mexico, a perenially |
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Stacey Koprince
MGMAT STAFF
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Generally "where" is used for physical locations - otherwise, we have to use a variant such as "in which." Other variants include "at which" and "for which." Both "where" and "in which" refer to the community, which has already been established as a physical location (Shiprock New Mexico), so we can use "where." We could also use "in which" - this just means "in the community" which is also grammatically correct.
The key is that the only "in which" option given has a pronoun error, so I don't have a grammatically correct option that uses "in which." That leaves me with "where" by default. A, B, and E all have pronoun errors. D would have to have a comma before the which and the verb "has" makes the sentence awkward. The community doesn't "have" household incomes. The individual members of the community do. |
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sheetal
Guest
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I didn't quite understand Stacey's point in which she mentions that which has already been established as a physical location (Shiprock New Mexico), so we can use "where." . Can someone explain this? Is it mandatory for a (grammatically correct) construct with "which" to have a comma always infront of "which" ? Thanks in advance. |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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stacey is saying that you can't use the word 'where' unless you've established that you're talking about a physical location. in this particular problem, you have indeed established such a thing, because shiprock, n.m., is definitely a physical location. stacey is not saying that the word 'which' has been established as a physical location, in case you read her sentence that way. -- re: your other question as far as we can tell from our rather extensive research, the gmat does not use 'which' without commas. if you have a modifier that is not preceded by a comma - i.e., an essential modifier - then you use 'that', not 'which'. |
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