| sanj wrote: |
An economic recession can result from a lowering of employment rates triggered by a drop in investment, which causes people to cut consumer spending and starts a cycle of layoffs leading back to even lower employment rates.
a lowering of employment rates triggered by a drop in investment, which causes people to cut consumer spending and start a cycle of layoffs leading back to even lower employment rates.
a lowering of employment rates triggered by dropping investment, which causes people to cut consumer spending and starts a cycle of layoffs leading back to even lower employment rates.
falling employment rates triggered by a drop in investment, which cause cutbacks in consumer spending, starting a cycle of layoffs that lead to even lower employment rates.
falling employment rates that are triggered by a drop in investment, causing people to cut consumer spending and starting a cycle of layoffs that lead back to even lower employment rates.
falling employment rates that are triggered by a drop in investment, causing cutbacks in consumer spending and starting a cycle of layoffs leading to even lower employment rates.
my pic is E but sc 1000 answer is C Ron or stacey please help
[/b] |
no, c would definitely be considered wrong on the official test. the pronoun 'which' is committed to the nearest noun - 'investment', or, if you're being
really permissive, 'drop in investment' - and so can't be followed by the plural verb
cause, as both possible antecedents are singular. i like (e) better as well.
in any case, i would advise against relying on an online bricolage such as 1000sc for quality problems; the departures from the style and rules of the official test are frequent and often severe. instead, you should go through official problems (og11, og verbal supplement, gmatprep) with an
extremely fine-toothed comb, looking for subtleties and connections. (an extremely thorough review of a single problem, including cross-referencing it in our strategy guide to find related problems and looking between related problems to find common threads, can easily take five to ten minutes. i'm not saying that you should review
every official problem to that degree - there are only so many hours in a day, after all - but i'm saying that your time would be better spent in that sort of intensive review than in doing random online problem collections.)