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pranabiitkgp
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Post subject: MGMAT SC page 113, if -then constructions Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2011 4:22 am |
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1. If Sophie EATS pizza tomorrow, then she WILL BECOME ill. 2. If Sophie ATE pizza tomorrow, then she would become ill
My questions are:
a. How is 1 in present? even though EATS (present tense) is used, we're talking about tomorrow.
b. Why 'ate' , the past form of eat is used to tell some action on future , here tomorrow ? Thanks.
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jnelson0612
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Post subject: Re: MGMAT SC page 113, if -then constructions Posted: Mon Jan 17, 2011 11:43 am |
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pranabiitkgp wrote: 1. If Sophie EATS pizza tomorrow, then she WILL BECOME ill. 2. If Sophie ATE pizza tomorrow, then she would become ill
My questions are:
a. How is 1 in present? even though EATS (present tense) is used, we're talking about tomorrow.
b. Why 'ate' , the past form of eat is used to tell some action on future , here tomorrow ? Thanks. a. These are good questions. The first clause is in the present because when she is actually eating the pizza she is doing it in the present, and as a result of eating the pizza something will happen in the future. Thus the sentence uses the "IF present, THEN future" construction. An example is "If I play (PRESENT) racquetball tomorrow, then I will be (FUTURE) sore the next day." b. This is tricky. This has more to do with what will happen after she eats the pizza and the author's belief that she will not in fact do so. The author thinks that it is unlikely that she will eat the pizza. However, he is focusing more on what would happen if she did eat the pizza, in the unlikely event that she would do so. Thus, if she did indeed eat the pizza (thus it's already happened--past tense) something will happen to her (conditional).
_________________ Jamie Nelson ManhattanGMAT Instructor
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pranabiitkgp
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Post subject: Re: MGMAT SC page 113, if -then constructions Posted: Tue Jan 18, 2011 1:59 am |
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Hi Jamie, thanks for answering, however i am neither convinced nor could find any logical scientific explanation in your answers rather both the answers failed to referred any rules and rather depending mostly on the matter of perception of the writer .
a)"when she is actually eating the pizza she is doing it in the present" - by this logic there would have no requirement of any specific tense ever . Any thing which is meant to do anytime would be actually be performed by anyone staying on that time only . Probably to mention some certain/fixed action in future (present tense is used) and its equally certain consequences the 'will' is used .
b) Completely confused .
Past(1)----------Present(2)----------future(3)
Now we are standing at 2) , saying if some actions did occur at 1) , what would happen at 3) . If this is the case then how tomorrow is used for 'some actions did occur at 1)'
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jnelson0612
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Post subject: Re: MGMAT SC page 113, if -then constructions Posted: Sun Jan 23, 2011 5:11 pm |
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Hi prana, I'm sorry to hear that my explanation wasn't helpful to you. I've read through your comment and my explanation a few times, and unfortunately I don't know if I can explain it much better than I have for the two examples. I think the thing to focus on here is that these particular constructions are in fact allowed and considered acceptable on the GMAT, even though they may not appear to make much sense.
I'm really sorry I couldn't be more helpful to you.
_________________ Jamie Nelson ManhattanGMAT Instructor
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tim
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Post subject: Re: MGMAT SC page 113, if -then constructions Posted: Mon Jan 24, 2011 10:52 pm |
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Posts: 2242 Location: Southwest Airlines, seat 21C
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Hi Prana, Let me take a stab at this one. The best way to look at the tenses in these sentences is to consider the perspective of the speaker. In hypothetical sentences such as these, we often step outside the perspective of the present. For your first example, your perspective is tomorrow, at which point the "eats" will be considered present tense and "will become" will be in the future from that point of view. In the second example, our perspective is some point further in the future, at which point "ate" and "would become" will both fall in the past from that point of view. i hope this helps. The best thing to keep in mind though is what Jamie mentioned, namely that you should just keep these unusual constructions in mind and remember these examples when you need to match a new sentence to one of these forms..
_________________ Tim Sanders Manhattan GMAT Instructor
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pranabiitkgp
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Post subject: Re: MGMAT SC page 113, if -then constructions Posted: Tue Jan 25, 2011 7:22 am |
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Hi tim , Thanks for your explanation, bringing perspective into the 'time scale' makes things somewhat clear . Also the best suggestions noted !
- Pranab.
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jnelson0612
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Post subject: Re: MGMAT SC page 113, if -then constructions Posted: Tue Jan 25, 2011 12:09 pm |
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Good to hear prana!
Thank you Tim.
_________________ Jamie Nelson ManhattanGMAT Instructor
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pranabiitkgp
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Post subject: Re: MGMAT SC page 113, if -then constructions Posted: Thu Jan 27, 2011 2:09 am |
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Hi Jamie & Tim - You both have wrongly spelled my name, it should be Pranab, not Prana ! There should not have any confusion among similar words :-) - Pranab.
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jnelson0612
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Post subject: Re: MGMAT SC page 113, if -then constructions Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 6:05 pm |
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Sorry pranab. At some point we have to shorten the usernames to save our own sanity; will try to do better next time. :-)
_________________ Jamie Nelson ManhattanGMAT Instructor
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