![]() |
| "dated at" vs "dated to be" |
|
Emily Sledge
MGMAT STAFF
|
Hi Samy,
I don't know whether either of those is correct - they may be, but I can't think of any sentences in which I would use such phrasing. The only idioms using "dated" that I can think of are: X dates (or dated) back to Y: The popularity of the ferris wheel dates back to the early days of state fairs. X dated to Y: The antique gilded mirror dated to the reign of Louis XIV. If you have an SC question that tested those idioms, please post the entire question to give us the context. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
Samy
Guest
|
Yes the sentence is:
Remnants of a meteorite that exploded in Siberian sky and scattered over 400 square km in and around lake baikal has been dated to be 1.23 Billion years old and thus is evidence of the earliest known Meteor impact on earth. A. has been dated to be 1.23 Billion years old and thus is B. has been dated at 1.23 Billion years old and thus C. have been dated to be 1.23 Billion years old and thus are D. have been dated as being 1.23 Billion years old and thus E. have been dated at 1.23 Billion years old and thus are |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
Shib
Guest
|
The answer is E.dated at is the correct idiom.
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
Samy
Guest
|
I felt the same too.
But the correct Ans is mentioned as C. Here the process of dating the remnants is done by someone. Like saying - The remains at the pyramids of Giza have been dated to be 1000 years old. So here someone is doing the dating. " Dated at" according to some experts is not an English Idiom. Please can we have some MGMAT experts respond. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
Dan Bernstein
MGMAT STAFF
|
Neither construction is great, and both are unlikely to show their hideous faces on your Official GMAT. However, dated to be is preferable to dated at , which is always incorrect. In this sentence, my interpretation is "dated" is functioning synonomously with "estimated," which takes "to be" in its proper idiomatic construction.
-dan |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
| Tutor's conflicting abnswer |
|
Alphabeta
Guest
|
As per this post
"dated to be" is wrong http://www.manhattangmat.com/forums/arco-practice-test-q-t612.html |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
| Re: Tutor's conflicting abnswer |
|
Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
|
i've mostly seen 'dated to', followed by a date: 'dated to 5000 b.c.' i don't think i've come across either of the two competing constructions here, at least not anytime in the recent past (and i spend lots and lots of time reading nonfiction, including quite a few anthropological works that mention dated artifacts on almost every page). |
||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||
| Re: Tutor's conflicting answer |
|
viksnme
Guest
|
so do we have a consensus on the correct usage ? 'dated to be' or 'dated at' ? Thanks. |
||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
| Re: Tutor's conflicting answer |
|
viksnme
Guest
|
Please ignore my previous post. What I really wanted to know was whether we should reject the original answer i.e. C and consider option E as correct ? This is what the conclusion looks like from all the discussions posted. |
||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
|
so wait, what's the source of this problem in the first place?
idiom is a slippery fish and differs slightly from source to source (unlike, say, subject-verb agreement, which is a clear case of right and wrong except in the very few cases in which it's determined by rhetorical considerations). therefore, i'd be wary of taking idiomatic usage cues from unreliable or unknown sources. also, we'll have to kill the thread if someone doesn't source the problem - or, at the very least, we'll have to delete all the posts that refer to the problem (we can keep the posts that just discuss the relevant issue but don't refer to the unsourced problem). |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
| "dated at" vs "dated to be" |
|
||
|
Powered by phpBB © phpBB Group
Content © Manhattan GMAT Forums
*GMAT and GMAT CAT are registered trademarks of the Graduate Management Admission Council,
which neither sponsors nor endorses this test preparation service.
Content © Manhattan GMAT Forums
*GMAT and GMAT CAT are registered trademarks of the Graduate Management Admission Council,
which neither sponsors nor endorses this test preparation service.

