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| Odds and ends grammar questions - help much appreciated |
| Idioms |
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Emily Sledge
MGMAT STAFF
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"Doubt that" would be preferable. "Whether" is used to indicate uncertainty between two options: either he is correct or he is wrong, in your example. You don't doubt the uncertainty of his correctness. You doubt his correctness, period. (Pardon the awkward phrasing, I hope it gets the point across.)
I have always heard it said "conform to," and the GMAT seems to agree.
"Account for your crimes" sounds better to me, too. But consider this one: "You will have to account to the judge for your crimes." I think which one you use depends on the context: account to a person, account for a thing.
It can be; your example is good. "A spending reduction of 20% is not sufficient to erase the state deficit."
You actually can talk about the "majority of the money": even though money is not countable, it is often measured in countable units (e.g. dollars). Thus, "The majority of the money in the state budget was used to pay for useless programs" is OK.
No, the team is always singular. Think of it this way: teams are plural. If you want to talk about the individuals on the team, then use them as the subject. Also, remember that verbs are made singular by the addition of an 's.' The following are correct: "The team wants to go to the championship." "The team members want to go to the championship." |
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| Odds and ends grammar questions - help much appreciated |
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