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| On the Great Plains, nineteenth-century settlers used |
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Suyash
Guest
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Use of them/their/it is ambiguous in a,b and c.Left with d and e.Would like to go with d as the original sentence says settlers used,so it should be D.Just an element of doubt whether the usage of MAKING DO is correct?
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guest
Guest
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Making do is totally incorrect.
"A" sounds much better but use of "it" is a problem |
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| On the Great Plains, nineteenth-century settlers used |
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Hanumayamma
Guest
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Good one!
The sentence has modifier issue: “doing it without” and “did it without “ modifies the settlers; Since the modifying phrase not next to the Noun – eliminate it E – “making” modifies grass – eliminate it Between C and D – Making them correctly modifies “homes” So C wins! |
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| Re: On the Great Plains, nineteenth-century settlers used |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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this should be (d). first off, "make do" is an idiomatic expression meaning, roughly, "get the job done" or "accomplish some planned goal". so that's fine, the above guest poster's assertion to the contrary notwithstanding. (a) and (b) are gone because "it" doesn't have an antecedent. (e) is gone because "settlers' homes" is the subject, creating the absurd meaning that the homes themselves "made do" -- i.e., that the homes built themselves. (d) is better than (c) for the following reasons: * "making them" would be wholly redundant, because we just got done saying "to build their homes". if this were the intended meaning, we'd just write "...used mud and grass to build their homes, without timber and nails". on the other hand, "making do" (which, as noted above, is an acceptable idiom) is acceptable as a modifier because it doesn't restate anything from the main clause. * "while not having" is way, way inferior to "without". in fact, if you've seen enough official problems, you'll eliminate wordy constructions like this on sight; they're common, and they're basically never correct (especially when they're alongside much more compact constructions, such as "without", in the answer choices). |
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| A vs D |
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tathagat
Guest
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hi Ron,
If A had doing "so", in place of doing "it", would A been preferable to D? |
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Guest
Guest
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What does the idiom "making do" mean?
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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look up 2 posts. |
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| On the Great Plains, nineteenth-century settlers used |
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