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Dr mba
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"make a plant more likely" is a better idiom than "makes it more likely for a plant" alo B is unnecessarily verbose & D presents the same idea in a more concise manner
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Stacey Koprince
MGMAT STAFF
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I've seen this one before - this is the only official question in 10 years that I have seen use "being" correctly. So it is still generally a good rule to avoid being, but use it more as a tiebreak - look for other stuff first.
So you knew to get rid of A and C. B violates a little known thing that the GMAT writers follow though it is not an official grammar rule - more a choice. It introduces a subject pronoun before the noun itself. Subject pronouns and nouns can be directly interchanged; as such, the test writers prefer to use the noun first and then later use a subject pronoun (if necessary). Note that I am specifically limiting this to subject pronouns, not object or possessive pronouns. Most people read a subject-pronoun-first situation as "awkward" though they don't really know why. And just study D from the point of view of: this is one of the only ways to use "being" correctly, so familiarize yourself with it. |
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Saurabh Malpani
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Hey Stacey, The only way is ---"Being" used as Modifier? am I correct? Please comment on the correct usage os Being. Saurabh Malpani |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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nope. if 'being' were a modifier, then it wouldn't make sense in its current location, as you'll soon see: this sentence has the following form: X does not make... therefore, whatever goes in the 'x' slot has to be, or function as, a noun. this rules out a-b immediately (these are subordinate clauses, which can't function as nouns). in choices c-d-e, the 'being' is a gerund (the -ing form that functions as a noun, as in the sentence taking overdoses of vitamins isn't good for your health). since gerunds function as nouns, that structure is permissible. |
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Saurabh Malpani
Guest
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Thanks!! Happy New Year! |
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H
Guest
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Hi, does "become" itself convey the sense/meaning of "future" and so "will" in E is unnecessary?
Thanks in advance. |
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Jonathon Winawer
MGMAT STAFF
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You are right that "will" is unnecessary in E. But I would give a slightly different explanation: You could either say "... make it any more likely that a plant will become ..." or "... make a plant any more likely to become..." You CANNOT combine them to get "...make a plant any more likely that it will become ..." That is, if you use 'plant' as the object of 'make', then it must take the complementary infinitive 'to become'. |
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H
Guest
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Is it true that "more likely" has to be followed by "to"?
Thanks in advance. |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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not necessarily. for instance, you could be talking about the probability of some event. in that case, you can just say that event x is likely, but event y is even more likely. or something along those lines. in the probability construction, you can also pair "likely" with "that", as in it is more likely that x will occur. if you're talking about what someone or something is likely to do, though, you must use "likely TO". there may be other words in the way as "noise" - for instance, bob is more likely than gary to pass the test - but "likely to" is the basis of the construction. |
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