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Guest79
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Post subject: Like any star of similar mass would do, once the Sun has Posted: Thu Aug 30, 2007 1:21 am |
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Like any star of similar mass would do, once the Sun has exhausted the hydrogen in its core, it expands into a red giant, eventually ejecting its outer envelope of gases to become a white dwarf.
(A) Like any star of similar mass would do, once the Sun has exhausted the hydrogen in its core, it expands into a red giant, eventually ejecting (B) Like any star of similar mass, once the hydrogen in the Sun's core is exhausted, then it expands into a red giant and eventually ejects (C) As in the case of any star of similar mass, once the hydrogen in the Sun's core is exhausted, it will expand into a red giant, and eventually ejecting (D) As any star of similar mass would, once the hydrogen in the Sun's core is exhausted it will expand into a red giant and will eventually eject (E) As would be the case with any star of similar mass, once the Sun exhausts the hydrogen in its core, it will expand into a red giant and eventually eject
Please explain your answer.
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givemeanid
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Post subject: Posted: Thu Aug 30, 2007 10:11 am |
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E for me.
Sentence is making a projection. So, future tense is needed. A and B are out. The 'its' after the underlined portion should refer back to Sun and not SUn's core. C and D have 'Sun's Core' and 'it' cannot refer to a possessive.
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SummerCourse
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Post subject: Posted: Fri Aug 31, 2007 6:18 pm |
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RonPurewal
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Post subject: Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2007 5:18 am |
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Givemeanid is correct about the 'possessive poison' (i.e., pronouns can't refer to a possessive noun) aspect. As always, though, this obscure fact isn't necessary to solve the problem: what's more important is to notice that, in choices C and D, "it" refers to "hydrogen" (the subject of the previous clause). This reference leads to the absurd idea that the _hydrogen_ will expand into a red giant AFTER IT'S ALL GONE. Choice C also exhibits a rather obvious parallelism defect, which also happens to be ungrammatical: "and eventually ejecting" not only fails to be parallel to "will expand," but is also, well, wrong.
Choice B is all kinds of wrong. Since "like any star of similar mass" doesn't have a subject, we need "the Sun" right after the comma (and it isn't there). Like choices C and D, this sentence mistakenly employs "it" to refer to hydrogen. And givemeanid has already pointed out the tense problem.
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Guest79
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Post subject: Posted: Tue Sep 18, 2007 2:43 pm |
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Thanks for the detailed explanation Ron, it helps!
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rschunti
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Post subject: Can I say that A is also wrong because Posted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 11:48 am |
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Can I eliminate choice "A" on the basis that it is starting a clause with "like"----->"Like any star of similar mass would do".
It is wrong to use "like" to start a clause in place of "As" ?
Thanks
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RonPurewal
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Post subject: Re: Can I say that A is also wrong because Posted: Wed Apr 16, 2008 4:09 am |
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rschunti wrote: Can I eliminate choice "A" on the basis that it is starting a clause with "like"----->"Like any star of similar mass would do".
It is wrong to use "like" to start a clause in place of "As" ?
Thanks
it is indeed wrong.
like is limited to introducing nouns (or their equivalents, such as pronouns and noun phrases). you are correct to assert that like cannot introduce clauses.
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H
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Post subject: Posted: Sun Jun 22, 2008 5:31 pm |
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Hi,
Why does the sentence use "as would be the case..." instead of "as is the case..."?
Is it talking about a similar phenomenon/situation that happens to Sun?
How should I decide the proper tense in "as [be] the case..."?
Another similar question in GMATPrep: http://www.manhattangmat.com/forums/as- ... t2420.html
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H
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Post subject: Posted: Sat Jul 05, 2008 12:46 pm |
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rfernandez
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Post subject: Posted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 3:08 am |
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"As would be the case" is better than "as is the case" for this sentence because it refers to a hypothetical star of similar mass to the Sun's. If the sentence referred to a specific star to which this happened, then "as was the case" would be appropriate since the construction would refer to an actual event.
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fenruyun
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Post subject: Re: Like any star of similar mass would do, once the Sun has Posted: Wed Sep 30, 2009 11:31 pm |
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I wonder if the expression" As any star of similar mass would" in D is right. shouldn't we add sth such as" As any star of similar mass would do"?
besides,I have heard that when u use the "as-clause" structure, it's important to keep the two verbs( one in the as-clause and the other in the main clause) in the same form. For example:As I did when I got the present, Mary cried . So in choice E, the sequence of the sentence could be adjusted into "As the case with any star of similar mass would be, once the Sun exhausts the hydrogen in its core, it will expand into a red giant and eventually eject." The "be" has nothing to parallel. Could u explain it? Thank u !!
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RonPurewal
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Post subject: Re: Like any star of similar mass would do, once the Sun has Posted: Mon Nov 16, 2009 9:24 am |
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fenruyun wrote: I wonder if the expression" As any star of similar mass would" in D is right. shouldn't we add sth such as" As any star of similar mass would do"?
besides,I have heard that when u use the "as-clause" structure, it's important to keep the two verbs( one in the as-clause and the other in the main clause) in the same form. For example:As I did when I got the present, Mary cried . So in choice E, the sequence of the sentence could be adjusted into "As the case with any star of similar mass would be, once the Sun exhausts the hydrogen in its core, it will expand into a red giant and eventually eject." The "be" has nothing to parallel. Could u explain it? Thank u !! you should think of "as is the case" / "as would be the case" / etc. as an idiomatic construction that can stand for just about any clause. in fact, "as is / was / would be the case" is generally used as a back-up construction when you can't use something like "did"/"do".
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herogmat
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Post subject: Re: Like any star of similar mass would do, once the Sun has Posted: Sun Nov 22, 2009 5:51 am |
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In option E "...once the Sun exhausts the hydrogen in its core, it will expand into a red giant and eventually eject..."
What is the antecedent of 'it' - sun or hydrogen? Can somebody clarify if this is a correct sentence construction where 'it'(pronoun) can refer to both subject and object of the clause...
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RonPurewal
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Post subject: Re: Like any star of similar mass would do, once the Sun has Posted: Sat Dec 19, 2009 8:14 am |
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Posts: 6765
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herogmat wrote: In option E "...once the Sun exhausts the hydrogen in its core, it will expand into a red giant and eventually eject..."
What is the antecedent of 'it' - sun or hydrogen? Can somebody clarify if this is a correct sentence construction where 'it'(pronoun) can refer to both subject and object of the clause... remember that PRONOUN AMBIGUITY IS NOT AN ABSOLUTE RULE. FIRST, go look at these two threads: post30203.html#p30203post30983.html#p30983in this case, the three conditions (specified in those threads) are satisfied: * the context is obvious (it's clear that "it" should be the sun) * "the sun", the correct antecedent, has the same grammar as "it" ("the sun" is the SUBJECT of its clause; "it" is the SUBJECT of its clause) * "the hydrogen", the wrong antecedent, has different grammar ("the hydrogen" is a DIRECT OBJECT; "it" is a SUBJECT) so the ambiguity is not a problem here.
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herogmat
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Post subject: Re: Like any star of similar mass would do, once the Sun has Posted: Sat Dec 19, 2009 1:28 pm |
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RonPurewal wrote: herogmat wrote: In option E "...once the Sun exhausts the hydrogen in its core, it will expand into a red giant and eventually eject..."
What is the antecedent of 'it' - sun or hydrogen? Can somebody clarify if this is a correct sentence construction where 'it'(pronoun) can refer to both subject and object of the clause... remember that PRONOUN AMBIGUITY IS NOT AN ABSOLUTE RULE. FIRST, go look at these two threads: post30203.html#p30203post30983.html#p30983in this case, the three conditions (specified in those threads) are satisfied: * the context is obvious (it's clear that "it" should be the sun) * "the sun", the correct antecedent, has the same grammar as "it" ("the sun" is the SUBJECT of its clause; "it" is the SUBJECT of its clause) * "the hydrogen", the wrong antecedent, has different grammar ("the hydrogen" is a DIRECT OBJECT; "it" is a SUBJECT) so the ambiguity is not a problem here. Agree. Thanks for the reply.
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