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| MGMAT SC Question Bank (2) |
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Guest79
Guest
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One more question I got on this one -
In choice (D) 'them' (an object pronoun) refers back to Saturn's main rings (a possessive noun). Is this grammatically correct? Isn't this a case of Possessive poison? |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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Re: possessive poison: no, it isn't possessive poison. The antecedent for 'them' is 'rings', which is not possessive. 'Saturn's' is essentially an adjective that modifies rings. (Besides, if Saturn were supposed to be the antecedent, you'd have singular-plural issues anyway; those would definitely trump the obscure 'possessive poison,' which doesn't actually decide ANY of the OG problems.)
Re: parallelism: The problem here is that the rings ARE composed of icy ringlets. This is a scientific FACT which is merely REVEALED by closer viewing; it is not an artifact of the closer viewing. If you wrote the sentence in the manner you're suggesting ('when viewed more closely...'), you'd be implying that the rings suddenly change themselves to icy ringlets when they think someone is watching. I think you'll find that the correct answer is among the best possibilities, inasmuch as it retains the correct meaning, while not becoming wildly nonparallel. |
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| MGMAT SC Question Bank (2) |
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Guest
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Hi,
I always thougt that the object pronoun refers to the object of the sentence and the subject pronoun refers to the subject of the sentence so in the above correct sentence "them", an object pronoun is referring to the subject saurn;s rings...How ? |
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| MGMAT SC Question Bank (2) |
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Guest
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Kindly ignore the above post..Thnx
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