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| Each year companies in United States could save as much as |
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Emily Sledge
MGMAT STAFF
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Actually, I think you lucked out a bit when you used concision as a deciding factor. By my count, (D) and (E) have the same number of words, and in fact the words themselves are longer in (E)--neither a bad thing nor a good thing on the GMAT.
Here are the only words that differentiate (D) and (E): (D) in employee illness prevention .....improving performance of workers... (E) by preventing illness among employees .... improved worker performance... I think this choice boils down to idiom, although parallelism could be useful: (D) reads "companies could save $58B in X...and gain $200B through Y" The phrasing "save $ in X" is not ideal...the only correct usage of this I can think of is "save $ in banks" (i.e. to specify location of saved money). That is not the purpose here. (E) reads "companies could save $58B by preventing X...and gain $200B through Y" where the correct idiom "save $ by doing X" (i.e. to specify how money is saved) is used. Also, X and Y are parallel nouns (illness and performance) correctly completing the idioms "by preventing X (one thing) ...and through Y (some other thing)" |
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Guest
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Thanks for helping all of us.
IN Ans D and E , how to know if the pronoun at the end (they) is referring to employess not to companies. |
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Stacey Koprince
MGMAT STAFF
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They refers to companies, not employees. Structure of the sentence: Companies could do X if they (the same companies) did Y. All of the stuff in X and Y is just detail, not part of the core.
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