![]() |
| The governement predicts that, for counsumers |
|
Guest
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
| few clarifications |
|
rschunti
Guest
|
Can we say that options "B" and "C" are out because of passive voice "will be greatly reduced". And option "D" is out because there is no verb-->"the government prediction that the Federal....".
In option "E" the only error is becasue propositional phrase "For....." comes before main clause? When you write a sentence like this <prepositional phrase>,<main clause> then why intended meaning of "will grately reduce cost" is not applicable to the "consumers and businesses.."? What is the rule that govern this? |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
|
please re-type the question into the text window, for the benefit of both fellow users and moderators. thanks.
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
| I am re-typing the question in text format as mentioned |
|
rschunti
Guest
|
The government predicts that, for consumers and businesses that make a large number of long-distance calls, the Federal communication's recent telephone rate cuts will greatly reduce costs, though some consumer groups disagree with the government's estimates, suggesting they are too optimistic.
A. The government predicts that, for consumers and businesses that make a large number of long-distance calls, the Federal communication's recent telephone rate cuts will greatly reduce costs, B. The government predicts that costs will be greatly reduced for consumers and businesses that make a large number of long-distance calls by the Federal Communication Commission's telephone rate cuts, C. The government's prediction is, for consumers and businesses making a large number of long-distance calls, costs will be greatly reduced by the recent telephone rate cuts made by the Federal Communications Commission, D. For consumers and businesses that make large number of long-distance calls, the government prediction that the Federal Communication's recent telephone rate cuts will greatly reduce costs, E. For consumers and businesses making a large number of long-distance calls, the government predicts that the recent telephone rate cuts that the Federal Communications Commission has made will greatly reduce costs, |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
| Re: few clarifications |
|
Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
|
the passive voice is indeed a problem, because it's unnecessary. (remember that the passive voice should only be employed when there's a fairly compelling reason to use it.) in choice b especially, there's also an unacceptably long distance between the passive-voice action (will be greatly reduced) and the agent of that action (by the ...). one thing you should definitely notice in choice c is the wordiness of 'the government's prediction is'. constructions like that, which can easily be replaced by more compact forms ('the government predicts') with no change in meaning, are ALWAYS wrong. (also, you need the word 'that' after 'is'.) the prepositional phrase at the beginning of choice e is an example of a dangling modifier: one isn't quite sure exactly what it's supposed to modify. according to the strict rules followed by the gmat, this phrase should technically modify the action directly following the comma (the government predicts), which doesn't make sense: the government is not making predictions for the benefit of consumers and businesses (rather, it is merely making projections). |
||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||
| Comma after that |
|
virgo_rookie
Guest
|
Hi Ron,
I am a bit confused over the explanation given for choosing between A & E. Somehow both A & E limit the cost saving to consumers & business hence E that way sounds similar in meaning to A. Secondly in choice A, "that" is followed by a comma, is that correct? I am not too sure if we can use comma after that. Is there any other reason/explanation possible from your side? Except for that comma rest everythign looks fine. As for E not able to differentiate the meaning intended(or mis-intended) |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
| Comma |
|
Emily Sledge
MGMAT STAFF
|
To see that the comma is OK in (A), you might try reading it without the phrase set off by commas:
"The government predicts that the Federal communication's recent telephone rate cuts will greatly reduce costs..." = X predicts that Y will Z. You could also read it as if that limiting phrase is parenthetical: "The government predicts that (for consumers and businesses that make a large number of long-distance calls) the Federal communication's recent telephone rate cuts will greatly reduce costs... " = X predicts that (just for some people) Y will Z. The meaning difference boils down to the placement of the "for" phrase. What exactly is FOR the people and companies mentioned? If it is the fact that the rate cuts will reduce their costs, then place the phrase close to that, as in (A). If it is the government, or the government prediction, then place the phrase next to "the government predicts," as in (E). |
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
| The governement predicts that, for counsumers |
|
||
|
Powered by phpBB © phpBB Group
Content © Manhattan GMAT Forums
*GMAT and GMAT CAT are registered trademarks of the Graduate Management Admission Council,
which neither sponsors nor endorses this test preparation service.
Content © Manhattan GMAT Forums
*GMAT and GMAT CAT are registered trademarks of the Graduate Management Admission Council,
which neither sponsors nor endorses this test preparation service.



