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| pronoun ambiguity? (v. passive voice) - which one trumps? |
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Stacey Koprince
MGMAT STAFF
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I deleted the actual question but I think I can still address your question about the question :)
First, passive never trumps anything. It can only be chosen if every other choice has a grammatical error. (Same with concision, incidentally.) Second, there is a little bit of fuzziness in terms of what the GMAT considers okay vs. ambiguous with respect to pronouns. In this case, you have two plural noun options: habits and writers. So, my options to replace the pronoun "they" are: but the writers can break these habits or but the habits can break these habits If you had had another plural noun that could've fit here, ambiguity may have been a problem. But you can't credibly say "the habits can break the habits (themselves)." For these types of issues (on which the GMAT itself has some fuzziness as to where it draws the line), I prefer to study from the newer questions (OG11 and the supplements) because things do change over time. The paper tests are at least 11 years old now (it was last given in 1997). |
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| ok |
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guest612
Guest
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Ok, so concision and passive don't trump anything but unless everything is grammatically incorrect there is likely a better answer choice. I have two days remaining until my exam! I will stick with OG.
Thanks, Stacey. |
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Stacey Koprince
MGMAT STAFF
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you're welcome - good luck!
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| pronoun ambiguity? (v. passive voice) - which one trumps? |
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