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| The computer company has announced that it will purchase the |
| Re: The computer company has announced that it will purchase |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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yes. if you wanted to modify just the preceding noun, you'd use the following type of structure: three days ago he received a payment for $1000, part of the long-overdue pension that had been delayed for various bureaucratic reasons. |
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Guest
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Hello,
Sorry for bumping an old thread, but I thought it was a suitable location for my question. What is the difference between "a part of" and "part of"? (In this case Answer B vs. Answer C and Answer D vs. Answer E) Thanks. |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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hmm... that's a good one. first off, the most important observation you could make: both can be used correctly. neither one is straight-out wrong. i'm not sure whether there's a clear distinction in their usage - you could try googling; i searched for a few minutes without finding anything definitive - but i came up with the following after taking a bit of mental inventory: i'd use part of for things that are more abstract in nature, and/or where the divisions between the "parts" aren't quite as clear (confidence, in addition to skill, is part of what's necessary for success in this game), and a part of for clear, literal distinctions in which the parts can be neatly partitioned off (the arm is a part of the human body). still, that's just what i came up with on the spot, and i wouldn't be surprised if the gmat's official line on the matter differed somewhat from mine. |
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Guest
Guest
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What is the OA of the question?
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| OA |
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guest12
Guest
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The OA is E
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| Re: The computer company has announced that it will purchase |
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Guest
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Ron, could you please explain why D is wrong ("to make" vs "that will make")? Thank you very much! |
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| Re: The computer company has announced that it will purchase |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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if you use the infinitive "to make", then the computer company is still the subject of the sentence. therefore, in this case you have to use the reflexive pronoun: itself. as an analogy, i can't look at me in the mirror, but i can look at myself in the mirror. same deal. in choice (e), "...that will make..." shifts the role of subject to deal, so a reflexive pronoun is no longer needed. in fact, the reflexive pronoun would be absurd in this case, since a deal obviously can't make itself the largest manufacturer in the market. |
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| Please explain B |
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Tomo
Guest
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Ron, could you explain why B,C is wrong? Why can't we think them as "final clause"?
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| Re: Please explain B |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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when you have noun modifiers like these - called appositives, if you happen to care about terminology - they must tag the immediately preceding noun (in the same manner as would a modifier with a comma followed by "which", for example). see here. according to this rule, then, choices (b) and (c) both declare that the actual amount of $950 million is "(a) part of a deal..." that's incorrect; it's the purchase / acquisition of the rival company's color printing division that's part of the deal. therefore, this is a misplaced modifier. |
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| The computer company has announced that it will purchase the |
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