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Anon
Guest
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Hi Ron, Could you please provide an example to clarify ... with adjectival and adverbial phrases... X has more money now than when the stock market crashed X has more money now than in 1988 X has more money than he had in 1988 are these all correct.... ??? thanks in advance |
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Anon
Guest
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sorry..wrong question...belongs somewhere else...pls ignore...
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Rey Fernandez
MGMAT STAFF
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Gellar, your version would be correct since "in 1990" is an adverbial phrase, per Ron's posting.
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Anon
Guest
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Hi Ron,
Could you please provide an example to clarify ... with adjectival and adverbial phrases... X has more money now than when the stock market crashed X has more money now than in 1988 X has more money than he had in 1988 are these all correct.... ??? thanks in advance - |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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i don't think the gmat would like any of these constructions all that much. first two: the gmat would probably ding these for not changing the tensed verb. when you have a parallel structure, the common parts (here, "has ... money") are assumed to apply equally to both parts of the structure; applying that principle here leads to the conclusion that the present tense (has) is being applied to both halves of the parallel construction, including the second half (which is obviously a past event). in other words: the second sentence expands as "x has more money now than he has in 1988". that's wrong. the same type of thing applies to the first sentence - again, the second half needs a verb that's fixed in the past tense. the third part seems fine, although there's something slightly undesirable about it (i can't put my finger on it exactly). |
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