Today's technology allows manufacturers to make small cars more fuel-efficient now than at any time in their production history.
A. small cars more fuel-efficient now than at any time in their
B. small cars that are more fuel-efficient than they were at any time in their
C. small cars that are more fuel-efficient than those at any other time in
D. more fuel-efficient small cars than those at any other time in their
E. more fuel-efficient small cars now than at any time in
OA: C
Hi. Can please anyone, explain why B is incorrect. Thank you.
GPrep - Today’s technology allows manufacturers to make
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Reading the initial sentence, we should notice the phrase "more fuel-efficient ... than". This tells us that we're dealing with a comparison: the fuel efficiency of small cars in the past vs. the fuel efficiency of small cars in the present.
However, we might notice something sounds odd about the comparison in first sentence. Small cars are "more fuel efficient now than at any time in their production history". Well ... doesn't "any time in their production history" include "now"? Meaning that small cars are more fuel efficient now than they are ... also now?
The impossible comparison is a classic GMAT trap, though this one doesn't show up all that often. When we compare one thing in a group to the rest of the things in the group, we need to make sure that we exclude the one thing from the group we compare it to, typically using the word "other". For example:
Let's look at the comparisons made in C and D.
C tells us that manufacturers make "small cars that are more fuel efficient than those [small cars] at any other time in production history". So the small cars manufacturers make now are more efficient than the small cars they made before.
D tells us that manufacturers make "more fuel efficient small cars than those [manufacturers] at any other time in their production history". This has a slightly different meaning. Now, the sentence tells us that the manufacturers make more fuel-efficient small cars, not that the small cars they make are more fuel-efficient. So with C, the manufacturers are increasing fuel efficiency, while in D, the manufacturers are increasing the number of cars.
When dealing with issues of meaning on Sentence Correction questions, we want the correct answer to capture the meaning intended by the original sentence. Ignoring the errors in the original sentence, we see that it conveys the idea of "more fuel-efficiency" not "more cars", making D wrong and C correct.
We actually featured this problem recently on the PrepScholar GMAT blog as one of the 5 Hardest Sentence Correction Questions. I recommend checking out the article for more strategies and trends we can take away from this and other 700+ level problems!
However, we might notice something sounds odd about the comparison in first sentence. Small cars are "more fuel efficient now than at any time in their production history". Well ... doesn't "any time in their production history" include "now"? Meaning that small cars are more fuel efficient now than they are ... also now?
The impossible comparison is a classic GMAT trap, though this one doesn't show up all that often. When we compare one thing in a group to the rest of the things in the group, we need to make sure that we exclude the one thing from the group we compare it to, typically using the word "other". For example:
- Keisha scored higher on the the test than all of the students in her class.
- Keisha scored higher on the the test than all of the other students in her class.
Let's look at the comparisons made in C and D.
C tells us that manufacturers make "small cars that are more fuel efficient than those [small cars] at any other time in production history". So the small cars manufacturers make now are more efficient than the small cars they made before.
D tells us that manufacturers make "more fuel efficient small cars than those [manufacturers] at any other time in their production history". This has a slightly different meaning. Now, the sentence tells us that the manufacturers make more fuel-efficient small cars, not that the small cars they make are more fuel-efficient. So with C, the manufacturers are increasing fuel efficiency, while in D, the manufacturers are increasing the number of cars.
When dealing with issues of meaning on Sentence Correction questions, we want the correct answer to capture the meaning intended by the original sentence. Ignoring the errors in the original sentence, we see that it conveys the idea of "more fuel-efficiency" not "more cars", making D wrong and C correct.
We actually featured this problem recently on the PrepScholar GMAT blog as one of the 5 Hardest Sentence Correction Questions. I recommend checking out the article for more strategies and trends we can take away from this and other 700+ level problems!
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