Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as the current one.
A. equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as
B. equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are
C. equally likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as
D. as likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as
E. as likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are
[spoiler]OA: Will be posted later. Please discuss each answer choice with supporting explanations.[/spoiler]
Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be
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IMO A
All other options have they. And they can refer to officials as well as drivers. SO I feel, it doesn't have clear antecedent. What's the OA?
All other options have they. And they can refer to officials as well as drivers. SO I feel, it doesn't have clear antecedent. What's the OA?
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OA given is E and I also have the same confusion of "they" ..........I have found one link which explains why option E is correct.....sameerballani wrote:IMO A
All other options have they. And they can refer to officials as well as drivers. SO I feel, it doesn't have clear antecedent. What's the OA?
https://www.urch.com/forums/gmat-sentenc ... als-2.html
Last edited by aspirant2011 on Sat Jun 04, 2011 8:23 am, edited 1 time in total.
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for D and E we can with idiom as... as...
and even we need to choose TO EXCEED
But the use of they still remains ambiguous to me.
Also the ending they are the current one seems awkward
what's the source. May be we can have expert comments.
and even we need to choose TO EXCEED
But the use of they still remains ambiguous to me.
Also the ending they are the current one seems awkward
what's the source. May be we can have expert comments.
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Hi,
A - Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as to exceed the current one(speed limit). -> this sentence doesn't look good
E - Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be as likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are to exceed the current one(speed limit). -> this sentence seems good
'as' here is used for similarity. So, it acts as a preposition. So 'as' should be followed by a clause or prepositional phrase, not noun/pronoun(the current one).
I am not 100% sure about the usage of 'they' though
Expert comments would be appreciated
A - Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as to exceed the current one(speed limit). -> this sentence doesn't look good
E - Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be as likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are to exceed the current one(speed limit). -> this sentence seems good
'as' here is used for similarity. So, it acts as a preposition. So 'as' should be followed by a clause or prepositional phrase, not noun/pronoun(the current one).
I am not 100% sure about the usage of 'they' though
Expert comments would be appreciated
Cheers!
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Things are not what they appear to be... nor are they otherwise
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This is an Idiom question. We say that something is "AS likely TO" not that two things are "equally likely" in this type of comparison.
X is as likely to ____ as Y
Therefore we can eliminate A, B, C, and D.
In E, "they" clearly refers back to "drivers."
X is as likely to ____ as Y
Therefore we can eliminate A, B, C, and D.
In E, "they" clearly refers back to "drivers."
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Hi GMAT Experts ... revisiting this thread as i had a couple of questionsVivianKerr wrote:This is an Idiom question. We say that something is "AS likely TO" not that two things are "equally likely" in this type of comparison.
X is as likely to ____ as Y
Therefore we can eliminate A, B, C, and D.
In E, "they" clearly refers back to "drivers."
---- why is wrong to use equally likely to .... here is an example sentence which i think is right
example : X and Y are equally likely to succeed
example : X is equally likely to cry as Y is
example : Wrestlers are equally likely to succeed as they are to fail
please explain why "Equally likely" is not even a consideration given i can make sentences with it as shown above ..
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Hello Everyone!
This is a great example of a GMAT question that has to do with the rules concerning comparisons! Before we dive in, here is the original question with any major differences between the options highlighted in orange:
Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as the current one.
(A) equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as
(B) equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are
(C) equally likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as
(D) as likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as
(E) as likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are
After a quick glance over the options, 2 major differences jumped out:
1. equally likely vs. as likely
2. as vs. as they are
Let's start with #1 on our list: equally likely vs. as likely. The proper idiomatic structure for each of these options are:
equally likely X and Y will happen (suggests both events will happen at the same time)
as likely X will happen as Y will happen (suggests that both events happen at separate times, but could end up turning out the same)
Since ALL of the options use some version of the phrase "as Y will happen" at the end of each one, we know that the first half of the comparison MUST include the "as likely X will happen" for the idiom to be complete.
(A) equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as
(B) equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are
(C) equally likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as
(D) as likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as
(E) as likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are
Therefore, we can eliminate options A, B, and C because they don't follow either idiom structure correctly.
Now, we're only left with options D and E! Let's now focus on #2: as vs. as they are. To make this a little easier to spot, I added in the non-underlined portion of the sentence to each option:
(D) Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be as likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as the current one.
This option is INCORRECT because the wording of this is confusing and awkward. The phrase "that they will exceed" is not only written poorly, but also it might confuse readers into thinking we're now talking about traffic safety officials exceeding the speed limit, rather than the drivers!
(E) Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be as likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are the current one.
This option is CORRECT! It uses the right idiom structure "as likely that X will happen as Y will happen." It's also absolutely clear that the pronoun "they" is referring only to the drivers!
There you go - option E is our correct choice!
Don't study for the GMAT. Train for it.
This is a great example of a GMAT question that has to do with the rules concerning comparisons! Before we dive in, here is the original question with any major differences between the options highlighted in orange:
Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as the current one.
(A) equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as
(B) equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are
(C) equally likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as
(D) as likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as
(E) as likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are
After a quick glance over the options, 2 major differences jumped out:
1. equally likely vs. as likely
2. as vs. as they are
Let's start with #1 on our list: equally likely vs. as likely. The proper idiomatic structure for each of these options are:
equally likely X and Y will happen (suggests both events will happen at the same time)
as likely X will happen as Y will happen (suggests that both events happen at separate times, but could end up turning out the same)
Since ALL of the options use some version of the phrase "as Y will happen" at the end of each one, we know that the first half of the comparison MUST include the "as likely X will happen" for the idiom to be complete.
(A) equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as
(B) equally likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are
(C) equally likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as
(D) as likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as
(E) as likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are
Therefore, we can eliminate options A, B, and C because they don't follow either idiom structure correctly.
Now, we're only left with options D and E! Let's now focus on #2: as vs. as they are. To make this a little easier to spot, I added in the non-underlined portion of the sentence to each option:
(D) Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be as likely that they will exceed the proposed speed limit as the current one.
This option is INCORRECT because the wording of this is confusing and awkward. The phrase "that they will exceed" is not only written poorly, but also it might confuse readers into thinking we're now talking about traffic safety officials exceeding the speed limit, rather than the drivers!
(E) Traffic safety officials predict that drivers will be as likely to exceed the proposed speed limit as they are the current one.
This option is CORRECT! It uses the right idiom structure "as likely that X will happen as Y will happen." It's also absolutely clear that the pronoun "they" is referring only to the drivers!
There you go - option E is our correct choice!
Don't study for the GMAT. Train for it.