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In December of 1987 an automobile manufacturer pleaded no contest to criminal charges of odometer tampering and agreed to pay more than $16 million in civil damages for cars that were test-driven with their odometers disconnected.
[A] cars that were test-driven with their odometers disconnected.
cars that it had test-driven with their disconnected odometers.
[C] its cars having been test-driven with disconnected odometers.
[D] having test-driven cars with their odometers disconnected.
[E] having cars that were test-driven with disconnected odometers.
The given OA is D.
Explanation:
The options B and C get cancelled out for a wrong use of the pronoun 'it' and 'its' with no antecedent at all.
Option A: Cars that were test driven does not give a clear meaning. It can also be that the cars that do not belong to the manufacturer, are without the odometers.
Option D vs E: This is where concision steps in.
the cars that were test driven - uses a 'that clause' to modify the things.
the test driven cars - is also a modifier
but Option D is more concise as the same meaning is conveyed by using lesser words.
An adjective form is preferred to a noun clause or a that clause. But not in cases of place and measurement.
This is specifically a concision question...
Hope this helps.
[A] cars that were test-driven with their odometers disconnected.
cars that it had test-driven with their disconnected odometers.
[C] its cars having been test-driven with disconnected odometers.
[D] having test-driven cars with their odometers disconnected.
[E] having cars that were test-driven with disconnected odometers.
The given OA is D.
Explanation:
The options B and C get cancelled out for a wrong use of the pronoun 'it' and 'its' with no antecedent at all.
Option A: Cars that were test driven does not give a clear meaning. It can also be that the cars that do not belong to the manufacturer, are without the odometers.
Option D vs E: This is where concision steps in.
the cars that were test driven - uses a 'that clause' to modify the things.
the test driven cars - is also a modifier
but Option D is more concise as the same meaning is conveyed by using lesser words.
An adjective form is preferred to a noun clause or a that clause. But not in cases of place and measurement.
This is specifically a concision question...
Hope this helps.
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LEARNING, APPLICATION AND TIMING IS THE FACT OF GMAT AND LIFE AS WELL... KEEP PLAYING!!!
Whenever you feel that my post really helped you to learn something new, please press on the 'THANK' button.













