Similar to Great Britain, Belgian scientists seem ready to compromise in the argument over uniform international laboratory standards.
A. Similar to Great Britain, Belgian scientists seem ready to compromise
B. Similar to those in Great Britain, scientists in Belgium seem ready to compromise
C. In Belgium, like Great Britain, scientists seem ready to compromise
D. Belgium scientists, similar to those in Great Britain, seem ready about compromising
E . Belgian scientists, like Great Britain, seem ready to compromise
OA B
Comparison
This topic has expert replies
- pesfunk
- Master | Next Rank: 500 Posts
- Posts: 286
- Joined: Tue Sep 21, 2010 5:36 pm
- Location: Kolkata, India
- Thanked: 11 times
- Followed by:5 members
Even I feel that B is the correct option.
However, I'm not sure why D is incorrect.
Could someone please explain ?
However, I'm not sure why D is incorrect.
Could someone please explain ?
AIM GMAT wrote:Similar to Great Britain, Belgian scientists seem ready to compromise in the argument over uniform international laboratory standards.
A. Similar to Great Britain, Belgian scientists seem ready to compromise
B. Similar to those in Great Britain, scientists in Belgium seem ready to compromise
C. In Belgium, like Great Britain, scientists seem ready to compromiseYour answer was incorrect
D. Belgium scientists, similar to those in Great Britain, seem ready about compromising
E . Belgian scientists, like Great Britain, seem ready to compromise
OA B
-
- Junior | Next Rank: 30 Posts
- Posts: 21
- Joined: Tue Aug 31, 2010 12:21 pm
- Thanked: 2 times
IMO.. B... (B Vs D)
A - comparing GB with B scientists
B - corret
C - Belgium seem ready to compromise instead of scientists
D - ready about compromising?
E - comparing B scientists with GB
A - comparing GB with B scientists
B - corret
C - Belgium seem ready to compromise instead of scientists
D - ready about compromising?
E - comparing B scientists with GB
- gmat_perfect
- Legendary Member
- Posts: 1083
- Joined: Wed Feb 24, 2010 9:38 pm
- Thanked: 127 times
- Followed by:14 members
[/quote]pesfunk wrote:Even I feel that B is the correct option.
However, I'm not sure why D is incorrect.
OA B
We use:
-->X, unlike Y..
--> Unlike X, Y...
--> Unlike X, mod, Y, mod....
We don't use:
X, similar to Y----though in some informal writing we see it.
We have seen in OG questions that "Seem to" is correct, and we have read a sentence "seem must be followed by to"
Seem ready to + verb is thus correct way to express.
So D is faulty.
Thanks.
-
- Master | Next Rank: 500 Posts
- Posts: 165
- Joined: Wed Jan 26, 2011 7:33 pm
- Location: Pune, India
- Thanked: 16 times
- Followed by:1 members
Let me try.
A = Incorrect comparison. We need to find out the correct comparison; in this case, we are comparing British scientists vs Belgian scientists.
same goes with E.
C = like Great Britain = we are missing in, In Belgium, like inGreat Britain, ...
D = ready about compromising = we are shifting the subject here, by making compromise -> compromising(gerund)
If a verb can act as a verb, we don't need to make it noun.
A = Incorrect comparison. We need to find out the correct comparison; in this case, we are comparing British scientists vs Belgian scientists.
same goes with E.
C = like Great Britain = we are missing in, In Belgium, like inGreat Britain, ...
D = ready about compromising = we are shifting the subject here, by making compromise -> compromising(gerund)
If a verb can act as a verb, we don't need to make it noun.
78 clicks can change my life !
-
- Legendary Member
- Posts: 544
- Joined: Mon Dec 27, 2010 8:10 am
- Thanked: 45 times
- Followed by:2 members
In option A and E Scientists are being compared to great britain. So eliminate them.
In option C the sentence emphasise on country ie. great britain and belgium but however the emphasis should be more on the scientists of those countries.
Option B and D are close. However i feel option D,"about comprimising" is awkward. Somehow cause it mentions that they are ready and comprimising shows the continuity.
So contradictions of a sort.
I will go with option B
what is OA?
In option C the sentence emphasise on country ie. great britain and belgium but however the emphasis should be more on the scientists of those countries.
Option B and D are close. However i feel option D,"about comprimising" is awkward. Somehow cause it mentions that they are ready and comprimising shows the continuity.
So contradictions of a sort.
I will go with option B
what is OA?
- gmat_perfect
- Legendary Member
- Posts: 1083
- Joined: Wed Feb 24, 2010 9:38 pm
- Thanked: 127 times
- Followed by:14 members
amaelle wrote:Good day all,
Even though i'm convinced that B is the right answer i can't figure out why C is incorrect??
any hint will be highly appreciated.
X, like Y, X and Y MUST be grammatically and logically parallel.
--> Mind the words "GRAMMATICALLY & LOGICALLY".
In Belguim, like Great Britain...........---> It lacks GRAMMATICAL parallelism.
In Belgium, like in Great Britain--should be the correct parallelism.
Prepositional phrase, LIKE Prepositional Phrase.
In Belgium, like Great Britain, scientists seem ready to compromise Your answer was incorrect....
HTH.
-
- Legendary Member
- Posts: 768
- Joined: Mon Nov 30, 2009 3:46 am
- Thanked: 21 times
- Followed by:7 members
@Gmat_perfect :
In Belgium, as in Great Britain..
like is not correct usage here. prepositional phrase here asks for usage of AS.In Belgium, like in Great Britain--should be the correct parallelism.
In Belgium, as in Great Britain..
-
- Legendary Member
- Posts: 1112
- Joined: Sat Feb 26, 2011 11:16 am
- Thanked: 77 times
- Followed by:49 members
@Gmat_Perfect,gmat_perfect wrote:amaelle wrote:Good day all,
Even though i'm convinced that B is the right answer i can't figure out why C is incorrect??
any hint will be highly appreciated.
X, like Y, X and Y MUST be grammatically and logically parallel.
--> Mind the words "GRAMMATICALLY & LOGICALLY".
In Belguim, like Great Britain...........---> It lacks GRAMMATICAL parallelism.
In Belgium, like in Great Britain--should be the correct parallelism.
Prepositional phrase, LIKE Prepositional Phrase.
In Belgium, like Great Britain, scientists seem ready to compromise Your answer was incorrect....
HTH.
Hi, I'm sure you are correct about OpB, but have one query please clarify..
the first time i saw opB i rejected this option, why please see
opB--- "Similar to those in Great Britain, scientists in Belgium seem ready to compromise"
here, the pronoun "Those" is coming in the first part, so i thought that it is ambiguous, as "Those" can refer to anything for ex cows...or anything...i'm weak in this topic and still working, as per my knowledge, it would be better if we write the Op B in this way---"Similar to scientists in Great Britain, those in Belgium seem ready to compromise"
Now, can you shed some light, and clarify that both the constructions are equally preferable in writing..??
second question, in OpD, i understand the flaw you indicated but apart from those flaws is the use of "Ready about" is correct?? is this a correct idiom???
Thanks and Regards
-
- Master | Next Rank: 500 Posts
- Posts: 165
- Joined: Wed Jan 26, 2011 7:33 pm
- Location: Pune, India
- Thanked: 16 times
- Followed by:1 members
perfect, do you mean Similar to Y, X = it is correct idiom in gmat.gmat_perfect wrote:We don't use:
X, similar to Y----though in some informal writing we see it.
But, X, similar to Y = is wrong?
Is it always?
78 clicks can change my life !
- gmat_perfect
- Legendary Member
- Posts: 1083
- Joined: Wed Feb 24, 2010 9:38 pm
- Thanked: 127 times
- Followed by:14 members
I did not see any official problem in which "X, similar to Y" or "Similar to X, Y" has been used. There is a very good alternative to these.tetura84 wrote:perfect, do you mean Similar to Y, X = it is correct idiom in gmat.gmat_perfect wrote:We don't use:
X, similar to Y----though in some informal writing we see it.
But, X, similar to Y = is wrong?
Is it always?
X, like Y.
If any one can give an official problem in which "Similar to X, Y" or "X, similar to Y" has been used, please let us know.
Thanks.