Please read through the kaplan 800 verbal supplement.
Read through the imperfect options in sentence correction.
You will see lots of whacky questions and equally whacky
answer choices that are supposed to be correct

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If the OG explanation is wrong in case of option (E), then Could you please tell me what is the right explanation for (E) being wrong.lunarpower wrote:that, frankly, is one of the particular instances in which the OG answer key authors are just ... well ... wrong. ironically, they are wrong for reasons that they actually mention themselves (!) -- namely, because the verb is singular, we know that it can't go with "laws".nileshdalvi wrote:Hi Ron,
If the touch rule does not strictly apply to "that", then why is it that in Q.40 in OG SC Diagnostic, "one of the Kirchoff's laws that" is incorrect because "That appears to refer to laws rather than one".
Is there any difference in the use of that in Q.50 and Q.40?
in my experience, some small but not totally insignificant percentage of the OG SC answer key comments are ... wrong. i'd say a couple percent.
the questions are essentially flawless, but many of the answer keys are (a) wrong, in the worst cases, or (b) missing extremely important elements of the problem -- things that the problem's actual author never would have left out of an explanation.
i.e., it's very easy to tell that the answer keys aren't written by the same people who write the questions (and that the people who write the questions are more talented than the people who write the answer keys! ... better than the other way around, for sure)
the OG is still an excellent resource, all things considered. but it's not perfect.
the one thing i see that's easiest to summarize in (e) is verb tense. that choice says that the law "was" an observation about electric current. that's incorrect; the law is such an observation, and will be forever and ever. for such timeless facts, the present tense is used.If the OG explanation is wrong in case of option (E), then Could you please tell me what is the right explanation for (E) being wrong.
This doesn't seem right,tetura84 wrote:Let's give it a try.
A vs C
The city mayor proposed ONLY ONE thing.
17% reduction in the amount.
This reduction will do two things.
to maintain .... and to subsidize ....
It is not that mayor proposed two things,
to reduce .... and to maintain
also, in C, I have issue with COMMA + by nearly 17 percent + COMMA
Is it acting like an appositive?
If yes, it is modifying reduce. But it is wrong, it should modify the amount.
But I need experts comment here.
that is precisely the intended meaning of the sentence. what seems incorrect about it to you?sushil_lakra wrote:if to maintain and to subsidize are parallel then here's how it would sound
proposal was to reduce the amount that was allocated to maintain the institution and reduce the amount allocated to subsidize the local arts group.
doesn't it seem incorrect.
the problem with this interpretation is that it doesn't make sense in context.I feel rather to reduce and to subsidize need be parallel.
Please correct me if I am wrong.