Portuguese (pronoun)

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Portuguese (pronoun)

by Mission2012 » Mon Oct 07, 2013 2:08 am
Unique among the Romance languages, Portuguese features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of their strong mercantile heritage.

A>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of their strong mercantile heritage
B>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of its strong mercantile heritage
C>has numbered rather than named its days, evidence of its strong mercantile heritage
D>numbered rather than named its days, out of its strong mercantile heritage
E>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of the strong Portuguese mercantile heritage

[spoiler]I am not sure why antecedent of "its" ambiguous.[/spoiler]
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Source: — Sentence Correction |

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by theCodeToGMAT » Mon Oct 07, 2013 2:37 am
{A} - INCORRECT; "their" SVA error
{B} - INCORRECT; "its" is not needed..
{C} - INCORRECT; Meaning Issue.
{D} - INCORRECT; Meaning Issue
{E} - CORRECT; concise
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by vinay1983 » Mon Oct 07, 2013 2:42 am
Mission2012 wrote:Unique among the Romance languages, Portuguese features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of their strong mercantile heritage.

A>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of their strong mercantile heritage
B>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of its strong mercantile heritage
C>has numbered rather than named its days, evidence of its strong mercantile heritage
D>numbered rather than named its days, out of its strong mercantile heritage
E>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of the strong Portuguese mercantile heritage

[spoiler]I am not sure why antecedent of "its" ambiguous.[/spoiler]
Their is wrong usage. Also we can observe splits here. "Its" has no antecedent here. option E correctly clears the doubt by including "Portuguese" in it
You can, for example never foretell what any one man will do, but you can say with precision what an average number will be up to!

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by rakeshd347 » Mon Oct 07, 2013 3:51 am
Mission2012 wrote:Unique among the Romance languages, Portuguese features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of their strong mercantile heritage.

A>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of their strong mercantile heritage
B>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of its strong mercantile heritage
C>has numbered rather than named its days, evidence of its strong mercantile heritage
D>numbered rather than named its days, out of its strong mercantile heritage
E>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of the strong Portuguese mercantile heritage

[spoiler]I am not sure why antecedent of "its" ambiguous.[/spoiler]
Only B and E stands out but to be honest I don't know why its doesn't have clear antecedent. Well its clearly refers to portugese. E is more clear of course and the best choice but I doubt it if GMAT give two choices too close to call.

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by Mission2012 » Mon Oct 07, 2013 4:08 am
Hi Rakesh,

Thanks for seconding my doubt.

I also believe that Portuguese is clearly an antecendent to its.

Let hope some experts would be able to point out what I am missing here.

rakeshd347 wrote:
Mission2012 wrote:Unique among the Romance languages, Portuguese features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of their strong mercantile heritage.

A>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of their strong mercantile heritage
B>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of its strong mercantile heritage
C>has numbered rather than named its days, evidence of its strong mercantile heritage
D>numbered rather than named its days, out of its strong mercantile heritage
E>features days that are not named but numbered, evidence of the strong Portuguese mercantile heritage

[spoiler]I am not sure why antecedent of "its" ambiguous.[/spoiler]
Only B and E stands out but to be honest I don't know why its doesn't have clear antecedent. Well its clearly refers to portugese. E is more clear of course and the best choice but I doubt it if GMAT give two choices too close to call.
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by theCodeToGMAT » Mon Oct 07, 2013 6:12 am
Yes, "its" has a clear antecedent..

I searched on Web and found that the issue with {B} is that "its" is referring to Adjective "Portuguese"

The words: "Japanese", "Italian" .. all are Proper Adjectives and NOT Noun.. so we cannot refer to them using "pronoun"
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by ceilidh.erickson » Mon Oct 07, 2013 7:09 am
What is the source of this question? (Please always NAME YOUR SOURCES!)

In common English usage, it's perfectly acceptable to use "Portuguese" as a noun. Yes, it's implied that we mean "the Portuguese language," but that doesn't make "Portuguese" a modifier. In fact, we know that it's a noun because it's being used as the subject: "Portuguese features..."

As such, it's perfectly acceptable to use it as an antecedent for the pronoun "it."

The GMAT would never test you on something like this. It's a bad question.
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Harvard Graduate School of Education

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by Mission2012 » Mon Oct 07, 2013 10:29 am
Source : Veritas
ceilidh.erickson wrote:What is the source of this question? (Please always NAME YOUR SOURCES!)

In common English usage, it's perfectly acceptable to use "Portuguese" as a noun. Yes, it's implied that we mean "the Portuguese language," but that doesn't make "Portuguese" a modifier. In fact, we know that it's a noun because it's being used as the subject: "Portuguese features..."

As such, it's perfectly acceptable to use it as an antecedent for the pronoun "it."

The GMAT would never test you on something like this. It's a bad question.
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by rakeshd347 » Mon Oct 07, 2013 1:23 pm
Mission2012 wrote:Source : Veritas
ceilidh.erickson wrote:What is the source of this question? (Please always NAME YOUR SOURCES!)

In common English usage, it's perfectly acceptable to use "Portuguese" as a noun. Yes, it's implied that we mean "the Portuguese language," but that doesn't make "Portuguese" a modifier. In fact, we know that it's a noun because it's being used as the subject: "Portuguese features..."

As such, it's perfectly acceptable to use it as an antecedent for the pronoun "it."

The GMAT would never test you on something like this. It's a bad question.
See What I told you. Its too close and B and E are both good. GMAT will never test your only on proper noun name and pronoun in the options.

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