Like any star of similar mass would do, once the Sun has exhausted the hydrogen in its core, it expands into a red giant, eventually ejecting its outer envelope of gases to become a white dwarf.
(A) Same
(B) Like any star of similar mass, once the hydrgogen in the Sun's core is exhausted, then it expands into a red giant and eventually ejects
(C) As in the case of any star of similar mass, once the hydrogen in the Sun's core is exhausted, it will expand into a red giant, and eventually ejecting
(D) As any star of similar mass would, once the hydrogen in the Sun's core is exhausted it will expand into a red giant and will eventually eject
(E) As would be the case with any star of similar mass, once the Sun exhausts the hydrogen in its core, it will expand into a red giant and eventually eject
[spoiler]Between options D and E which is more correct from parallelism perspective and why?
will expand into a red giant and will eventually eject OR will expand into a red giant and eventually eject
for those who are interested to solve this question, OA =E[/spoiler]
GMAT Prep Star question
This topic has expert replies
- harshavardhanc
- Legendary Member
- Posts: 526
- Joined: Sat Feb 21, 2009 11:47 pm
- Location: India
- Thanked: 68 times
- GMAT Score:680
Good one!iamcste wrote:Like any star of similar mass would do, once the Sun has exhausted the hydrogen in its core, it expands into a red giant, eventually ejecting its outer envelope of gases to become a white dwarf.
(A) Same
(B) Like any star of similar mass, once the hydrgogen in the Sun's core is exhausted, then it expands into a red giant and eventually ejects
(C) As in the case of any star of similar mass, once the hydrogen in the Sun's core is exhausted, it will expand into a red giant, and eventually ejecting
(D) As any star of similar mass would, once the hydrogen in the Sun's core is exhausted it will expand into a red giant and will eventually eject
(E) As would be the case with any star of similar mass, once the Sun exhausts the hydrogen in its core, it will expand into a red giant and eventually eject
[spoiler]Between options D and E which is more correct from parallelism perspective and why?
will expand into a red giant and will eventually eject OR will expand into a red giant and eventually eject
for those who are interested to solve this question, OA =E[/spoiler]
construction : modifier, modified part
For D :
Modifier compares stars, so the modified part should start with the Sun itself. But, it does not. The modified part tells about the happening in Sun's core.
For E:
modifier compares cases. Hence, per rule the modified part should be a case.
Yes, in E, it is. The case is "once the Sun exhausts the Hydrogen in its core"
Hence, E follows the rule.
Regards,
Harsha
Harsha
- harshavardhanc
- Legendary Member
- Posts: 526
- Joined: Sat Feb 21, 2009 11:47 pm
- Location: India
- Thanked: 68 times
- GMAT Score:680
D is totally incorrect in the meaning which it is conveying. The sentence wants to say that it is Sun which will expand into a red giant and eventually eject. Whereas, D says that Sun's core will expand into a red giant.iamcste wrote:thanks for your feedback, can you also respond to my question regards parallelism in spoiler part?harshavardhanc wrote:[
construction : modifier, modified part
As far as ||ism is concerned, E again is better.
Rather than using this construction : will X and will Y (X and Y being two verbs)
it is more concise to have will X and Y. Will applies to both the verbs : X and Y.
Regards,
Harsha
Harsha
-
- Legendary Member
- Posts: 940
- Joined: Tue Aug 26, 2008 3:22 am
- Thanked: 55 times
- Followed by:1 members
additional questions
1. If A were "Like any star of similar mass, the Sun exhausts the hydrogen in its core, it expands into a red giant, eventually ejecting its outer envelope of gases to become a white dwarf" would it be right?
2. what signals/indicators in the question does prompt us to use a future tense -"will" in correct statement E..
is it word "once" or "eventually" or not underlined expressions of the sentence "to become a X"?
1. If A were "Like any star of similar mass, the Sun exhausts the hydrogen in its core, it expands into a red giant, eventually ejecting its outer envelope of gases to become a white dwarf" would it be right?
2. what signals/indicators in the question does prompt us to use a future tense -"will" in correct statement E..
is it word "once" or "eventually" or not underlined expressions of the sentence "to become a X"?