-
cbenk121
- Master | Next Rank: 500 Posts
- Posts: 202
- Joined: Tue Sep 08, 2009 11:34 pm
- Thanked: 15 times
- GMAT Score:760
Here I have three statements:
1) She is thought to be secretly wealthy.
2) She thinks of them as heroes.
3) They are thought of by her as heroes.
#1 and #2 are correct, while #3 is incorrect. Why is #3 incorrect?
There is no explanation provided; my guess is that "by her" is a prepositional phrase instead of noun, which makes it an incorrectly constructed idiom. To fix, I would think to move "by her" outside. However, can not use that construction since I don't have a noun. So I use construction from statement #1: "They are thought to be heroes by her."
Am I correct in my reasoning here?
1) She is thought to be secretly wealthy.
2) She thinks of them as heroes.
3) They are thought of by her as heroes.
#1 and #2 are correct, while #3 is incorrect. Why is #3 incorrect?
There is no explanation provided; my guess is that "by her" is a prepositional phrase instead of noun, which makes it an incorrectly constructed idiom. To fix, I would think to move "by her" outside. However, can not use that construction since I don't have a noun. So I use construction from statement #1: "They are thought to be heroes by her."
Am I correct in my reasoning here?












