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goelmohit2002
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Hi All,
As per Kaplan, pronoun "One" cannot refer to anything except "one"....
e.g. that Kaplan gives is:
A person should never do XYZ.....if "one" want PQR.
Here Kaplan says that pronoun "one" cannot refer to "A person".
But it seems that the same is not followed by GMAT strictly....Can someone please tell what is the case? For e.g. in the below question from OG 10, Q9...
The reason to kick out A and B that OG gives is "The pronoun that in A and B should be deleted, since the pronoun one is sufficient to introduce the modifier and the sentence is more fluid without that."
Kindly help me understand this concept.
===============================================
Astronomers at the Palomar Observatory have discovered a distant supernova explosion, one that they believe is a type previously unknown to science.
(A) that they believe is
(B) that they believe it to be
(C) they believe that it is of
(D) they believe that is
(E) they believe to be of
As per Kaplan, pronoun "One" cannot refer to anything except "one"....
e.g. that Kaplan gives is:
A person should never do XYZ.....if "one" want PQR.
Here Kaplan says that pronoun "one" cannot refer to "A person".
But it seems that the same is not followed by GMAT strictly....Can someone please tell what is the case? For e.g. in the below question from OG 10, Q9...
The reason to kick out A and B that OG gives is "The pronoun that in A and B should be deleted, since the pronoun one is sufficient to introduce the modifier and the sentence is more fluid without that."
Kindly help me understand this concept.
===============================================
Astronomers at the Palomar Observatory have discovered a distant supernova explosion, one that they believe is a type previously unknown to science.
(A) that they believe is
(B) that they believe it to be
(C) they believe that it is of
(D) they believe that is
(E) they believe to be of












