In their most recent press release, the new management stated that they plan to expand into the global software market via a series of acquisitions in Asia and Latin America.
A) their most recent press release, the new management stated that they plan to expand
B) its most recent press release, the new management stated that they plan to expand
C) its most recent press release, the new management stated that it plans on expanding
D) its most recent press release, the new management stated an intention to expand
E) its most recent press release, the new management stated their intention to expand
Could somebody tell me what is the correct idiom "plan to" or "plan on".
:roll:
This appeared on one of the MGMAT CATs. I selected 'C' but 'D' the correct answer is 'D'.
Thanks in advance.
"Plan to" Vs "Plan on"
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MGMAT's explaination is pasted below. But I am confused to know that "Plan on" is idiomatically incorrect, with the correct idiom being "plan on".
GMAT instructors, please throw some light on this!!!! Thanks.
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The original sentence uses the incorrect plural pronoun “their” to refer to the singular noun “management.” Similarly, the second plural pronoun “they” is also inconsistent with its singular antecedent “management.”
(A) This answer choice is incorrect as it repeats the original sentence.
(B) This answer choice corrects one of the original pronoun errors by changing the plural pronoun "their" to the singular pronoun "its," but fails to correct the second pronoun problem, retaining the plural pronoun “they,” which is inconsistent with the singular noun “management.”
(C) This answer choice uses the unidiomatic construction “to plan on” rather than the correct idiom “to plan to.”
(D) CORRECT. This answer choice correctly uses the singular pronoun "its" to refer to the singular noun "management," and eliminates the use of the incorrect plural pronoun "they."
(E) In this answer choice, the plural pronoun “their" does not agree with the singular noun “management.”
GMAT instructors, please throw some light on this!!!! Thanks.
====================================
The original sentence uses the incorrect plural pronoun “their” to refer to the singular noun “management.” Similarly, the second plural pronoun “they” is also inconsistent with its singular antecedent “management.”
(A) This answer choice is incorrect as it repeats the original sentence.
(B) This answer choice corrects one of the original pronoun errors by changing the plural pronoun "their" to the singular pronoun "its," but fails to correct the second pronoun problem, retaining the plural pronoun “they,” which is inconsistent with the singular noun “management.”
(C) This answer choice uses the unidiomatic construction “to plan on” rather than the correct idiom “to plan to.”
(D) CORRECT. This answer choice correctly uses the singular pronoun "its" to refer to the singular noun "management," and eliminates the use of the incorrect plural pronoun "they."
(E) In this answer choice, the plural pronoun “their" does not agree with the singular noun “management.”
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I might be wrong , but to plan on is more of an American usage and an accepted form in colloquial lingo. However on GMAT formal idiom is always preferred which "to plan to" is.
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[/quote] In their most recent press release, the new management stated that they plan to expand into the global software market via a series of acquisitions in Asia and Latin America.
A) their most recent press release, the new management stated that they plan to expand
B) its most recent press release, the new management stated that they plan to expand
C) its most recent press release, the new management stated that it plans on expanding
D) its most recent press release, the new management stated an intention to expand
E) its most recent press release, the new management stated their intention to expand
Could somebody tell me what is the correct idiom "plan to" or "plan on".
Rolling Eyes
This appeared on one of the MGMAT CATs. I selected 'C' but 'D' the correct answer is 'D'.
Thanks in advance.[/quote]
are
both :
STATED THAT / STATED === >> Both acceptable!!?
Are both :
I plan on doing this job
I plan to do this job
A) their most recent press release, the new management stated that they plan to expand
B) its most recent press release, the new management stated that they plan to expand
C) its most recent press release, the new management stated that it plans on expanding
D) its most recent press release, the new management stated an intention to expand
E) its most recent press release, the new management stated their intention to expand
Could somebody tell me what is the correct idiom "plan to" or "plan on".
Rolling Eyes
This appeared on one of the MGMAT CATs. I selected 'C' but 'D' the correct answer is 'D'.
Thanks in advance.[/quote]
are
both :
STATED THAT / STATED === >> Both acceptable!!?
Are both :
I plan on doing this job
I plan to do this job
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- Stacey Koprince
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Received a PM asking me to respond.
People say "plan on" all the time. We also use all kinds of other grammatically incorrect stuff every day, but the GMAT doesn't let us get away with it.
Here's my rule for studying idioms: if I haven't seen it in an official question, it's not high on my priority list. Why? Because there are thousands and thousands of idioms in the language, and I can't study them all. I'm most interested in studying the ones that have actually been tested on the exam.
This one (although it is one of ours, yes) does not follow my rule. So it's not high on my list of things to worry about.
(By the way, how do we know what the test has actually tested? The idioms chapter in the 3rd and 4th editions of our SC strategy guide was developed from official question sources only. That doesn't mean it covers every idiom ever tested on the GMAT - but every idiom on the list was officially tested at some point. You can add to the list yourself as you do questions from official sources and see other idioms you didn't know.)
People say "plan on" all the time. We also use all kinds of other grammatically incorrect stuff every day, but the GMAT doesn't let us get away with it.
Here's my rule for studying idioms: if I haven't seen it in an official question, it's not high on my priority list. Why? Because there are thousands and thousands of idioms in the language, and I can't study them all. I'm most interested in studying the ones that have actually been tested on the exam.
This one (although it is one of ours, yes) does not follow my rule. So it's not high on my list of things to worry about.
(By the way, how do we know what the test has actually tested? The idioms chapter in the 3rd and 4th editions of our SC strategy guide was developed from official question sources only. That doesn't mean it covers every idiom ever tested on the GMAT - but every idiom on the list was officially tested at some point. You can add to the list yourself as you do questions from official sources and see other idioms you didn't know.)
Please note: I do not use the Private Messaging system! I will not see any PMs that you send to me!!
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UPDATE:
we're going to have to edit this question, as "plan on VERBing" is actually accepted by GMAC as a valid idiom.
see here:
https://www.manhattangmat.com/forums/acc ... t5501.html
that's an official GMATPREP problem, in which "to plan on VERBing" is used in a correct answer.
in that problem, the impetus for using "plan on practicing" (rather than "plan to practice") is to avoid the ugliness of the repeated to" ("...to plan to practice..."). the gmat actually has a long, long history of using secondary, less commonly accepted constructions in order to avoid things like "X to Y to Z", "X of Y of Z", "X that Y that Z", etc.
we're going to have to edit this question, as "plan on VERBing" is actually accepted by GMAC as a valid idiom.
see here:
https://www.manhattangmat.com/forums/acc ... t5501.html
that's an official GMATPREP problem, in which "to plan on VERBing" is used in a correct answer.
in that problem, the impetus for using "plan on practicing" (rather than "plan to practice") is to avoid the ugliness of the repeated to" ("...to plan to practice..."). the gmat actually has a long, long history of using secondary, less commonly accepted constructions in order to avoid things like "X to Y to Z", "X of Y of Z", "X that Y that Z", etc.
Ron has been teaching various standardized tests for 20 years.
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Pueden hacerle preguntas a Ron en castellano
Potete chiedere domande a Ron in italiano
On peut poser des questions à Ron en français
Voit esittää kysymyksiä Ron:lle myös suomeksi
--
Quand on se sent bien dans un vêtement, tout peut arriver. Un bon vêtement, c'est un passeport pour le bonheur.
Yves Saint-Laurent
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Great catch, Ron! I'm about to temporarily remove this question from our database so that we can re-write wrong answer C (to make sure that it doesn't hinge on this idiom issue alone).
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