comparisons with "like"
he treated his date like a gentleman (example by ron: subject - gentleman)
he treated his date,like a gentleman (definitely same comparison)
is it always the case that "like" makes the comparison with the subject??
comparisons using "like"
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- VivianKerr
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"Like" is a keyword that indicates a comparison, but there are other common keywords, such as "whereas" that can set up a comparison. But yes, we see "like" used quite a bit on the GMAT to set up a comparison.
Check out this Veritas question:
Like the traditional lutefisk and klippfisk that is prepared with dried cod steeped in lye as refrigeration was non-existent in early Norwegian homes, the bacalhau spoiling in early Portuguese dishes was prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients and make the fish tastier.
Notice how "like" sets up the comparison, but we cannot compare "lutefisk and klippfisk" to "the spoiling."
The correct choice will compare fish to fish, "lutefisk and klippfisk" to "bacalhau." Let's look at the answer choices:
(A) the bacalhau spoiling in early Portuguese dishes was prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients and make
(B) the bacalhau's spoiling in early Portuguese dishes is prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients, making
(C) that the bacalhau spoiled in early Portuguese dishes was prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients, making
(D) early Portuguese dishes prevented bacalhau from spoiling using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients and make
(E) bacalhau itself was prevented from spoiling in early Portuguese dishes using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients, making
The correct answer is (E). Notice that the verbs "to preserve" and "making" are no longer parallel, but that can be overlooked since "making" is correctly used as a modifier in this revision. The most important thing is to fix the comparison (the original error) without introducing new errors.
Check out this Veritas question:
Like the traditional lutefisk and klippfisk that is prepared with dried cod steeped in lye as refrigeration was non-existent in early Norwegian homes, the bacalhau spoiling in early Portuguese dishes was prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients and make the fish tastier.
Notice how "like" sets up the comparison, but we cannot compare "lutefisk and klippfisk" to "the spoiling."
The correct choice will compare fish to fish, "lutefisk and klippfisk" to "bacalhau." Let's look at the answer choices:
(A) the bacalhau spoiling in early Portuguese dishes was prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients and make
(B) the bacalhau's spoiling in early Portuguese dishes is prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients, making
(C) that the bacalhau spoiled in early Portuguese dishes was prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients, making
(D) early Portuguese dishes prevented bacalhau from spoiling using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients and make
(E) bacalhau itself was prevented from spoiling in early Portuguese dishes using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients, making
The correct answer is (E). Notice that the verbs "to preserve" and "making" are no longer parallel, but that can be overlooked since "making" is correctly used as a modifier in this revision. The most important thing is to fix the comparison (the original error) without introducing new errors.
Vivian Kerr
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Thank you for all the "thanks" and "follows"!
GMAT Rockstar, Tutor
https://www.GMATrockstar.com
https://www.yelp.com/biz/gmat-rockstar-los-angeles
Former Kaplan and Grockit instructor, freelance GMAT content creator, now offering affordable, effective, Skype-tutoring for the GMAT at $150/hr. Contact: [email protected]
Thank you for all the "thanks" and "follows"!
thanxx vivian for the description through example.VivianKerr wrote:"Like" is a keyword that indicates a comparison, but there are other common keywords, such as "whereas" that can set up a comparison. But yes, we see "like" used quite a bit on the GMAT to set up a comparison.
Check out this Veritas question:
Like the traditional lutefisk and klippfisk that is prepared with dried cod steeped in lye as refrigeration was non-existent in early Norwegian homes, the bacalhau spoiling in early Portuguese dishes was prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients and make the fish tastier.
Notice how "like" sets up the comparison, but we cannot compare "lutefisk and klippfisk" to "the spoiling."
The correct choice will compare fish to fish, "lutefisk and klippfisk" to "bacalhau." Let's look at the answer choices:
(A) the bacalhau spoiling in early Portuguese dishes was prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients and make
(B) the bacalhau's spoiling in early Portuguese dishes is prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients, making
(C) that the bacalhau spoiled in early Portuguese dishes was prevented using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients, making
(D) early Portuguese dishes prevented bacalhau from spoiling using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients and make
(E) bacalhau itself was prevented from spoiling in early Portuguese dishes using drying and salting techniques to preserve nutrients, making
The correct answer is (E). Notice that the verbs "to preserve" and "making" are no longer parallel, but that can be overlooked since "making" is correctly used as a modifier in this revision. The most important thing is to fix the comparison (the original error) without introducing new errors.
my doubt in sentences stated above in ma quote : like is making the comparison with the subject (used with comma or without comma)...is it always so...no ambiguity of comparison with the "object" (here-"date")
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I feel there is ambiguity here. Better way would be:sukkhi wrote:comparisons with "like"
he treated his date like a gentleman (example by ron: subject - gentleman)
he treated his date,like a gentleman (definitely same comparison)
is it always the case that "like" makes the comparison with the subject??
Like a gentleman, he treated his date.