A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall plan, as well as artifacts, such as glass oil-lamp fragments, found at the site.
(A) A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall plan, as well as
(B) A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, once probably being a church, was indicated by its eastward orientation, overall plan, and
(C) Indicating that a ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church were its eastward orientation and overall plan, but also the
(D) A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicates its eastward orientation and overall plan, as well as the
(E) That a ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church is indicated by its eastward orientation and overall plan, as well as by the
Discussions please. OA [E Why?
Aqaba Jordan OG16
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A ruined structure found at Aqaba,Jordan,was probably a church as indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall plan,as well as artifacts,such as glass-oil lamp fragments,found at the site
A ruined.... phrase correctly modifies the structure Jordan.
The fact that it may be a church is indicated by 3 factors
These 3 are found at site.
Now in given sentence all these 3 do not follow parallel construction with only one by for 2nd item. Hence A is wrong.
now going for other options
(B) A ruined structure found at Aqaba,Jordan,once probably being a church,was indicated by its eastward orientation,overall plan,and
once probably being a church............gives a meaning error spoiled by once and being(for past tense).
(C) Indicating that a ruined structure found at Aqaba,Jordan,was probably a church were its eastward orientation and overall plan,but also the
Using Present continuous tense Indicating for past event is wrong. Also Jordan is a structure and it is not indicating sth. This is wrong meaning wise because of wrong modifier.
not only...........but also......... is also used wrongly
(D) A ruined structure found at Aqaba,Jordan,was probably a church,as indicates its eastward orientation and overall plan,as well as the
present tense indicates changes the whole meaning of the sentence.
(E)That a ruined structure found at Aqaba,Jordan,was probably a church is indicated by its eastward orientation and overall plan,as well as by the
even though, Use of That in modifier part seems somewhat awkward to me, parallel structure in this sentence is well written without error.
That a ruined.... phrase correctly modifies the structure Jordan.
The fact that it may be a church is indicated by 3 factors
A ruined.... phrase correctly modifies the structure Jordan.
The fact that it may be a church is indicated by 3 factors
- its eastward direction
by its overall plan and
as well as artifacts
These 3 are found at site.
Now in given sentence all these 3 do not follow parallel construction with only one by for 2nd item. Hence A is wrong.
now going for other options
(B) A ruined structure found at Aqaba,Jordan,once probably being a church,was indicated by its eastward orientation,overall plan,and
once probably being a church............gives a meaning error spoiled by once and being(for past tense).
(C) Indicating that a ruined structure found at Aqaba,Jordan,was probably a church were its eastward orientation and overall plan,but also the
Using Present continuous tense Indicating for past event is wrong. Also Jordan is a structure and it is not indicating sth. This is wrong meaning wise because of wrong modifier.
not only...........but also......... is also used wrongly
(D) A ruined structure found at Aqaba,Jordan,was probably a church,as indicates its eastward orientation and overall plan,as well as the
present tense indicates changes the whole meaning of the sentence.
(E)That a ruined structure found at Aqaba,Jordan,was probably a church is indicated by its eastward orientation and overall plan,as well as by the
even though, Use of That in modifier part seems somewhat awkward to me, parallel structure in this sentence is well written without error.
That a ruined.... phrase correctly modifies the structure Jordan.
The fact that it may be a church is indicated by 3 factors
- by its eastward direction and its overall plan
by artifacts
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A: as indicatedNeilsheth2 wrote: A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall plan, as well as artifacts, such as glass oil-lamp fragments, found at the site.
(A) A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall plan, as well as
(B) A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, once probably being a church, was indicated by its eastward orientation, overall plan, and
(C) Indicating that a ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church were its eastward orientation and overall plan, but also the
(D) A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicates its eastward orientation and overall plan, as well as the
(E) That a ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church is indicated by its eastward orientation and overall plan, as well as by the
Here, it is not crystal clear WHAT is indicated.
Eliminate A.
B: A ruined structure...was indicated by its orientation.
This meaning is nonsensical:
An ORIENTATION cannot indicate a STRUCTURE.
Eliminate B.
but must serve to connect CONTRASTING IDEAS.
C: its eastward orientation and overall plan, but also the artifacts
Here, the usage of but is inappropriate, since the orientation, the plan and the artifacts are NOT contrasting ideas.
Rather, all three serve THE SAME FUNCTION: they indicate that the ruined structure was probably a church.
Eliminate C.
D: as indicates its eastward orientation and overall plan
Here, indicates (singular) does not agree with its eastward orientation and overall plan (plural subject).
Eliminate D.
The correct answer is E.
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In some cases, a subordinate clause will omit a subject and a verb when their presence is clearly understood.anant03 wrote:Hi GMATGuru ,
Can you please explain more about option A , because I was stuck between A & E . I choose E over A because E is parallel than A.
Please explain sir.
Thanks.
Such a clause is called a VERBLESS clause.
Generally, the omitted verb is a form of TO BE (is, are, etc.).
SC12 in the OG12:
Rising inventories, if not accompanied by corresponding increases in sales, can lead to production cutbacks that would hamper economic growth.
Conveyed meaning:
Rising inventories, if [rising inventories are] not accompanied by corresponding increases in sales, can lead to production cutbacks that would hamper economic growth.
Here, the subject and verb in brackets are omitted, but their presence is clearly understood.
Rule:
If a subject is omitted, It must be CRYSTAL CLEAR what subject is intended.
Answer choice A in the SC above:
A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation.
Here, the implied subject of the verbless as-clause seems to be a church -- the nearest preceding noun -- with the result that church must also serve as the referent for its.
Conveyed meaning:
A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as [a church is] indicated in the church's eastward orientation.
This meaning is nonsensical.
Eliminate A.
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Hello Mitch,GMATGuruNY wrote:In some cases, a subordinate clause will omit a subject and a verb when their presence is clearly understood.anant03 wrote:Hi GMATGuru ,
Can you please explain more about option A , because I was stuck between A & E . I choose E over A because E is parallel than A.
Please explain sir.
Thanks.
Such a clause is called a VERBLESS clause.
Generally, the omitted verb is a form of TO BE (is, are, etc.).
SC12 in the OG12:
Rising inventories, if not accompanied by corresponding increases in sales, can lead to production cutbacks that would hamper economic growth.
Conveyed meaning:
Rising inventories, if [rising inventories are] not accompanied by corresponding increases in sales, can lead to production cutbacks that would hamper economic growth.
Here, the subject and verb in brackets are omitted, but their presence is clearly understood.
Rule:
If a subject is omitted, It must be CRYSTAL CLEAR what subject is intended.
Answer choice A in the SC above:
A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation.
Here, the implied subject of the verbless as-clause seems to be a church -- the nearest preceding noun -- with the result that church must also serve as the referent for its.
Conveyed meaning:
A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as [a church is] indicated in the church's eastward orientation.
This meaning is nonsensical.
Eliminate A.
can A be crossed out also because of faulty parallellism?
indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall plan,
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Neilsheth2 wrote: A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall plan, as well as artifacts, such as glass oil-lamp fragments, found at the site.
(A) A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall plan, as well as
this sentence mean
the structure was a church as the structure was indicated in eastward orientation. " as " here mean "in the same way that". this meaning make no sense.
indicated ... " is a participle 2 phrase and refers to subject of preceding clause .
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I am still confused about this question. In choice A, I think it's church indicated, church is the subject of verb indicated, and indicated is the past participle to show passivity.GMATGuruNY wrote:A: as indicatedNeilsheth2 wrote: A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall plan, as well as artifacts, such as glass oil-lamp fragments, found at the site.
(A) A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall plan, as well as
(B) A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, once probably being a church, was indicated by its eastward orientation, overall plan, and
(C) Indicating that a ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church were its eastward orientation and overall plan, but also the
(D) A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicates its eastward orientation and overall plan, as well as the
(E) That a ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church is indicated by its eastward orientation and overall plan, as well as by the
Here, it is not crystal clear WHAT is indicated.
Eliminate A.
B: A ruined structure...was indicated by its orientation.
This meaning is nonsensical:
An ORIENTATION cannot indicate a STRUCTURE.
Eliminate B.
but must serve to connect CONTRASTING IDEAS.
C: its eastward orientation and overall plan, but also the artifacts
Here, the usage of but is inappropriate, since the orientation, the plan and the artifacts are NOT contrasting ideas.
Rather, all three serve THE SAME FUNCTION: they indicate that the ruined structure was probably a church.
Eliminate C.
D: as indicates its eastward orientation and overall plan
Here, indicates (singular) does not agree with its eastward orientation and overall plan (plural subject).
Eliminate D.
The correct answer is E.
Also, in the explanation, OG said E's expression (by) (its) A+ B, as well as (by) C. Why the structure is not the by A and B as well as C or by A and by B as well as by C?
Thanks in advance !
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Hi GurunNY,GMATGuruNY wrote:Rule:
If a subject is omitted, It must be CRYSTAL CLEAR what subject is intended.
Answer choice A in the SC above:
A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation.
Here, the implied subject of the verbless as-clause seems to be a church -- the nearest preceding noun -- with the result that church must also serve as the referent for its.
it is new for me.
if a cause omits object / verb, then the omitted subject must be the noun preceding immediately ?
why not omitted subject is structure?
please give me more further explanation.
thanks a lot,
have a nice day
>_~
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Thanks for your detailed explanation!GMATGuruNY wrote:In some cases, a subordinate clause will omit a subject and a verb when their presence is clearly understood.anant03 wrote:Hi GMATGuru ,
Can you please explain more about option A , because I was stuck between A & E . I choose E over A because E is parallel than A.
Please explain sir.
Thanks.
Such a clause is called a VERBLESS clause.
Generally, the omitted verb is a form of TO BE (is, are, etc.).
SC12 in the OG12:
Rising inventories, if not accompanied by corresponding increases in sales, can lead to production cutbacks that would hamper economic growth.
Conveyed meaning:
Rising inventories, if [rising inventories are] not accompanied by corresponding increases in sales, can lead to production cutbacks that would hamper economic growth.
Here, the subject and verb in brackets are omitted, but their presence is clearly understood.
Rule:
If a subject is omitted, It must be CRYSTAL CLEAR what subject is intended.
Answer choice A in the SC above:
A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation.
Here, the implied subject of the verbless as-clause seems to be a church -- the nearest preceding noun -- with the result that church must also serve as the referent for its.
Conveyed meaning:
A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as [a church is] indicated in the church's eastward orientation.
This meaning is nonsensical.
Eliminate A.
The explanation is that The subject of "as indicated..."is church because the pronoun its refers to the church.My question is that if there is no such pronoun to provide information, how to find the subject of the as-clause?(such as although clause,though clause etc. )We should find the nearest noun or find the subject of the main clause?
Thanks!
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A verbless clause must be as close as possible to its implied subject.
Check my post dated 28 October 2016:
https://www.beatthegmat.com/on-earth-am ... tml#784522
If a clause omits a subject, the intended subject must be CRYSTAL CLEAR.
If the intended subject is NOT crystal clear, eliminate the answer choice.
Check my post dated 28 October 2016:
https://www.beatthegmat.com/on-earth-am ... tml#784522
If a clause omits a subject, the intended subject must be CRYSTAL CLEAR.
If the intended subject is NOT crystal clear, eliminate the answer choice.
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I have seen the link,that is quite helpful!Thanks so much!GMATGuruNY wrote:A verbless clause must be as close as possible to its implied subject.
Check my post dated 28 October 2016:
https://www.beatthegmat.com/on-earth-am ... tml#784522
If a clause omits a subject, the intended subject must be CRYSTAL CLEAR.
If the intended subject is NOT crystal clear, eliminate the answer choice.
the choice C&E told me the rule that the verb-less clause must be placed as close as possible to the omitted subject!
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Hi Mitch,GMATGuruNY wrote:In some cases, a subordinate clause will omit a subject and a verb when their presence is clearly understood.anant03 wrote:Hi GMATGuru ,
Can you please explain more about option A , because I was stuck between A & E . I choose E over A because E is parallel than A.
Please explain sir.
Thanks.
Such a clause is called a VERBLESS clause.
Generally, the omitted verb is a form of TO BE (is, are, etc.).
SC12 in the OG12:
Rising inventories, if not accompanied by corresponding increases in sales, can lead to production cutbacks that would hamper economic growth.
Conveyed meaning:
Rising inventories, if [rising inventories are] not accompanied by corresponding increases in sales, can lead to production cutbacks that would hamper economic growth.
Here, the subject and verb in brackets are omitted, but their presence is clearly understood.
Rule:
If a subject is omitted, It must be CRYSTAL CLEAR what subject is intended.
Answer choice A in the SC above:
A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as indicated in its eastward orientation.
Here, the implied subject of the verbless as-clause seems to be a church -- the nearest preceding noun -- with the result that church must also serve as the referent for its.
Conveyed meaning:
A ruined structure found at Aqaba, Jordan, was probably a church, as [a church is] indicated in the church's eastward orientation.
This meaning is nonsensical.
Eliminate A.
In (A) it is not clear what the subject of "as" is.
In (D) is this also true?
Also, in most choices, the antecedent of "its" is "a structure" or "a church"?
Thanks in advance.
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A: indicated in its eastward orientation and by its overall planaflaam wrote:Hello Mitch,
can A be crossed out also because of faulty parallellism?
Each of the colored portions above is an adverbial prepositional phrase serving to modify indicated.
Since the two colored phrases serve the same function, they are grammatically parallel.
However, the red phrase distorts the intended meaning.
Intended meaning:
The eastward orientation indicates that the ruined structure was probably a church.
Since the eastward orientation indicates the conclusion in green, the conclusion in green is indicated not IN the eastward orientation but BY the eastward orientation, as expressed in the OA:
That a ruined structure...was probably a church is indicated BY its eastward orientation.
Since the red portion in A does not convey the intended meaning, eliminate A.
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The errors in D are different.exc4libur wrote:In (A) it is not clear what the subject of "as" is.
In (D) is this also true?
Generally, a subject should PRECEDE its verb, unless there is a clear justification for placing the subject after the verb.
D: A ruined structure was probably a church, as indicates its eastward orientation.
Here, the subject for the verb in blue seems to be the noun phrase in red, as follows:
A ruined structure was probably a church, as its eastward orientation indicates.
in D, there is no justification for placing the subject in red after the verb in blue.
Also, a reader might wonder whether its serves to refer to structure or to church.
Further, it is not crystal clear what exactly the orientation indicates.
For all these reasons, eliminate D.
The intended antecedent for its is structure.Also, in most choices, the antecedent of "its" is "a structure" or "a church"?
OA: That a ruined structure was probably a church is indicated by its eastward orientation.
Conveyed meaning:
The eastern orientation of the structure indicates that the structure was probably a church.
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