C:
Doris Schopper became president of the international council of Medecins sans Frontieres, in English named as "Doctors Without Borders."
Aditya, as you and Rich have noted, the organization was NAMED not in English but in the original language.
"Doctors without Borders" is simply a TRANSLATION of the original name.
Hence, C does not convey the intended meaning.
Other reasons to eliminate C:
In A,
known is placed adjacent to what it's modifying (
Medecins sans Frontieres).
In C,
named is NOT placed adjacent to what it's modifying (
Medecins sans Frontieres).
Since a modifier should be placed AS CLOSE AS POSSIBLE to what it's modifying, eliminate C and choose A.
named as is unidiomatic.
Incorrect:
John was named as president.
Correct:
John was named president.
Also, if you are debating between A and another answer choice, and you cannot cite a concrete error in A, eliminate the other answer choice and pick A.
In general, it's safer to stick with the original sentence.
aditya8062 wrote:Thanks Rich
i got this question from the gmat prep . what amazes me is the fact that now GMAC is making options a lot more difficult to eliminate . unlike previously, where one could eliminate the options based on bad grammar , now MEANING is playing a very important role . i feel that this CHANGE gives natives a lot more advantage than it gives to non natives .
Consider this change an OPPORTUNITY.
Previously, test-takers were required to know arcane idioms and little-used grammatical structures.
Recent GMATs enable test-takers to eliminate answer choices simply by applying a bit of reasoning.
Before examining the answer choices, try to determine what the sentence is trying to say.
In many cases, several answer choices can be eliminated simply because they do not convey a sensical meaning.
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