India's rice production

This topic has expert replies
Master | Next Rank: 500 Posts
Posts: 234
Joined: Tue May 31, 2016 1:40 am
Thanked: 3 times

India's rice production

by Needgmat » Tue Jun 14, 2016 9:51 am
In 1979 lack of rain reduced India's rice production to about 41 million tons, nearly 25 percent less than those of the 1978 harvest.

A) less than those of the 1978 harvest

B) less than the the 1978 harvest

C) less that 1978

D) fewer than 1978

E) fewer than that of India's 1978 harvest

OAB

Doubt: LESS is used with uncountable nouns and FEWER is used with countable nouns. So why [spoiler]D& E[/spoiler] are incorrect?

Also in OA why HARVEST is required? Why not C


Hi Experts ,

Please explain.

Many thanks in advance.

Kavin

User avatar
GMAT Instructor
Posts: 15539
Joined: Tue May 25, 2010 12:04 pm
Location: New York, NY
Thanked: 13060 times
Followed by:1906 members
GMAT Score:790

by GMATGuruNY » Sat Jun 18, 2016 2:41 am
In 1979 lack of rain reduced India's rice production to about 41 million tons, nearly 25 percent less than those of the 1978 harvest.

A: less than those of the 1978 harvest.
B: less than the 1978 harvest.
C: less than 1978.
D: fewer than 1978.
E: less than that of India's 1978 harvest.
In E, that seems to refer to production. Thus, that of India's 1978 harvest implies the PRODUCTION of India's HARVEST - an error of redundancy, since the PRODUCTION and the HARVEST are the same thing. Eliminate E.

C and D each seem to compare the rice production to 1978. The PRODUCTION cannot be compared to a YEAR. Eliminate C and D.

In A, those seems to refer to tons, implying that the TONS of the rice production in 1979 are being compared to the TONS of the 1978 harvest. Not the intended meaning. The intention here is to compare the PRODUCTION in one year to the HARVEST in the other. Eliminate A.

The correct answer is B.
Doubt: LESS is used with uncountable nouns and FEWER is used with countable nouns. So why [spoiler]D& E[/spoiler] are incorrect?
Generally:
less serves to refer to any noun that takes a SINGULAR VERB.
fewer serves to refer to any noun that takes a PLURAL VERB.

Normally, expressions of money, weight, time and distance take a SINGULAR VERB.
Five dollars IS a good price.
41 million tons IS equal to 82,000,000,000 pounds.
Twenty minutes IS the amount of time allotted for the first section of the test.
One hundred miles IS not a great distance.


Since 41 million tons takes a singular verb, the correct modifier is not fewer but LESS.
Private tutor exclusively for the GMAT and GRE, with over 20 years of experience.
Followed here and elsewhere by over 1900 test-takers.
I have worked with students based in the US, Australia, Taiwan, China, Tajikistan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia -- a long list of countries.
My students have been admitted to HBS, CBS, Tuck, Yale, Stern, Fuqua -- a long list of top programs.

As a tutor, I don't simply teach you how I would approach problems.
I unlock the best way for YOU to solve problems.

For more information, please email me (Mitch Hunt) at [email protected].
Student Review #1
Student Review #2
Student Review #3

Master | Next Rank: 500 Posts
Posts: 234
Joined: Tue May 31, 2016 1:40 am
Thanked: 3 times

by Needgmat » Sat Jun 18, 2016 10:18 am
Doubt: LESS is used with uncountable nouns and FEWER is used with countable nouns. So why [spoiler]D& E[/spoiler] are incorrect?
Generally:
less serves to refer to any noun that takes a SINGULAR VERB.
fewer serves to refer to any noun that takes a PLURAL VERB.

Normally, expressions of money, weight, time and distance take a SINGULAR VERB.
Five dollars IS a good price.
41 million tons IS equal to 82,000,000,000 pounds.
Twenty minutes IS the amount of time allotted for the first section of the test.
One hundred miles IS not a great distance.


Since 41 million tons takes a singular verb, the correct modifier is not fewer but LESS.
[/quote]

Hi GMATGuruNY ,

Thank you so much for your explanation.

What I understood from your explanation is that LESS is used with uncountable nouns and FEWER is used with countable nouns, but in question, which shows weight, time, expression of money, I should use LESS over FEWER with SINGULAR VERB.

Please confirm, if my understanding is correct.

Thanks,

Kavin

Master | Next Rank: 500 Posts
Posts: 234
Joined: Tue May 31, 2016 1:40 am
Thanked: 3 times

by Needgmat » Mon Jun 20, 2016 8:17 pm
Hi GMATGuruNY ,

Please confirm, if my understanding is correct.

Thanks,

Kavin

User avatar
GMAT Instructor
Posts: 15539
Joined: Tue May 25, 2010 12:04 pm
Location: New York, NY
Thanked: 13060 times
Followed by:1906 members
GMAT Score:790

by GMATGuruNY » Tue Jun 21, 2016 5:05 am
Needgmat wrote:Hi GMATGuruNY ,

Thank you so much for your explanation.

What I understood from your explanation is that LESS is used with uncountable nouns and FEWER is used with countable nouns, but in question, which shows weight, time, expression of money, I should use LESS over FEWER with SINGULAR VERB.

Please confirm, if my understanding is correct.

Thanks,

Kavin
Your understanding seems correct.

To sum up:
For countable nouns, we use fewer.
For uncountable nouns, we use less.
A noun that takes a singular verb is considered uncountable.
Quantities of weight, time, distance and money take a singular verb and thus are considered uncountable, with the result that we use LESS for these sorts of quantities.
Private tutor exclusively for the GMAT and GRE, with over 20 years of experience.
Followed here and elsewhere by over 1900 test-takers.
I have worked with students based in the US, Australia, Taiwan, China, Tajikistan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia -- a long list of countries.
My students have been admitted to HBS, CBS, Tuck, Yale, Stern, Fuqua -- a long list of top programs.

As a tutor, I don't simply teach you how I would approach problems.
I unlock the best way for YOU to solve problems.

For more information, please email me (Mitch Hunt) at [email protected].
Student Review #1
Student Review #2
Student Review #3

Master | Next Rank: 500 Posts
Posts: 234
Joined: Tue May 31, 2016 1:40 am
Thanked: 3 times

by Needgmat » Tue Jun 21, 2016 10:46 pm
Hi GMATGuruNY ,

Thank you so much for your great explanation.

Thanks,

Kavin