Can someone please help me with the following question?
It is well known in the supermarket industry that how items are placed on shelves and the frequency of
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
(A) the frequency of inventory turnovers can be
(B) the frequency of inventory turnovers is often
(C) the frequency with which the inventory turns over is often
(D) how frequently is the inventory turned over are often
(E) how frequently the inventory turns over can be
I could narrow down my options to D and E but could not decide on which one and for what reason.....
OG 10 - Q 93
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OA is E. D swaps subject verb order. i.e. is the inventory instead of the inventory in E.Poornima wrote:Can someone please help me with the following question?
It is well known in the supermarket industry that how items are placed on shelves and the frequency of
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
(A) the frequency of inventory turnovers can be
(B) the frequency of inventory turnovers is often
(C) the frequency with which the inventory turns over is often
(D) how frequently is the inventory turned over are often
(E) how frequently the inventory turns over can be
I could narrow down my options to D and E but could not decide on which one and for what reason.....
- codesnooker
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D option has a couple of issues:Poornima wrote:Can someone please help me with the following question?
It is well known in the supermarket industry that how items are placed on shelves and the frequency of
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
(A) the frequency of inventory turnovers can be
(B) the frequency of inventory turnovers is often
(C) the frequency with which the inventory turns over is often
(D) how frequently is the inventory turned over are often
(E) how frequently the inventory turns over can be
I could narrow down my options to D and E but could not decide on which one and for what reason.....
The 'how frequently" clause is started by how, a relative pronoun, so the sequence is: subject + (auxiliary) + verb . If it is a independent question, started by a interrogative pronoun, the sequence is how + auxiliary + subject + verb.
Often is not redundant with "frequently", because they are referring to different things. But "often" really changed the meaning of original sentence.
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I am confused whether we shud go for turnover / turns over ...
Turnover - an act or result of turning over; upset
If turnover is the right then it shud be option A.
moreover abt parallelism
It is well known in the supermarket industry that how items are placed on shelves and the frequency of
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
that how is nt it parallel to both the sentences before and after 'AND' , so why do we shud repeat how again after 'AND'
Please let me know if I am wrong
what is OA?
Turnover - an act or result of turning over; upset
If turnover is the right then it shud be option A.
moreover abt parallelism
It is well known in the supermarket industry that how items are placed on shelves and the frequency of
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
that how is nt it parallel to both the sentences before and after 'AND' , so why do we shud repeat how again after 'AND'
Please let me know if I am wrong
what is OA?
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OA answer is E I thought D is out for redundant are often. Can anyone give a detailed explanation ?
- arora007
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Hey.... I had logged in just to post this query and you solved it!!tomato1 wrote:Also in option D, frequently and often have same meaning.
IMO E
thankx
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I am not able to get to the right choice between D and E.............can someone explain in detail why E is wright and D is wrong..........
It is well known in the supermarket industry that how items are placed on shelves and the frequency of
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
(A) the frequency of inventory turnovers can be
(B) the frequency of inventory turnovers is often
(C) the frequency with which the inventory turns over is often
(D) how frequently is the inventory turned over are often
(E) how frequently the inventory turns over can be
Parallelism:
How X and how Y--is the parallelism tested in this sentence.
==> This rule helps us eliminate A, B, and C.
We are between D and E. In the option D, "How frequently is the inventory turned over" has a problem. We normally use auxiliary verb(s) before subject in case of interrogative sentence. The option D could be correct is it were "How frequently the inventory is turned over". Again two clauses have been connected, and a compound subject has been made. It is not correct. We are finally left with E, the best answer.
Thanks.
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
(A) the frequency of inventory turnovers can be
(B) the frequency of inventory turnovers is often
(C) the frequency with which the inventory turns over is often
(D) how frequently is the inventory turned over are often
(E) how frequently the inventory turns over can be
Parallelism:
How X and how Y--is the parallelism tested in this sentence.
==> This rule helps us eliminate A, B, and C.
We are between D and E. In the option D, "How frequently is the inventory turned over" has a problem. We normally use auxiliary verb(s) before subject in case of interrogative sentence. The option D could be correct is it were "How frequently the inventory is turned over". Again two clauses have been connected, and a compound subject has been made. It is not correct. We are finally left with E, the best answer.
Thanks.
- gmat_perfect
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It is well known in the supermarket industry that how items are placed on shelves and the frequency of
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
(A) the frequency of inventory turnovers can be
(B) the frequency of inventory turnovers is often
(C) the frequency with which the inventory turns over is often
(D) how frequently is the inventory turned over are often
(E) how frequently the inventory turns over can be
First: Parallelism=> How x and how Y is the paralleism. We can eliminate the option A, B, and C.
We are left with D and E.
In the option D, "how frequently is the inventory turned over" is a problem. We know, auxiliary verb is usually used after subject. In case of interrogative sentence, we use auxiliary verb before subject. In the option D, the auxiliary verb "is" has been wrongly used before verb. We are left with E.
Answer is E.
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
(A) the frequency of inventory turnovers can be
(B) the frequency of inventory turnovers is often
(C) the frequency with which the inventory turns over is often
(D) how frequently is the inventory turned over are often
(E) how frequently the inventory turns over can be
First: Parallelism=> How x and how Y is the paralleism. We can eliminate the option A, B, and C.
We are left with D and E.
In the option D, "how frequently is the inventory turned over" is a problem. We know, auxiliary verb is usually used after subject. In case of interrogative sentence, we use auxiliary verb before subject. In the option D, the auxiliary verb "is" has been wrongly used before verb. We are left with E.
Answer is E.
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excellent gmat_perfect .little correction i think :
In the option D, "how frequently is the inventory turned over" is a problem. We know, auxiliary verb is usually used after subject. In case of interrogative sentence, we use auxiliary verb before subject. In the option D, the auxiliary verb "is" has been wrongly used before verb. We are left with E.
bolded part should be "before subject" not "before verb" .
In the option D, "how frequently is the inventory turned over" is a problem. We know, auxiliary verb is usually used after subject. In case of interrogative sentence, we use auxiliary verb before subject. In the option D, the auxiliary verb "is" has been wrongly used before verb. We are left with E.
bolded part should be "before subject" not "before verb" .
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Hi Guys, really struggling to understand the face-off between "D" and "E" . Could anyone explain this differently.
Also isn't the second part of "E" wrong in the sense :
It is well known in the supermarket industry that how items are placed on shelves and the frequency of
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
(D) how frequently is the inventory turned over are often
(E) how frequently the inventory turns over can be (doesn't it mean that the inventory turns over by itself)
Example:
(E) how items are placed (by someone) and how ... inventory turns over (by itself ?)
Also isn't the second part of "E" wrong in the sense :
It is well known in the supermarket industry that how items are placed on shelves and the frequency of
inventory turnovers can be crucial to profits.
(D) how frequently is the inventory turned over are often
(E) how frequently the inventory turns over can be (doesn't it mean that the inventory turns over by itself)
Example:
(E) how items are placed (by someone) and how ... inventory turns over (by itself ?)