700-800 SC 4-14

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700-800 SC 4-14

by ranjeet75 » Wed Nov 09, 2011 9:09 pm
Based on recent box office receipts, the public's appetite for documentary films, [u]like nonfiction books[/u], seems to be on the rise.

"¢ like nonfiction books
"¢ as nonfiction books
"¢ as its interest in nonfiction books
"¢ like their interest in nonfiction books
"¢ like its interest in nonfiction books

OA after some discussions
Source: — Sentence Correction |

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by saketk » Wed Nov 09, 2011 9:23 pm
ranjeet75 wrote:Based on recent box office receipts, the public's appetite for documentary films, like nonfiction books, seems to be on the rise.

"¢ like nonfiction books
"¢ as nonfiction books
"¢ as its interest in nonfiction books
"¢ like their interest in nonfiction books
"¢ like its interest in nonfiction books

OA after some discussions
compare parallel things.

This brings us down to two choices.

Choice C and Choice E. I will go for Choice E because we are comparing Noun and not comparining 'verb' here.

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by ranjeet75 » Wed Nov 09, 2011 9:34 pm
Why A is wrong here?

in E "its" refers to what - whether "its" refers to "public's"

Yes out of C & E, E is correct but as for A, the meaning gets that
the public's appetite for documentary films as well as nonfiction books seems to be on rise.

Am I wrong?

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by sam2304 » Thu Nov 10, 2011 3:01 am
Nice question.

Agree with saketk. Comparison is between public's appetite for documentary films and non fiction books.

IMO E.

A is wrong as it shud compare the public's appetite for x and public's appetite for y.
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by suny_sn1 » Thu Nov 10, 2011 3:43 am
Based on recent box office receipts, the public's appetite for documentary films, like nonfiction books, seems to be on the rise.

"¢ like nonfiction books
"¢ as nonfiction books
"¢ as its interest in nonfiction books
"¢ like their interest in nonfiction books
"¢ like its interest in nonfiction books

I don't like Option C, D or E because "its" and "their" refer to possesive noun "public's appetite"
Since nonfiction books is a noun , I would go with A instead of B

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by GMATGuruNY » Thu Nov 10, 2011 4:44 am
ranjeet75 wrote:Based on recent box office receipts, the public's appetite for documentary films, like nonfiction books, seems to be on the rise.

"¢ like nonfiction books
"¢ as nonfiction books
"¢ as its interest in nonfiction books
"¢ like their interest in nonfiction books
"¢ like its interest in nonfiction books

OA after some discussions
A comparison must compare APPLES TO APPLES: it must compare the right two things.

A and B incorrectly compare the public's appetite to non-fiction books. Eliminate A and B.

In C, their (plural) does not agree with public's (singular). Eliminate C.

D incorrectly uses AS to compare two nouns (the public's appetite and its interest). LIKE is used to compare nouns; AS is used to compare ACTIONS. Eliminate D.

The correct answer is E.

In E, its (singular possessive pronoun) is correctly used to refer to another singular possessive construction (the public's).

I'm a bit troubled by the non-underlined portion. The introductory modifier seems to imply that the public's appetite is based on recent box office receipts.
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by gmatpup » Thu Nov 10, 2011 6:57 am
I agree the answer is E

"like its interest in nonfiction books"

LIKE is used when something is similar.. not for examples

and ITS refers correctly to the public's (being singular)

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