Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging, the manufacturer has announced that it will cut production by closing its factories for two days a month.
A. Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging
B. Because of plunging prices for computer chips, which is due to an oversupply
C. Because computer chip prices have been sent plunging, which resulted from an oversupply
D. Due to plunging computer chip prices from an oversupply
E. Due to an oversupply, with the result that computer chip prices have been sent plunging
This was really tough for me , OA is given as : A
Can anyone comment what's wrong with[spoiler] D?[/spoiler]
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Guess experts need to step in. IMHO, a controversial question. Is it really from the OG??? Even D has been cited as OA in the pastBecause an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging, the manufacturer has announced that it will cut production by closing its factories for two days a month.
A. Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging
B. Because of plunging prices for computer chips, which is due to an oversupply
C. Because computer chip prices have been sent plunging, which resulted from an oversupply
D. Due to plunging computer chip prices from an oversupply
E. Due to an oversupply, with the result that computer chip prices have been sent plunging
This was really tough for me , OA is given as : A
Can anyone comment what's wrong with[spoiler] D?[/spoiler]
The fight is clearly between A and D
When "Due to" is used as "caused by", D makes grammatical sense but A sounds more logical to me because
A says that an "Oversupply" in the market will force the company to shut down production for 2 days, while D says that plunging prices will force the company to shut down production.
However, A has a "present perfect" problem. Clearly oversupply precedes manufacturer announcement, i don't think we can use 2 "has" here.
I will go with A because it is marginally more logical
the first issue in D, I guess, is that it is less parallel with the main clause than is A ,and there's a little change of focus from A to D.
However, are they fatal errors? OR can we say that D is just a little worse than A?
OG gives an explanation saying that D's backward time order of events is confusing, but I don't feel this reason well-standing.
Can Ron step in here?
However, are they fatal errors? OR can we say that D is just a little worse than A?
OG gives an explanation saying that D's backward time order of events is confusing, but I don't feel this reason well-standing.
Can Ron step in here?
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In D and E, due to seems to be modifying the manufacturer. Since the manufacturer was not due to plunging computer chip prices (in D) or due to an oversupply (in E), eliminate D and E.Giorgio wrote:Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging, the manufacturer has announced that it will cut production by closing its factories for two days a month.
A. Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging
B. Because of plunging prices for computer chips, which is due to an oversupply
C. Because computer chip prices have been sent plunging, which resulted from an oversupply
D. Due to plunging computer chip prices from an oversupply
E. Due to an oversupply, with the result that computer chip prices have been sent plunging
This was really tough for me , OA is given as : A
Can anyone comment what's wrong with[spoiler] D?[/spoiler]
In B, which has no clear antecedent. Eliminate B.
In C, which seems to refer to prices, but the prices did not result from an oversupply; the plunging of the prices resulted from an oversupply. Eliminate C.
The correct answer is A.
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mitch nails it, but here's some extra information on "due to".
https://www.manhattangmat.com/forums/pos ... tml#p29817
https://www.manhattangmat.com/forums/pos ... tml#p29817
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Hi GMATGuruNYGMATGuruNY wrote:In D and E, due to seems to be modifying the manufacturer. Since the manufacturer was not due to plunging computer chip prices (in D) or due to an oversupply (in E), eliminate D and E.Giorgio wrote:Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging, the manufacturer has announced that it will cut production by closing its factories for two days a month.
A. Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging
B. Because of plunging prices for computer chips, which is due to an oversupply
C. Because computer chip prices have been sent plunging, which resulted from an oversupply
D. Due to plunging computer chip prices from an oversupply
E. Due to an oversupply, with the result that computer chip prices have been sent plunging
This was really tough for me , OA is given as : A
Can anyone comment what's wrong with[spoiler] D?[/spoiler]
In B, which has no clear antecedent. Eliminate B.
In C, which seems to refer to prices, but the prices did not result from an oversupply; the plunging of the prices resulted from an oversupply. Eliminate C.
The correct answer is A.
I was going through the explanation given in OG. Though I know that option B is not correct,I want to know one thing. OG says that "which" refers to plural "prices". As per my knowledge "which" refers to nearest sensible noun. And in option B the nearest noun is "computer chips". Can you please explain me how is "which" referring to "prices".
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In B, which is given a singular verb (which IS), implying that which refers to a singular noun. Thus, which cannot refer to prices (plural) or to computer chips (plural). The explanation in the OG alludes to the intended meaning: since the plunging of the prices is due to an oversupply, the intention in B is that which refers to prices.anukrati wrote:Hi GMATGuruNYGMATGuruNY wrote:In D and E, due to seems to be modifying the manufacturer. Since the manufacturer was not due to plunging computer chip prices (in D) or due to an oversupply (in E), eliminate D and E.Giorgio wrote:Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging, the manufacturer has announced that it will cut production by closing its factories for two days a month.
A. Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging
B. Because of plunging prices for computer chips, which is due to an oversupply
C. Because computer chip prices have been sent plunging, which resulted from an oversupply
D. Due to plunging computer chip prices from an oversupply
E. Due to an oversupply, with the result that computer chip prices have been sent plunging
This was really tough for me , OA is given as : A
Can anyone comment what's wrong with[spoiler] D?[/spoiler]
In B, which has no clear antecedent. Eliminate B.
In C, which seems to refer to prices, but the prices did not result from an oversupply; the plunging of the prices resulted from an oversupply. Eliminate C.
The correct answer is A.
I was going through the explanation given in OG. Though I know that option B is not correct,I want to know one thing. OG says that "which" refers to plural "prices". As per my knowledge "which" refers to nearest sensible noun. And in option B the nearest noun is "computer chips". Can you please explain me how is "which" referring to "prices".
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This is naive but I have to ask this. As far as I know, the clause preceding a comma should modify the thing after it. How is "Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging", modifying "manufacturer". We are rejecting choices in which the clause seems to modify manufacturerGMATGuruNY wrote:In D and E, due to seems to be modifying the manufacturer. Since the manufacturer was not due to plunging computer chip prices (in D) or due to an oversupply (in E), eliminate D and E.Giorgio wrote:Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging, the manufacturer has announced that it will cut production by closing its factories for two days a month.
A. Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging
B. Because of plunging prices for computer chips, which is due to an oversupply
C. Because computer chip prices have been sent plunging, which resulted from an oversupply
D. Due to plunging computer chip prices from an oversupply
E. Due to an oversupply, with the result that computer chip prices have been sent plunging
This was really tough for me , OA is given as : A
Can anyone comment what's wrong with[spoiler] D?[/spoiler]
In B, which has no clear antecedent. Eliminate B.
In C, which seems to refer to prices, but the prices did not result from an oversupply; the plunging of the prices resulted from an oversupply. Eliminate C.
The correct answer is A.
Please help
Regards,
Vishal
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this principle only applies if you are dealing with a modifier that actually modifies nouns.vishal.pathak wrote:This is naive but I have to ask this. As far as I know, the clause preceding a comma should modify the thing after it. How is "Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging", modifying "manufacturer". We are rejecting choices in which the clause seems to modify manufacturer
Please help
Regards,
Vishal
"because" (like its cousins "although", "despite", and many others) modifies entire clauses.
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GMATGuruNY wrote:Hi Mitch,Giorgio wrote:Because an oversupply of computer chips has sent prices plunging, the manufacturer has announced that it will cut production by closing its factories for two days a month.
C. Because computer chip prices have been sent plunging, which resulted from an oversupply
In C, which seems to refer to prices, but the prices did not result from an oversupply; the plunging of the prices resulted from an oversupply. Eliminate C.
The correct answer is A.
In C you mentioned WHICH seems to refer to PRICES - My doubt is WHY it cannot refer to PLUNGING (does it act as a GERUND or ADVERB modifying 'have been sent').
IMO PLUNGING is acting a gerund here and therefore WHICH could refer to plunging as well! Is this a correct interpretation.
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Hi Mitch,Due to plunging computer chip prices from an oversupply
Is this a modifier? Might sound naive but I haven't come across this kind of modifier and so this Question.
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Sach
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Just one thing, please help me understand the use of "has" in both the sentences.lunarpower wrote:mitch nails it, but here's some extra information on "due to".
https://www.manhattangmat.com/forums/pos ... tml#p29817
e.g. Because prices have gone up, the manufacturer has announced something.
I thought the following makes more sense:
Because the prices went up, the manufacturer has announced ..
Are both equally good? Thank you very much advance.
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that tense ("has + VERBed") is used when the speaker/writer is looking at a past event from the present point of view. it's often used for past events that either (1) are ongoing into the present timeframe, or (2) are in the past, but have some sort of tangible effect on the present timeframe.divineacclivity wrote:Just one thing, please help me understand the use of "has" in both the sentences.lunarpower wrote:mitch nails it, but here's some extra information on "due to".
https://www.manhattangmat.com/forums/pos ... tml#p29817
e.g. Because prices have gone up, the manufacturer has announced something.
e.g., let's say someone played high-school football 20 years ago.
if this person was just talking to a random stranger in a bar (no direct connection to his football experience), he would just use the past tense: i played high-school football.
of the other hand, if this person was in an interview for a coaching position in high-school football, he would say i have played high-school football(, so i know the game.)
there is no difference in the timeframe of the event; the difference lies in how the event is viewed.
so, if the sentence is talking about the present effect of the price increases, "have gone" is better than "went".
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