zhanghan.neu Wrote:StaceyKoprince Wrote:I've seen this one before - this is the only official question in 10 years that I have seen use "being" correctly. So it is still generally a good rule to avoid being, but use it more as a tiebreak - look for other stuff first.
So you knew to get rid of A and C. B violates a little known thing that the GMAT writers follow though it is not an official grammar rule - more a choice. It introduces a subject pronoun before the noun itself. Subject pronouns and nouns can be directly interchanged; as such, the test writers prefer to use the noun first and then later use a subject pronoun (if necessary). Note that I am specifically limiting this to subject pronouns, not object or possessive pronouns. Most people read a subject-pronoun-first situation as "awkward" though they don't really know why.
And just study D from the point of view of: this is one of the only ways to use "being" correctly, so familiarize yourself with it.
Hello Stacey,
Could you please give two examples seperately for using an objective pronounc and possessive pronouns before nouns, just for comparison purposes?
Thanks a lot!
Hi
I am not Stacy but I would like to help:
Using objective pronoun before nouns:
He was promoted this month, according to the pay check Mr. William received.
Using possessive pronouns:
Holding two large boxes in his arms, Joe had to be very careful when walking to the parking lot.
Hope it helps.