RPurewal Wrote:Hei Wrote:How about B?
Some people said that "from when" is not right.
Can "that" in choice B represents "the growth of the global economy"? Or "that" could only refer to one noun?
Thanks in advance.
you can't use 'that' in this sort of construction, because constructions using 'that of' (or other preposition after 'that') must have EXACTLY parallel structures. in other words, if the second half says 'that during 10,000 years', then the preceding half
must say 'the growth of ___
during something else' (or some other time preposition, such as
before or
after, in place of
during).
there's nothing ungrammatical about 'from when', because the clause starting with 'when' is a perfectly legitimate noun clause (i.e., 'when agriculture began' serves as a noun. however:
- it's possible that the gmat
does consider such constructions wrong; the only way to tell is to see if they say so in any official answer choices
- regardless of where the gmat stands on the issue, 'the beginning of agriculture' is unquestionably better than 'when agriculture began' (i.e., an actual noun is almost always superior to a circuitous noun clause, when possible)
Hi Ron,
I assume that the rule applies to "those+preposition" in a comparison sentence (such as an "as...as" sentence and a "than" sentence)
I have read through all OG 10 SC questions, and it seems like that 2 of them are exceptions:
19. In addition to having more protein than wheat does, rice has
protein of higher quality than
that in wheat, with more of the amino acids essential to the human diet.
112. Domestic automobile manufacturers have invested millions of dollars in research to develop
cars even more gasoline-efficient than
those at present on the road.
(I know that I am not supposed to post OG questions because of the copyright issue; hope that it is okay to post without posting the full questions; otherwise, please delete my questions and leave the question #s so that other can refer to their OG books)
I believe that the "exactly parallal structures" refer to a pair of prepositional phrases serving the similar function. If my understanding is correct, then #19 is an exception to your rule.
In #112 "cars" isn't followed by preposition....
Did I interpret your rule incorrectly?
Thanks in advance.