Anon Wrote:Hi Instructors,
Just a small question regarding this SC..
in choice E we have : THE plant and animal extinctions
Could you please explain if this usage correct ???
thanks in advance
Anon
well... it's in the correct answer, so it must be correct. so there's your answer on that one.
(not meant to be sarcastic; the correct answers to official problems are
the best source of information about what the gmat considers to be correct/incorrect in tcerms of usage and diction.)
in general, this seemingly extraneous use of 'the' is indicated if the sentence refers to
very specific events, items, etc., particularly if those events/items/etc are assumed to be
known to the reader. more so if the events/items/etc form a
complete set.
in this problem, these things all make sense. (as for the last point, the form of the correct sentence allows us to infer that the asteroid impact caused
all of the plant and animal extinctions that ended the cretaceous period.
if you're worrying about how you'll ever
distinguish between sentences that need this 'the' and sentences that don't, then don't worry: you'll never have to make that decision. the gmat won't make you decide between two choices that are both grammatically correct based on such a subtle semantic difference, so there will be some other grammatical error that disqualifies the wrong answers (as in this problem).
so just realize that this form is acceptable, DON'T use it to disqualify an answer choice, and go from there.