kedarmehta.ce2006 Wrote:Thanks Ron !
You are the Guru :)
thanks.
To give this a perfect close, 2 quick checks -
1) that vs which
Is this right? (my suggestion for correct/incorrect)
[Incorrect] I am staying at various hotels, which Paris Hilton operates.
[Correct] I am staying at various hotels that paris hilton operates.
hmmm ... i'm not seeing the connection to the problem in this thread, so let's kill this discussion.
your judgments here are correct, but it's impossible to tell whether you've made those judgments for the right reasons.
if you think this decision has anything to do with grammar, then you're incorrect. on the other hand, if you understand the
meaning difference between "which" and "that" -- and how it applies to the situation here -- then good.
i have never seen this particular difference tested on the gmat, so it shouldn't be discussed in this thread. (you can always create a post in the General Verbal folder if you want to discuss it further.)
2) This also clears a popluar belief, which I had observed in few other forums. I had seen folks discussing, as in,
"that" cannot be immediately placed after the subject ...to again refer back to the same subject.
that is one of the wrongest things i've ever seen. who was saying this? where would they get such a strange idea?
I don't think that's true. You can very well use [that] after the subject. Am I right?
The hand that rocks the cradle...
yeah.
subjects aren't "special" when it comes to modifiers. if a modifier can modify a noun, then it makes no difference whether that noun is the subject of a verb.
Thanks again, in advance !
(btway just realized few grammer & parallel structure errors in my original post. Corrected them now, hopefully ! It's always good to self review your own stuff, with eye for grammer. To all, please feel free to point me to my grammer errors !)
well, you should probably spell "grammar" correctly. (:
as long as your posts convey your points/questions clearly, you are fine. remember that
fixing sentences isn't a skill that is relevant to GMAT SC.