RonPurewal Wrote:Choice A doesn't have that issue. ("Their" in choice A is fine.)
The problem with choice A is that it suggests that manufacturers are retooling existing small cars, rather than creating new ones that are better.
E.g.,
I'm going to make air conditioners quieter. --> I'm going to modify existing air conditioners so that they make less noise.
I'm going to make quieter air conditioners.
I'm going to make air conditioners that are quieter.
--> I'm going to make a new model that makes less noise.
A is like the first one of these, so it doesn't make sense in context.
Hi, Ron
I find your post extremely helpful in my study.
I am still confused though:
(a) make small cars more efficient now than any time in their(small cars') production history
I think that: small cars' production history goes well with any time, not any other time. Because literally history does not include the time point "now", am I right on this saying?
I find the "any other time in history" saying somehow redundant. In A, today modifies technology and is in subject, and the author compare now with any past time from the object -manufactures-'s side, so I don't thinks now is wrong because of today.
If "their" refers to the exact "small cars" appeared earlier in the sentence, the sentence is saying workers make sth more efficient now than ever (in sth's history).
Using your sentence, I would say "I am going to make air conditioners quieter than ever", but we don't need to remake air conditioners-we are still making new ones, just quieter than former ones. So here the "small cars" can be referred back to themselves, serving as a general concept.
If we change "small cars" into "cars", I find the choice even more confusing.
Workers make cars more efficient now than any time in their(cars') production history
- make cars more efficient now than ever.
Please help me clear the thoughts, thanks again.