Verbal questions from any Manhattan Prep GMAT Computer Adaptive Test. Topic subject should be the first few words of your question.
ajabedin
 
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x is enough to y / so x as to y

by ajabedin Sat Mar 07, 2009 2:03 pm

Can someone elaborate on the distinction between the two, I am a little iffy on when to know which one is correct.

The category 1 to 5 rating known as the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale provides an estimate of a hurricane’s potential of destroying or damaging property, and is primarily determined from wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds so high as to blow away small buildings, completely destroy mobile homes, and cause severe window and door damage.

a. of destroying or damaging property, and is primarily determined from wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds so high as

b. to destroy or damage property, and is primarily determined from wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds high enough

c. of destroying or damaging property, and is primarily determined by wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds so high as

d. to destroy or damage property, and is primarily determined by wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds high enough

e. to destroy or damage property, and is primarily determined by wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds so high as
dg_p
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by dg_p Tue Mar 17, 2009 12:43 pm

IMO E
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by StaceyKoprince Mon Mar 23, 2009 9:53 pm

Interestingly, we've recently discovered two contradictory OG explanations on this issue. A problem in the 10th edition says "so x as to y" is correct, and a different problem in the 11th edition says it is not a correct idiom. Maybe something in the 12th edition will clear up the discrepancy. :)

We think the "rejection" of the entire idiom in the 11th edition was merely poor wording; we think the writer was actually trying to say it just wasn't correct usage for that particular sentence.

Regardless, both of the idioms you mention are grammatically fine, but they have slightly different meanings.

"So X as to Y" means something is SO (big, strong, slow, whatever, but something kind of extreme) that it actually causes something else to happen - something that wouldn't ordinarily happen. Normal wind wouldn't blow away small buildings, but category 5 winds can.

"X is (high, low, whatever) enough to Y" is more like a definition. "Cat 5 winds are high enough to blow away small houses" = the definition of Cat 5 winds is the winds that are high enough to blow away small houses.

The original sentence was not defining Cat 5 winds based on what the winds would / could do. Rather it was conveying that the extreme winds are SO strong that they result in some very bad things that wouldn't ordinarily occur under more normal wind conditions.

Having said all of that - I've only seen "so X as to Y" tested a few times, and I've never seen the other variant tested (on the real test). So I wouldn't worry about it too much. :)
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by malikrulzz Wed Apr 22, 2009 10:37 am

ISn't high/ enough redundant? and to destroy is prefered to distroying
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by priyankur.saha Fri Apr 24, 2009 12:42 am

a. of destroying or damaging property, and is primarily determined from wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds so high as
: wrong Idiom: estimate to destroy

b. to destroy or damage property, and is primarily determined from wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds high enough
Wrong idiom: determine by

c. of destroying or damaging property, and is primarily determined by wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds so high as
: wrong Idiom: estimate to destroy

d. to destroy or damage property, and is primarily determined by wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds high enough
GOOD: emphasizing the later part so "enough to" is correct usage
e. to destroy or damage property, and is primarily determined by wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds so high as
:wrong: stacey’s explanation
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by JonathanSchneider Fri May 01, 2009 4:43 pm

Yes to both of the above.

The initial conversation had leapt past the first split: "to destroy" is correct here. This properly follows from the word "potential."

We also do want the idiom "determined by," not "determined from."
sandeep.19+man
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by sandeep.19+man Thu Aug 26, 2010 4:49 am

priyankur.saha Wrote:d. to destroy or damage property, and is primarily determined by wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds high enough
GOOD: emphasizing the later part so "enough to" is correct usage
e. to destroy or damage property, and is primarily determined by wind speed; a category 5 storm has wind speeds so high as
:wrong: stacey’s explanation


JonathanSchneider Wrote:Yes to both of the above.


Wait a sec... Isnt the OA E?
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by mschwrtz Fri Sep 24, 2010 9:58 pm

Not unless the OA is wrong. D is the best answer here.
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by jssaggu.tico Sat Sep 25, 2010 2:09 pm

First of all, I respect everyone's opinion. I do understand an inevitable ambiguity in this problem.

However, option 'E' is the BEST ONE, which really makes sense in given scenario. I differ from Stacey's opinion. Stacey said exactly opposite to what I think, and what I am going to explain as follows:!

"x is enough to y" : It doesn't define anything but instead informs a specific case of Category 5. As we all know that this is not the case. Here author tries to define the extreme nature of Category 5. If we use this idiom, it may lead to believe that Category 5 may be incapable of destroying buildings in some cases. Contrary to this, Author tries to convey the severe nature of category 5 hurricane. He basically tries to define it by a way, which emphasize on its severe nature.


"so x as to y": It is only an appropriate way of defining the severe nature of Category 5: It certainly falls in the degree that is capable of destroying the buildings for sure. Hence, by using this, an author defines the category 5 with an emphasize on the extreme strength of the hurricane to destroy buildings.

-Thanks.
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by tim Tue Oct 26, 2010 8:55 am

Sorry. Remember, the GMAT makes the rules, so an alternate opinion - even if it is supported by a non-GMAT grammar book - is just an opinion. Make sure that you learn how the GMAT writers use idioms - even if you disagree - because they are ultimately the ones who give you your score..
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by rikky.bora Wed May 18, 2011 10:13 am

Question 1 - Is "Determine From" always wrong on the GMAT?

Question 2 - If above = No, then what are the nuances involved between "determine by" and "determine from"
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by jnelson0612 Sun May 22, 2011 11:18 pm

rikky.bora Wrote:Question 1 - Is "Determine From" always wrong on the GMAT?

Question 2 - If above = No, then what are the nuances involved between "determine by" and "determine from"



"Determine by" is generally the idiom you should use on the GMAT.
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rikky.bora
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by rikky.bora Wed Jul 06, 2011 10:38 am

jnelson0612 Wrote:
rikky.bora Wrote:Question 1 - Is "Determine From" always wrong on the GMAT?

Question 2 - If above = No, then what are the nuances involved between "determine by" and "determine from"



"Determine by" is generally the idiom you should use on the GMAT.


Hi Jamie,

I just came across a post here by Ron where he says "determine from" is correct as well :(

turning-away-from-literary-realism-to-write-romantic-stories-t5815.html

** 4th post from the bottom.
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by jnelson0612 Sun Jul 17, 2011 7:25 pm

Good catch, rikky. I would never argue with Ron! I think you've found the answer to your question through that thread and Ron's post. :-)
Jamie Nelson
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Suapplle
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Re: x is enough to y / so x as to y

by Suapplle Tue Dec 17, 2013 10:26 pm

Hi,instructors,in Og13,"so as to"is said to be unidiomatic,so in the real test,can we eliminate it directly because of the unidiomatic usage?please clarify,thanks!