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vik
 
 

Women are expected to be the majority

by vik Thu Dec 06, 2007 7:46 pm

Women are expected to be the majority of student entering law school this fall, a trend ultimately placing more women in leadership position in politics and business.
A Women are expected to be the majority of student entering law school this fall, a trend ultimately placing
B The majority of students entering law school this fall are expected to be women, a trend that will ultimately place
C The majority of students entering law school this fall are expected to be women, which will ultimately place
D It is expected that the majority of students entering law school this fall will be women, a trend ultimately placing
E It is expected for the women to be the majority of students entering law school this fall, which will ultimately place

Please explain

This is GMAT prep question

Now Why B is correct. My question is "the majority " in B is singular or plural

Also in A " A trend ... placing" is wrong beacuse it is expected so it should have "will" as mentioned in B
RonPurewal
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by RonPurewal Fri Dec 07, 2007 5:58 am

well, b is the correct answer, so there you have it: 'majority' is considered plural, at least when it refers to the majority of countable items/entities (like women).

notice that this isn't an issue in this particular problem (there are no choices using 'majority' in the singular), but take note (for future problems) that the plural is acceptable usage here.

by the way, make sure you copy problems correctly (you've rewritten several plural nouns as singular, without the -s on the end).
Vik
 
 

by Vik Fri Dec 07, 2007 12:53 pm

One more question :- Is in A " trend ... placing " is wrong why?
Saurabh Malpani
 
 

Can you please disect the problem

by Saurabh Malpani Fri Dec 07, 2007 7:36 pm

Hi

Can anyone of you please disect the problem and explain why is B prefered over A & C.

Saurabh malpani
Saurabh Malpani
 
 

Can you please disect the problem

by Saurabh Malpani Fri Dec 07, 2007 7:36 pm

Hi

Can anyone of you please disect the problem and explain why is B prefered over A & C.

Saurabh malpani
vanD
 
 

relative pronound and tense

by vanD Sat Dec 08, 2007 8:43 pm

Women are expected to be the majority of student entering law school this fall, a trend ultimately placing more women in leadership position in politics and business.
A Women are expected to be the majority of student entering law school this fall, a trend ultimately placing
B The majority of students entering law school this fall are expected to be women, a trend that will ultimately place<<CORRECT
C The majority of students entering law school this fall are expected to be women, which will ultimately place
D It is expected that the majority of students entering law school this fall will be women, a trend ultimately placing
E It is expected for the women to be the majority of students entering law school this fall, which will ultimately place
RonPurewal
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Re: Can you please disect the problem

by RonPurewal Tue Dec 11, 2007 5:51 am

Saurabh Malpani Wrote:Hi

Can anyone of you please disect the problem and explain why is B prefered over A & C.

Saurabh malpani


well, b is preferred because it isn't wrong. :)

a is wrong because of the participle 'placing', which wrongly indicates that this trend is already placing more women in leadership positions.
c is wrong because the relative pronoun 'which' is placed in a position where it must refer to 'women'. this is wrong for 2 different reasons: (a) 'which' can't refer to people, and (b) according to the sentence, women don't place themselves in leadership positions; the trend does.
Guest
 
 

by Guest Wed Jan 16, 2008 1:37 am

what are wrong with D and E?
Thanks
RonPurewal
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by RonPurewal Wed Jan 16, 2008 5:10 am

choice d has the same problem as choice a (the participle 'placing' is used in the same incorrect manner).

the error in choice e is very similar to that in choice c: the pronoun 'which' is used incorrectly again. the noun closest to this relative pronoun - 'this fall' - makes no sense in context.
Sputnik
 
 

by Sputnik Mon Jun 09, 2008 5:16 pm

Hi Ron,

Thanks for the explanation.
Could you please explain why B is not a run on sentence or a comma splice.

I thought its joining 2 independent clauses with just a comma.

Thanks
Sputnik
RonPurewal
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by RonPurewal Wed Jun 11, 2008 4:45 am

Sputnik Wrote:Hi Ron,

Thanks for the explanation.
Could you please explain why B is not a run on sentence or a comma splice.

I thought its joining 2 independent clauses with just a comma.

Thanks
Sputnik


nope, the second part is not an independent clause. try reading it by itself; it's not a sentence (a trend THAT will ultimately...)

this second part is an example of an appositive noun modifier, a type of modifier that NEVER appears in spoken language but that appears on the gmat a lot. the reason is that, unlike relative pronouns such as 'which', these modifiers don't have to touch their referent.
for instance:
the general tried to get his troops to retreat before being surrounded, a strategy that ultimately failed.

same idea here.
lots of students don't like this structure at all when they first see it, but you have to get used to it - it's commonplace on the exam.
vivekwrites
 
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Re: Women are expected to be the majority

by vivekwrites Wed Jul 29, 2009 10:00 pm

Ron, in the following post you say that appositive must modify the noun that comes IMMEDIATELY before the comma.

the-number-of-people-flying-first-t5600.html

Can you please explain, in which cases appositive can modify nouns appearing anywhere in the sentence.
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Re: Women are expected to be the majority

by RonPurewal Fri Aug 07, 2009 6:16 am

vivekwrites Wrote:Ron, in the following post you say that appositive must modify the noun that comes IMMEDIATELY before the comma.

the-number-of-people-flying-first-t5600.html

Can you please explain, in which cases appositive can modify nouns appearing anywhere in the sentence.


good point.

if you have an appositive modifier that's an abstract noun - such as "strategy", "figure", "statistic", "findings", "situation", "change", "difference", etc. - then such an appositive may be allowed to describe the entire situation described in the previous clause.

for instance, the example i gave above with "a strategy..."

also, for further examples, see #59 and #79 in the purple verbal supplement OG book.
in #79 this modifier is part of the underline and is useful in choosing the correct answer. in #59 it's not part of the underline, so you don't have to use it, but you're exposed to it so that you can use it later.

hmm.
vishalsahdev03
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Re: Women are expected to be the majority

by vishalsahdev03 Mon Nov 09, 2009 11:30 pm

While attempting the question I got stuck between B and D and had no knowledge to move ahead, I could figure out the "placing" and "place" is one of the differences but did not know what to mark or whats the difference between them and which one is correct!!

I have seen this happening in some other similar cases as well.

Please recommend some steps to improve this weakness, it is effecting my score by miles !!

Thanks in advance !
vishalsahdev03
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Re:

by vishalsahdev03 Tue Dec 01, 2009 2:00 pm

RonPurewal Wrote:choice d has the same problem as choice a (the participle 'placing' is used in the same incorrect manner).

the error in choice e is very similar to that in choice c: the pronoun 'which' is used incorrectly again. the noun closest to this relative pronoun - 'this fall' - makes no sense in context.



I could not find action doer if B so B seemed passive; we do not know who is expecting .

Also, in D "placing" seems better it seems to be a continuous process and also the give statement has the same verb form, which is not incorrect, why should we choose to change it !!

Please explain !
Thanks !