Last visit was: 25 Apr 2024, 08:41 It is currently 25 Apr 2024, 08:41

Close
GMAT Club Daily Prep
Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.

Customized
for You

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History

Track
Your Progress

every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance

Practice
Pays

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Close
Request Expert Reply
Confirm Cancel
SORT BY:
Date
Magoosh GMAT Instructor
Joined: 28 Dec 2011
Posts: 4452
Own Kudos [?]: 28571 [29]
Given Kudos: 130
Most Helpful Reply
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 05 Dec 2011
Posts: 66
Own Kudos [?]: 88 [16]
Given Kudos: 2
Location: Canada
Concentration: Accounting, Finance
GMAT Date: 09-08-2012
GPA: 3
Send PM
General Discussion
User avatar
Senior Manager
Senior Manager
Joined: 09 May 2012
Affiliations: UWC
Posts: 314
Own Kudos [?]: 8799 [1]
Given Kudos: 100
Location: Canada
GMAT 1: 620 Q42 V33
GMAT 2: 680 Q44 V38
GPA: 3.43
WE:Engineering (Entertainment and Sports)
Send PM
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 15 Jul 2012
Posts: 8
Own Kudos [?]: 38 [1]
Given Kudos: 6
Concentration: Finance, Leadership
GMAT Date: 10-25-2012
GPA: 3
Send PM
Re: Rex quondam rexque futurus [#permalink]
1
Kudos
macjas wrote:
Good question Mike! Here is my analysis somewhat:

Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise as king again.

(A) that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise
this sentence is the least ambiguous and structurally kosher. :)

(B) that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, arising
the use of present participle "arising" is inappropriate here as it seems to modify the phrase "in some future time of need" :(

(C) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, arising
this option is ambiguous, for in using the infinitive, we do not know in what time context Arthur was/is king. It also has the "arising" issue found in B. :(

(D) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, to arise
once again, the time context is ambiguous. :(

(E) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise

same issue as above :([/quote]


In "D" how come the time context is ambiguous. The sentence clearly says "at one time". What's wrong with D?
User avatar
Senior Manager
Senior Manager
Joined: 09 May 2012
Affiliations: UWC
Posts: 314
Own Kudos [?]: 8799 [0]
Given Kudos: 100
Location: Canada
GMAT 1: 620 Q42 V33
GMAT 2: 680 Q44 V38
GPA: 3.43
WE:Engineering (Entertainment and Sports)
Send PM
Re: Rex quondam rexque futurus [#permalink]
dheerajv wrote:
In "D" how come the time context is ambiguous. The sentence clearly says "at one time". What's wrong with D?


Hi Dheeraj, to me somehow using the construct "to be" implies something universal. "xxx is" or "xxx was" puts things in the perspective of time. This is at least how I understand it. Experts please correct me if I am wrong :)
GMAT Club Legend
GMAT Club Legend
Joined: 19 Feb 2007
Status: enjoying
Posts: 5265
Own Kudos [?]: 42104 [0]
Given Kudos: 422
Location: India
WE:Education (Education)
Send PM
Re: Rex quondam rexque futurus [#permalink]
Expert Reply
(A) that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise ---- the first part of the sub-clause is a clause with a verb and the second one too is similar


(B) that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, arising --- the two parts are not parallel. Arising renders the second part into a phrase; wrong

(C) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, arising ---- same as B; wrong

(D) The mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, to arise; to be denotes timelessness, or even contemporariness, which it is not. Past tense was is the appropriate in this case. same thing what macjas has pointed out

(E) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise--- the first part is a phrase and the second part is a clause; wrong
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 02 Jul 2009
Posts: 27
Own Kudos [?]: 71 [0]
Given Kudos: 7
Send PM
Re: Rex quondam rexque futurus [#permalink]
A is right..holds that and parallelsim are the keys
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 16 Jan 2012
Status:SLOGGING : My son says,This time Papa u will have to make it : Innocence is BLISS
Posts: 116
Own Kudos [?]: 267 [1]
Given Kudos: 30
Location: India
WE:Sales (Energy and Utilities)
Send PM
Re: Rex quondam rexque futurus [#permalink]
1
Kudos
Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure ofArthur was at one time king of all of England and,in some future time of need, will arise as king again.

Intent of the sent : Ancient legend holds 2 things ...............1. X was the king at one time................AND.................. 2. X will arise as king again in the future

Vertical scan reveals : A n somewhat D to fit the equation ( maintaining parallelism )

A : Legend holds THAT...........Arthur WAS the king.......................AND......................WILL ARISE as king again.

D : Legend holds Arthur TO BE at one time king .............AND............... TO ARISE as king again ( TO BE form..........timeless verbs doesn't reveal the timeframe when the action took place ) = So not a proper choice = Eliminated

Furthermore THAT in A = cements its choice over D.

Leading to A = my take
Magoosh GMAT Instructor
Joined: 28 Dec 2011
Posts: 4452
Own Kudos [?]: 28571 [3]
Given Kudos: 130
Re: Rex quondam rexque futurus [#permalink]
3
Kudos
Expert Reply
geno5 wrote:
Mike,
I always love your questions you post and find them very helpful, but I do not find this one to be of a great difficulty is it really considered 700? I did it in about 25 secs, it has very easy splits.


Thank you for your kind words. To be honest, I am more or less guessing in the dark when I estimate the difficulty of a question I have just written. It's always hard to gauge what will seem obvious and what folks will find tricky.

Mike :-)
Intern
Intern
Joined: 04 Jul 2011
Status:Fighting hard
Posts: 43
Own Kudos [?]: 278 [0]
Given Kudos: 87
GMAT Date: 10-01-2012
Send PM
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
Thanks for the question. I overlooked A and chose D, despite the ambiguity in time. I really was not sure on whether the usage of "holds that" is correct.
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 22 Sep 2011
Posts: 7
Own Kudos [?]: 6 [0]
Given Kudos: 88
Concentration: General Management
Send PM
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
TO BE is most often then not is an incorrect choice (please correct me if i am wrong) , therefore , C / D/E are out.

B is wrong due to the use to "ARISING"

Correct Ans : - A
avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 08 Apr 2013
Posts: 100
Own Kudos [?]: 70 [0]
Given Kudos: 27
Send PM
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
D should be

holds Athure to have been the king.

is that rith?

"hold sombody to do something" is correct as " hold that sombody do something"

is that right?
Magoosh GMAT Instructor
Joined: 28 Dec 2011
Posts: 4452
Own Kudos [?]: 28571 [2]
Given Kudos: 130
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
2
Bookmarks
Expert Reply
vietmoi999 wrote:
D should be
holds Athure to have been the king.
is that rith?
"hold sombody to do something" is correct as " hold that sombody do something"
is that right?

Dear vietmoi999,
The construction "to hold that P did X" is perfectly correct. The construction "to hold P to do X" or "to hold P to have done X" is highly suspect ---- use of the the verb "to hold" plus the infinitive is a highly debatable construction. Some grammar experts would say it's permissible, others would say it is strictly wrong. You definitely will not see this structure as part of a correct answer on the GMAT.
Does this make sense?
Mike :-)
User avatar
MBA Blogger
Joined: 13 Apr 2013
Posts: 103
Own Kudos [?]: 42 [0]
Given Kudos: 9
Concentration: General Management, Nonprofit
GMAT 1: 510 Q29 V31
GMAT 2: 590 Q32 V38
WE:Research (Non-Profit and Government)
Send PM
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
B: Wrong; Tense of arise is wrong. it refers to the future there should be will arise.
C: wrong; Same reason as above
E: wrong: Needs a That in the sentence to work.
A: right answer; Has will arise at end of the phrase and that at the beginning of the phrase
Director
Director
Joined: 17 Mar 2014
Posts: 756
Own Kudos [?]: 608 [0]
Given Kudos: 1348
Send PM
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
mikemcgarry wrote:
Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise as king again.
(A) that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise
(B) that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, arising
(C) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, arising
(D) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, to arise
(E) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise



Mike,
Can you help in eliminating wrong options in your way.

Regards,
Ammu
Magoosh GMAT Instructor
Joined: 28 Dec 2011
Posts: 4452
Own Kudos [?]: 28571 [3]
Given Kudos: 130
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
1
Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Expert Reply
ammuseeru wrote:
mikemcgarry wrote:
Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise as king again.
(A) that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise
(B) that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, arising
(C) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, arising
(D) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, to arise
(E) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise



Mike,
Can you help in eliminating wrong options in your way.

Regards,
Ammu

Dear Ammu,

I know I wrote this question a few years ago, but I am really not particularly happy with it. If I had to give it a grade now, I'd give it a grade of a B- of C+. It's among the first GMAT SC questions I ever wrote, and most of the questions I have written are far superior to this. Basically, this question is way too easy.

The idiom for the verb "hold" is a "that"-clause.
I hold that X is Y. = correct
Idiomatically, "hold" does not take the infinitive.
I hold X to be Y. = idiomatically incorrect
Thus, (C) & (D) & (E) are incorrect.

We also need parallelism between the two verbs --- "was" and "will arise", not "was" and "arising." Thus, (B) is wrong, and (A) is the only option left.

Does this make sense?
Mike :-)
Director
Director
Joined: 17 Mar 2014
Posts: 756
Own Kudos [?]: 608 [0]
Given Kudos: 1348
Send PM
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
mikemcgarry wrote:
ammuseeru wrote:
mikemcgarry wrote:
Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise as king again.
(A) that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise
(B) that the mythical figure of Arthur was at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, arising
(C) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, arising
(D) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, to arise
(E) the mythical figure of Arthur to be at one time king of all of England and, in some future time of need, will arise



Mike,
Can you help in eliminating wrong options in your way.

Regards,
Ammu

Dear Ammu,

I know I wrote this question a few years ago, but I am really not particularly happy with it. If I had to give it a grade now, I'd give it a grade of a B- of C+. It's among the first GMAT SC questions I ever wrote, and most of the questions I have written are far superior to this. Basically, this question is way too easy.

The idiom for the verb "hold" is a "that"-clause.
I hold that X is Y. = correct
Idiomatically, "hold" does not take the infinitive.
I hold X to be Y. = idiomatically incorrect
Thus, (C) & (D) & (E) are incorrect.

We also need parallelism between the two verbs --- "was" and "will arise", not "was" and "arising." Thus, (B) is wrong, and (A) is the only option left.

Does this make sense?
Mike :-)



Yeah, it makes sense. Thank you Mike.

Regards,
Ammu
Intern
Intern
Joined: 26 Jan 2017
Posts: 6
Own Kudos [?]: 1 [1]
Given Kudos: 2
Send PM
Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
1
Kudos
mikemcgarry wrote:
The idiom for the verb "hold" is a "that"-clause.
I hold that X is Y. = correct
Idiomatically, "hold" does not take the infinitive.
I hold X to be Y. = idiomatically incorrect
Thus, (C) & (D) & (E) are incorrect.

We also need parallelism between the two verbs --- "was" and "will arise", not "was" and "arising." Thus, (B) is wrong, and (A) is the only option left.

Does this make sense?
Mike :-)

Dear Mike,

How come "hold to be" is idiomatically incorrect? I'm not a native speaker so I can't tell which one is correct but there are too many examples of "hold X to be Y" shown in Google to be ignored:

"I now hold her to be a very competent, complicated, strong, deep-thinking, quick-witted, quick-draw, wonderful creature."
"The citizens of Antwerp hold him to be the instigator and ringleader of this atrocious plot."
"This uses a particular meaning of 'hold': to "hold X to be Y" means "to believe or maintain that X is Y""
Magoosh GMAT Instructor
Joined: 28 Dec 2011
Posts: 4452
Own Kudos [?]: 28571 [0]
Given Kudos: 130
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
Expert Reply
mynguyen62 wrote:
mikemcgarry wrote:
The idiom for the verb "hold" is a "that"-clause.
I hold that X is Y. = correct
Idiomatically, "hold" does not take the infinitive.
I hold X to be Y. = idiomatically incorrect
Thus, (C) & (D) & (E) are incorrect.

We also need parallelism between the two verbs --- "was" and "will arise", not "was" and "arising." Thus, (B) is wrong, and (A) is the only option left.

Does this make sense?
Mike :-)

Dear Mike,

How come "hold to be" is idiomatically incorrect? I'm not a native speaker so I can't tell which one is correct but there are too many examples of "hold X to be Y" shown in Google to be ignored:

"I now hold her to be a very competent, complicated, strong, deep-thinking, quick-witted, quick-draw, wonderful creature."
"The citizens of Antwerp hold him to be the instigator and ringleader of this atrocious plot."
"This uses a particular meaning of 'hold': to "hold X to be Y" means "to believe or maintain that X is Y""

Dear mynguyen62,

I'm happy to respond. :-)

I have a few things to say. First of all, grammar & idioms is NOT mathematical. In math, there's a black/white distinction: something is either right or wrong. Period. What's right is right for everyone, and what's wrong is wrong for everyone.

Grammar does not work that way. Everything associated with grammar & language is on a spectrum. Let's artificially say that there's some kind of 0 to 10 scale. Zero would be something that absolutely no native speaker would say. Let's say that little-kid talk and low quality slang would be around 2-3. Let's say that ordinary speech is about 4-6, and the higher numbers represent increasing levels of formality. A 10 would be the most sophisticated writing possible in English, the way an exalted author might write. Let's say that the language on the GMAT SC is 8+, that is, very sophisticated, much more sophisticated than ordinary speech.

This is precisely why it is an exceptionally poor idea to do a Google search to determine if some idiom is correct on the GMAT. You see, Google reflects the overall trends of the population, and so many Americans are about at 4-5 on that scale. Everyone who takes the GMAT is educated, but so many Americans are poorly educated--but no lack of education, however appalling, keeps people off the internet! Many American magazines and popular newspapers use grammatical forms that I consider absolutely embarrassing! There's a well-marketed self-proclaimed grammar authority known by the handle "Grammar Girl" who extols values of about a 5-6 on that scale. All of this falls well short of what the GMAT expects.

Would you hear "hold to be" in ordinary American colloquial conversation? Of course. But OK in ordinary American speech is NOT OK on the GMAT SC. The GMAT holds a much higher standard. In fact, some of what the GMAT would consider correct is so sophisticated that it would sound wrong to ordinary uneducated American native speakers.

If you want to know what is right on the GMAT, you cannot rely on general guides. You absolutely must use material that is specific to the GMAT. Here's a free GMAT Idiom ebook. I would also recommend that MGMAT books.

As someone who has studied the GMAT for years, here's what I can tell you:
hold that= 100% correct, totally legitimate
hold to be = hmmm; not 100% wrong, probably correct in colloquial speech, but I don't believe this appears as part of the correct answer in any GMAT SC question.

Finally, I would say: the absolute best thing any non-native speaker can do to get a sense for the idioms is to cultivate a habit of reading:
How to Improve Your GMAT Verbal Score

Does all this make sense?
Mike :-)
Intern
Intern
Joined: 26 Jan 2017
Posts: 6
Own Kudos [?]: 1 [0]
Given Kudos: 2
Send PM
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
Hi Mike

Wow I didn't expect such a detailed explanation. What surprised me the most was that even Google results with millions of example are not reliable (at least for GMAT) anymore. I guess that I have to switch to more reliable sources. The idiom ebook doesn't contain the "hold to be" example though.

Thank you very much for your thorough help! I will check the given links attentively.
GMAT Club Bot
Re: Ancient Celtic legend holds that the mythical figure of [#permalink]
 1   2   
Moderators:
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
6920 posts
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
238 posts

Powered by phpBB © phpBB Group | Emoji artwork provided by EmojiOne