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In Episode 7 of our GMAT Ninja CR series, we are rounding up the oddballs, the misfits, and the format-benders: EXCEPT, Fill-In-The-Blanks, and other unusual Critical Reasoning question types. When you see a question that ends with a literal blank line
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yeah, I picked C as well, but the OA is A!! That's because, according to x2suresh's link, "could" expresses an ability while "would" expresses a preference, which means that there is a decision involved. The only similarity between the 2 words is that they both express uncertainty. So based on their exact definitions, it can't be C because "The ability" is not an independent living being that can consciously take its own decision.
However, after reading tarek's post and knowing the OA. I will agree with OA. When I was reading the answer choices, I couldn't find anything wrong except "being" in (A). If one wants to preserve the sanctity of the meaning, the only other answer choice can be (B). However, "capability for predicting" is an incorrect use of idiom and hence should be (A).
Just a comment - Being is not wrong, it's just not preferred in the GMAT. We shouldn't quickly eliminate being just because we see it.
I think the test makers are well aware that courses/people shun the use of being, therefore, the makers would be more likely to test us on it. just imo.
Since "Being able to" is an opening modifier it requires a subject.The original statement does not.Can people vote on whether the original statement is a case of dangling modifier lacking a subject
I have the same concern ... 'would' and 'could' are both gramatically correct, but the usage of 'would' instead of 'could' changes the meaning of the original sentence ... the question says 'can' (could) and we are making it as 'will' (would) ...
Is it correct if I see the phrase "Being able to predict the rise and fall of the interest rate" as a gerund noun? If so, the original sentence looks grammatically correct to me.
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