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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
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Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, but such a feat has never been verifiably performed.

(A) Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day
The use of "combining" here is ambiguous. "Combining" can either be verb or an adjective. It is not clear
the usage of "one day" is also not correct here


(B) One day, it may be possible to combine atoms at the temperature of a room
"temperature of the room". changes the meaning. it should be room temperature

(C) The combination of atoms at room temperature may one day be possible
This is the noun form and generally the verb form is preferred to the noun form...maybe be the reason why it is wrong

(D) It may one day be possible to combine atoms at room temperature
"It" is an ambiguous pronoun. It doesn't have an antecedent. But it is the verb form ("to combine").
Maybe the reason why it is right. Although I would prefer the answer to be (C)


(E) Combining atoms at room temperature may one day be possible
The use of "combining" here is ambiguous. "Combining" can either be verb or an adjective. It is not clear
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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
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I am not able to buy D.
I am going with A.

We need to have proper construction to support "feat" in the second clause.
We need to show the description of "feat" in the first clause.

"Combining atoms at room temperature" is the feat and A looks better than E.

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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
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AimHigher wrote:
Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, but such a feat has never been verifiably performed.

(A) Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day
(B) One day, it may be possible to combine atoms at the temperature of a room
(C) The combination of atoms at room temperature may one day be possible
(D) It may one day be possible to combine atoms at room temperature
(E) Combining atoms at room temperature may one day be possible


In D It is a placeholder. The construction with place holder it + infinitive sounds stronger than other answer choices.
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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
Kindly provide a detailed explanation for OE.
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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
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kannu44 wrote:
I didnt understand why E is not correct here . Could you please help.
Thanks

I do not see any problem with A or C - the question-writer might be thinking that using "to combine" is better than "combining", but in my opinion, there is no reason to do so.
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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
Why option a is not correct?

Is it something wrong with 'may be possible one day'?
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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
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VKat wrote:
Why option a is not correct?

Is it something wrong with 'may be possible one day'?


Hi VKat ,

As explained by our expert here there is no problem with A or C.

This is a bad quality question.
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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
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kunal1608 wrote:
GMATNinja, Experts,

Could someone please explain how to eliminate the incorrect choices and what role ??ne day" is playing in this sentence

Thanks


Your first query has already been addressed in this forum.

Your second query: "one day" is playing the role of an adverb for the verb "may be". When it may be possible? - one day. An adverb says something more about a verb - this is the function "one day" has in this sentence.
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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
AaronPond wrote:
To truly understand this problem, we need to understand the “-ing” ending for verbals. First, it is worth noting that a verbal is NOT a verb – so it doesn’t have to follow verb conjugation rules. Verbals are words that at first glance might look like verbs but function as nouns or modifiers. Verbals with “-ing” suffixes are actually not “continuous present tense verbs” at all; instead, they are either gerunds (in other words, nouns… for example, “Running is something I like to do) or present participles (in other words, adjectives… for example, “running water”.) Verbals are not a “weaker” verb form at all, but a different construction altogether. However, the fact that verbals ending in “-ing” can, depending on context, be either a noun or an adjective is the key to unlocking this problem.

Both answer choices A and E contain the profoundly ambiguous phrase “combining atoms.” Notice how this phrase could mean either “atoms which combine” (using the present participle form) or “the act of combining atoms” (using the gerund form.) With the first option, atoms is the subject of the sentence, while the second option the gerund “combining” is the subject. This drastically changes the meaning, therefore eliminating both A and E as possible candidates.

Answer choice B can be eliminated because of the phrase “at the temperature of a room.” This implies a specific room, whereas “room temperature” is the idiomatic way of saying “around the temperature humans normally like.” The meaning totally changes. This is an Illogical error.

Answer choice C also contains an Illogical error. The meaning of the phrase “The combination of atoms at room temperature may one day be possible” implies that atom combinations are not possible at room temperature, and if this were true, life as we know it would be impossible. Molecules are a pretty big part of, well, everything.

The only answer remaining is answer choice D. Now, D contains what I call “Convoluted Camouflage” in my classes. The basic idea is this: the GMAT sometimes hides the correct answer by embedding unusual or obnoxious phrasing without containing grammar or logical problems. Many people see the pronoun “It” and get upset because this seems like an ambiguous pronoun with no clear antecedent. However, the phrase “it may be possible to…” is a common English idiom. This is a false alarm intended to trap people, when in fact such a construction is perfectly legal.


I have a question. So with answer choice A, if you were to assume "combing" is a modifier, then where would the verb be in the first clause of the sentence? I read it as the verb and therefore it means "the act of combining atoms may be possible one day" which to my knowledge is grammatically correct? Can someone help?
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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
I treated Combining in option A and E as 'an act of combining the atoms' because the sentence uses the word feat for Combining Atoms. The logic and meaning are well expressed in option A.
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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
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Re: Combining atoms at room temperature may be possible one day, [#permalink]
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