GraceSCKao
Hi
ExpertsGlobal5Thank you so much for your quick response! My question was partially solved--yes, it seems to make more sense to have the infinitive phrase refer to the whole group instead of each member in the group.
Still, could you elaborate why we need to use "a ticket" instead of "tickets"?
If this sentence were "John was one of the few people to get an advanced ticket of U2's concert," the use of the singular ticket would not bother me, and the sentence would be just like the Noble prize example ("Obama is one of the few American politicians to win a Nobel Peace Prize.") However, since the correct answer uses "
their hands" (plural) before
"an advanced ticket" (singular), it seems odd to me. Are the few people going to share one ticket? It would be illogical.
On the other hand, would it be wrong in the GMAT world if I say "to get their hands on tickets fo the U2's concert?"
Thank in advance for your explanation.
BTW, this is not an OG question but I really do not want to face such dilemma in the real exam....[/quote]
Hello
GraceSCKao,
We hope this finds you well.
To answer your query, although this construction is a bit awkward and ambiguous it is still an acceptable way to convey the intended meaning.
Further, we would like to point out that since all other answer choices have more concrete errors, Option C is still the best answer choice despite this ambiguity.
Remember, on the GMAT you must look for the
best of the given answer choices, not a
perfect one.
We hope this helps.
All the best!
Experts' Global Team