manugmat123 wrote:
More than have any of its competitors, Dynacorp, which will release its annual earnings report on Friday, is staking its future on the business of bringing shale gas from formerly inaccessible locations like the Arctic and energy-hungry nations like India and China.
A) More than have any of its competitors, Dynacorp, which will release its annual earnings report on Friday, is staking its future on the business of bringing shale gas from formerly inaccessible locations like the Arctic and energy-hungry nations like India and China.
B) More than has any of its competitors, Dynacorp, which will release its annual earnings report on Friday, has staked its future on the business of bringing shale gas from formerly inaccessible locations like the Arctic to energy-hungry nations like India and China.
C) More so than any of its competitors, Dynacorp, which will release its annual earnings report on Friday, is staking its future on the business of bringing shale gas from formerly inaccessible locations like the Arctic and energy-hungry nations such as India and China.
D) More than any of its competitors have, Dynacorp, which will release its annual earnings report on Friday, staked its future on the business of bringing shale gas from formerly inaccessible locations like the Arctic and energy-hungry nations such as India and China.
E) More than any of its competitors, Dynacorp, which will release its annual earnings report on Friday, is staking its future on the business of bringing shale gas from formerly inaccessible locations like the Arctic to energy-hungry nations like India and China.
HimG15 wrote:
+1
I also couldn't understand why b is incorrect. Can someone please help ?
HimG15 , have you read the posts above, especially those from
mikemcgarry ?
If not, please read
this post, then
Mo2men 's
reply, and finally,
mikemcgarry 's
response.
If you have read them, and you still feel lost, I will be happy to try to help.
I have very little to add to Mike McGarry 's insightful analysis.
I will emphasize: No real GMAT question would hang by a thread this thin.
(And it would not use the word "like" to list examples!)
Try not to worry about this question.
All due respect to Veritas: everyone gets it wrong sometimes.
This question is not a good practice tool.
Quote:
There are a variety of ways in which this question falls short of the ideal established by the GMAT.
This is a very poor question. As a general rule, I don't think it helps to dive into the logic of poorly designed questions.
Your instincts were good; the question bothered you.
I hope that helps. If it does not, ask again, perhaps with a little more specificity?
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