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Correct option : A

Sentence Exam on :
- Parallelism list at End of sentence
- they pronoun refer to thieves

As criminal activity on the Internet becomes more and more sophisticated, not only
are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts,
they can also pilfer valuable information
such as
- business development strategies,
- new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and
- sell the data to competitors
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Hi,
I read using "comma" + "and" needs to have an IC post that.
Only option D follows this rule.
Does this rule have an exception?
Cardinal rule #1 of SC: do not invent rules! :)

There is no rule that "comma + and" must introduce an independent clause. The construction could introduce the last element in a list: "Tim likes basketball, hockey, and jai alai."

The comma could be setting off a non-essential modifier. "Tim likes basketball, which he is terrible at, and hockey."

The takeaway: if "comma + and" isn't introducing an independent clause, do not assume you're looking at an error! You still have to reason your way through the logic of the sentence. Always.

I hope that clears things up!
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Hi GMATNinja, AnishPassi , egmat , EducationAisle
KarishmaB , ChiranjeevSingh
,Bunuel
I have a doubt in option A: In the sentence 'not only' is followed by a clause and 'also' is followed by a verb 'pilfer' and it doesn't have subject (subject 'they' is present but it is before 'also'), so not sure how this usage is correct and how both can be parallel, so could you please explain.

As criminal activity on the Internet becomes more and more sophisticated, not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts, they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell the data to competitors.


(A) they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell
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kunalc20

I have a doubt in option A: In the sentence 'not only' is followed by a clause and 'also' is followed by a verb 'pilfer' and it doesn't have subject (subject 'they' is present but it is before 'also'), so not sure how this usage is correct and how both can be parallel, so could you please explain.

As criminal activity on the Internet becomes more and more sophisticated, not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts, they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell the data to competitors.


(A) they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell
I am wondering if you are trying to draw parallels with "not only....but also..". This isn't using that structure.

"they" is indeed the subject of "pilfer"; the presence of "also" doesn't really make any difference to subject-verb pair.
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Hi GMATNinja, AnishPassi Sir, I have a doubt in option A: In the sentence 'not only' is followed by a clause and 'also' is followed by a verb 'pilfer' and it doesn't have subject (subject 'they' is present but it is before 'also'), so not sure how this usage is correct and how both can be parallel, so could you please explain.

As criminal activity on the Internet becomes more and more sophisticated, not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts, they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell the data to competitors.


(A) they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell
This drives a lot of people crazy. Just know that if the construction is "not only... but," the second half of the parallelism will begin after the "but." If there is no "but," the second half of the parallelism will begin after the comma.

Put another way, "also" is not a parallel marker. It's just an adverb.

For example:

    "Not only does Tim root for the Sacramento Kings, he also has a poster of Marvin Bagley blowing a wide-open dunk."

Here, the parallel elements are "does Tim root" and "he also has," and both of those are full clauses. So this is okay.

Same deal in (A). The two parallel elements are "are thieves" and "they can also pilfer," both of which clauses. That's not a problem. (Note that "are thieves" just has the subject-verb order inverted. "Thieves" is the subject in this case, so we still have a full clause.)

I hope that clears things up!
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Daagh, you're bringing this to a whole new level of grammar intensity! Always fun. (And yes, apparently I'm a grammar nerd or something. I guess it says that in my job title...?)

Disclaimer: unless you really love grammar, just stop reading right now. This isn't an important rant for most test-takers -- there are dozens (hundreds?) of far more important things to worry about on the GMAT.

OK, so answer choice (A) has three components:

Quote:
As criminal activity on the Internet becomes more and more sophisticated

So component #1 is clearly a dependent clause. On to #2:

Quote:
not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts

Ah, here it is: this can't stand alone as a sentence, either. Sure, it doesn't have a standard "marker" that "turns" an independent clause into a dependent clause (although, but, and, because, etc.), but it's still a dependent clause: it has a subject and a verb, but can't stand alone -- at least not the way it's written in (A).

So we have two dependent clauses so far. On to part #3:

Quote:
they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell the data to competitors.

And there's our independent clause. So we don't have a comma splice here, and GMAC didn't actually make a mistake in this case -- it's just that the middle clause is super-sneaky.

I hope this helps! And seriously: if you're not daagh and you didn't follow this explanation, please don't worry about it. Again, parallelism and other issues are way more important here.
Hi GMATNinja,

This question is so classic that we are still discussing it in 2022....(and the community has five pages of discussion already!)

I have checked all the previous posts but one question still hovers in my mind: why is this sentence "not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts" not an independent clause? Why cannot it stand alone? Is it because this sentence begins with "not only"? I hope to confirm as I have never read relevant rules before.

I could see that this sentence is inverted and the following was my idea when I practiced this question: its meaning was similar to "thieves are not only able to divert cash from company bank accounts." So, when I flipped the sentence, I adjusted the word order of NOT ONLY too and transferred the sentence into "thieves are not only able to divert cash from company bank accounts." Then, as I got an independent clause, I needed a conjunction before the second independent clause and only options (D) and (E) got "but." So, I eliminated (A), (B) and (C).

I chose (E) as I (incorrectly) thought that since I got "thieves are not only able to divert cash from company bank accounts," I could use "but also pilfering....and selling..." (Thieves are not only able to... but also pilfering....and selling....just my idea before finding that no other flipped the sentence as I did.)

I know that we do not need to stick with the NOT ONLY...BUT ALSO idiom, but the lack of conjunction in option (A), (B) and (C) really bothers me. Could you elaborate more on why "not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts" is a dependent clause?

And, when we have an inverted sentence, do we just flip the verb and subject and leave everything else as is?

Thank in advance for your time and response. :)
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Thanks so much GMATNinja , Got it now
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Hi GMATNinja, AnishPassi , egmat , EducationAisle
KarishmaB , ChiranjeevSingh
,Bunuel
I have a doubt in option A: In the sentence 'not only' is followed by a clause and 'also' is followed by a verb 'pilfer' and it doesn't have subject (subject 'they' is present but it is before 'also'), so not sure how this usage is correct and how both can be parallel, so could you please explain.

As criminal activity on the Internet becomes more and more sophisticated, not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts, they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell the data to competitors.


(A) they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell

GMATNinja gave a great explanation. I’ll add one point:

As criminal activity on the Internet becomes more and more sophisticated, not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts, [but] they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell the data to competitors.

The sentence doesn’t actually have the word ‘but’, but the contrast begins after the comma. I have added ‘but’ in brackets above to highlight where the contrast starts. So, that’s why the clause after ‘not only’ needs to be parallel with the clause after the comma.
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GraceSCKao
Hi GMATNinja,

This question is so classic that we are still discussing it in 2022....(and the community has five pages of discussion already!)

I have checked all the previous posts but one question still hovers in my mind: why is this sentence "not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts" not an independent clause? Why cannot it stand alone? Is it because this sentence begins with "not only"? I hope to confirm as I have never read relevant rules before.

I could see that this sentence is inverted and the following was my idea when I practiced this question: its meaning was similar to "thieves are not only able to divert cash from company bank accounts." So, when I flipped the sentence, I adjusted the word order of NOT ONLY too and transferred the sentence into "thieves are not only able to divert cash from company bank accounts." Then, as I got an independent clause, I needed a conjunction before the second independent clause and only options (D) and (E) got "but." So, I eliminated (A), (B) and (C).

I chose (E) as I (incorrectly) thought that since I got "thieves are not only able to divert cash from company bank accounts," I could use "but also pilfering....and selling..." (Thieves are not only able to... but also pilfering....and selling....just my idea before finding that no other flipped the sentence as I did.)

I know that we do not need to stick with the NOT ONLY...BUT ALSO idiom, but the lack of conjunction in option (A), (B) and (C) really bothers me. Could you elaborate more on why "not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts" is a dependent clause?

And, when we have an inverted sentence, do we just flip the verb and subject and leave everything else as is?

Thank in advance for your time and response. :)
Let's start with something easier:

  • "Tim is going to the grocery store." - Perfectly fine independent clause.
  • "Either Tim is going to the grocery store." - Um... or what?? The "either" causes the reader to expect something else. Sure, there's a subject and a verb, but without that something else, the sentence is incomplete and doesn't make any sense on its own.

Similarly:

  • "Tim is going to the grocery store." - Perfectly fine independent clause.
  • "Not only is Tim going to the grocery store." - Again something is missing. And this is actually worse than the "either" example above: if you drop the "either" from the second sentence above, you are indeed left with a perfectly fine independent clause. If you drop the "not only" here, you're left with "Is Tim going to the grocery store." The inverted word order makes this look like a question! This word order would never fly as a simple statement.

The "not only..." part in choice (A) wouldn't fly as an independent clause for those same reasons.

And if you're still bothered by the absence of a conjunction in (A), just think about this final set of examples:

  • "Tim is going to the grocery store." - Perfectly fine independent clause.
  • "Although Tim is going to the grocery store." - Not fine on its own.
  • "Although Tim is going to the grocery store, his kids are worried that he'll forget to buy essential items such as Skittles and Cap'n Crunch." - The "although" turns the first part into a dependent clause, so we don't need a conjunction after the comma. Same is true of the "not only" in (A). (Mmmm... Cap'n Crunch. :-P )

I hope that helps!
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Can we use 'but also' without using 'not only' ?
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Can we use 'but also' without using 'not only' ?

Hello Dhwanii,

We hope this finds you well.

To answer your query, "but also" can, indeed, be used without "not only".

For example, "I like the sun, but also like the rain."

We hope this helps.
All the best!
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@empowergmatrich Your explanation here will be much appreciated!!
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Quote:
As criminal activity on the Internet becomes more and more sophisticated, not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts, they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell the data to competitors.

(A) they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell
(B) they can also pilfer valuable information that includes business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and selling
(C) also pilfering valuable information including business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, selling
(D) but also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans to sell
(E) but also pilfering valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans and selling
Hi RonTargetTestPrep,
It seems that the following sentence is just awkward, isn't it?
The core:
Thieves are not only able to divert cash from company bank accounts, they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and (they can also) sell the data to competitors.
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Quote:
D. but also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans to sell
OK, now we really do have a “not only… but also” structure, which means that we need to think about parallelism again. There’s not much wiggle-room here: whatever follows “not only” needs to be parallel to whatever follows “but also.”

So we have: “not only are thieves able to divert cash… but also pilfer valuable information…” This isn’t awful, but it doesn’t quite seem parallel to me: “not only are thieves” gives us a subject and a verb, but the “but also” is followed only by a verb.

Plus, “to sell” seems to only modify “contract bidding plans”, and that’s not quite right: the thieves are selling the strategies and specifications, too. (A) makes much more sense than (D).

GMATNinja
Sir, hope you're fine.
How do we convinced that ''to sell'' does not modify ''strategies and specifications'' too? Very curious to know that...
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As criminal activity on the Internet becomes more and more sophisticated, not only are thieves able to divert cash from company bank accounts, they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell the data to competitors.

Option Elimination -
Beware of many deceptions GMAT has been using, especially in the "Not only...but also" idiom.
Not only X but also Y demands strict parallelism. Moreover, this construction places an equal significance on X and Y.
But if we need to present a contrast, we need X but Y. Here is a good deceiving question with X but also Y (don't jump to conclude and make a rule that it ok to use but also without not only. This question is an example of X but Y and not at all for the "not only but also" idiom. https://gmatclub.com/forum/not-only-did ... l#p3293065
Now, there is another deception with just "not only." Let's take an example: Not only was she a talented pianist, she was also a gifted painter. In this example, "not only" emphasizes the exceptional quality of the person's musical talent. And what is this "Not only was she a talented pianist"? Is it an independent clause? No. It's adverbial. Adverbial for what? For the subject and verb in the subsequent independent clause, "she was." With this understanding, let's look at the options.

(A) they can also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and sell - As introduces an adverbial. For what? For the subject and verb in the subsequent adverbial (remember adverbs can modify adverbs? Yes), "thieves are." Not only introduces another adverbial and emphasizes that thieves can divert cash from the company bank accounts. Adverbial for what? For subject + verb in the subsequent clause, "they can pilfer ...." Moreover, "they can pilfer and sell" is parallel. I know it broke our love with "not only but also," but the sentence is absolutely correct.

(B) they can also pilfer valuable information that includes business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, and selling - "selling" parallel to what? Nothing.

(C) also pilfering valuable information including business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans, selling - total crap. Comma + ING is adverbial. Here, it modifies what? "thieves can divert cash"? Seriously? Moreover, "selling" modifying what?

(D) but also pilfer valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans to sell - "to sell" only limited to "contract bidding plans" and not others? Wrong.

(E) but also pilfering valuable information such as business development strategies, new product specifications, and contract bidding plans and selling - "not only but also needs strict parallelism. After not only do we have subject + verb, but after "but" also we have nothing as "pilfering" and "selling" without helping verbs are just verbals (modifiers).
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Hello from the GMAT Club VerbalBot!

Thanks to another GMAT Club member, I have just discovered this valuable topic, yet it had no discussion for over a year. I am now bumping it up - doing my job. I think you may find it valuable (esp those replies with Kudos).

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