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esledge
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that refers to the immediate noun before it.Here it is a plural.Hence are is correct usage.

IMO C.

I agree. Consider this simpler example:
Jack is but one of the talent show performers that are planning to rehearse here tonight.

Following noun modifier rules, if only Jack plans to rehearse, we'd have to move the modifier closer to him:
Jack, who is planning to rehearse here tonight, is but one of the talent show performers.

Even if you ignore the is/are verb split, you should still arrive at the answer C. Some of these have been mentioned above, but not the wordiness issue found in A, D, E.

A) is looking to use its waterfront as a way for it to improve the quality of urban life and attract
Wordiness

B) is looking at using its waterfront to improve the quality of urban life and attract
Idiom ("looking to use X" is prefered)

C) are looking to use their waterfronts to improve the quality of urban life and attract
CORRECT

D) are looking to use its waterfront as a way of improving the quality of urban life and attracting
mismatch of are/its
Wordiness

E) are looking at using their waterfronts as a way of improving the quality of urban life and attract.
Idiom ("looking to use X" is prefered)
Wordiness
Lack of Parallelism

esledge If "its" in (D) refers to the river, is (D) still incorrect? Is there any parallelism issue with (D)?
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esledge
amit2k9
that refers to the immediate noun before it.Here it is a plural.Hence are is correct usage.

IMO C.

I agree. Consider this simpler example:
Jack is but one of the talent show performers that are planning to rehearse here tonight.

Following noun modifier rules, if only Jack plans to rehearse, we'd have to move the modifier closer to him:
Jack, who is planning to rehearse here tonight, is but one of the talent show performers.

Even if you ignore the is/are verb split, you should still arrive at the answer C. Some of these have been mentioned above, but not the wordiness issue found in A, D, E.

A) is looking to use its waterfront as a way for it to improve the quality of urban life and attract
Wordiness

B) is looking at using its waterfront to improve the quality of urban life and attract
Idiom ("looking to use X" is prefered)

C) are looking to use their waterfronts to improve the quality of urban life and attract
CORRECT

D) are looking to use its waterfront as a way of improving the quality of urban life and attracting
mismatch of are/its
Wordiness

E) are looking at using their waterfronts as a way of improving the quality of urban life and attract.
Idiom ("looking to use X" is prefered)
Wordiness
Lack of Parallelism

esledge If "its" in (D) refers to the river, is (D) still incorrect? Is there any parallelism issue with (D)?


its refers to Trenton's .
But problem is SV agreement as per meaning wise
are looking to use its waterfront as a way of improving the quality of urban life and attracting

i hope it helps
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With a new park, stadium, and entertainment complex along the Delaware River, Trenton, New Jersey, is but one of a large number of communities that is looking to use its waterfront as a way for it to improve the quality of urban life and attract new businesses.

Verb should be plural --> Eliminate A, B
(A) is looking to use its waterfront as a way for it to improve the quality of urban life and attract
(B) is looking at using its waterfront to improve the quality of urban life and attract

S: A numer of --> "Its" is singular --> Eliminate D
(D) are looking to use its waterfront as a way of improving the quality of urban life and attracting

Improving and attract is NOT paralle --> Eliminate E
(E) are looking at using their waterfronts as a way of improving the quality of urban life and attract

This is the right answer
(C) are looking to use their waterfronts to improve the quality of urban life and attract
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Dear experts, please help me with this question. I marked option D because i thought "its" in option D refer to Trenton.
Can you please tell me why this meaning is wrong?

(D) are looking to use its(Trenton's) waterfront as a way of improving the quality of urban life and attracting
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We want to use plural instead of singular because the whole purpose of the sentence is to describe what the communities are trying to accomplish.

If we wanted to describe only Trenton, then 'of a large number of communities' does not serve any purpose. We could simply say:

Trenton, New Jersey, is but one of a large number of communities that looking to use its waterfront to improve the quality of urban life and attract new businesses.

Since that is not the intended meaning, we need to use the plural form 'are':

Trenton, New Jersey, is but one of a large number of communities that are looking to use their waterfronts to improve the quality of urban life and attract new businesses.
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With a new park, stadium, and entertainment complex along the Delaware River, Trenton, New Jersey, is but one of a large number of communities that is looking to use its waterfront as a way for it to improve the quality of urban life and attract new businesses.

Test Points: SV agreement & idiom

(A) is looking to use its waterfront as a way for it to improve the quality of urban life and attract ("that is lookingg to use...“ should modify "communities", so "are" is the correct verb)

(B) is looking at using its waterfront to improve the quality of urban life and attract (Same as A)

(C) are looking to use their waterfronts to improve the quality of urban life and attract

(D) are looking to use its waterfront as a way of improving the quality of urban life and attracting ("communites" are plural, so we cannot use "its")

(E) are looking at using their waterfronts as a way of improving the quality of urban life and attract ("looking at using..." is not idiomatic)
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GMATNinja, could you please explain when that+modifier should refer back to immediately preceding noun, and when it can refer back to other nouns in the previous clause? Why it is not correct in this case that+modifier should refer to one of the communities, and not communities?
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Isn't 'that' singular?
then how can it refer back to communities which is plural?

structure -

Trenton (subject of main clause)
is (verb)
but one of a large number of communities (object of main clause)
that (relative clause subject)
are looking (relative clause verb)
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Vartikaa14
Isn't 'that' singular?
then how can it refer back to communities which is plural?

structure -

Trenton (subject of main clause)
is (verb)
but one of a large number of communities (object of main clause)
that (relative clause subject)
are looking (relative clause verb)

Hello Vartikaa14,

We hope this finds you well.

To answer your query, in this sentence, "that" serves as a preposition rather than as a pronoun.

We hope this helps.
All the best!
Experts' Global Team
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Vartikaa14
Isn't 'that' singular?
then how can it refer back to communities which is plural?

structure -

Trenton (subject of main clause)
is (verb)
but one of a large number of communities (object of main clause)
that (relative clause subject)
are looking (relative clause verb)
Hi Vartikaa14,

You've correctly classified this that as a relative pronoun. As a normal pronoun or as an adjective (more precisely, "determiner"), that does have a plural form, those, but as a relative pronoun, that does not have a plural form.

1. That was a tough question. | Those were some tough questions. | That were some tough questions.That is used as a pronoun here, and has a plural form, those.

2. That question was tough. | Those questions were tough. | That questions were tough. ← As a determiner, that has a plural form.

3. A question that was tough... | Questions that were tough... | Questions those were tough... ← As a relative pronoun, that does not have a plural form.

4. The question was not that tough! | The question was not those tough! ← Again, no plural form when that is used as an adverb.

And of course, if we use that to introduce a dependent clause ("She did {something} so that..."), we can't replace that with those.

ExpertsGlobal5
To answer your query, in this sentence, "that" serves as a preposition rather than as a pronoun.
That is not a preposition.
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Vartikaa14
Isn't 'that' singular?
then how can it refer back to communities which is plural?
Hi Vartikaa14, as AjiteshArun has suggested, when used as a relative pronoun, "that" can refer to either singular or to plural noun.

For example, both of the following would be correct:

Peter has a car that is very expensive.
- that is referring to singular "car".

Peter has many cars that are very expensive.
- that is referring to plural "cars".

Quote:
structure -

Trenton (subject of main clause)
is (verb)
but one of a large number of communities (object of main clause)
that (relative clause subject)
are looking (relative clause verb)
Yes, this structure ("one of...") is actually very common on GMAT. Our book EducationAisle Sentence Correction Nirvana discusses "one of the mysteries", its application and examples in significant detail. If you or someone is interested, PM me your email-id; I can mail the corresponding section.
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one trick gmat likes is that the pattern in correct answer is seldom used idiom or strange. this make us go away when we see the strange pattern we dont know . this is not good for non native.

"be looking to do " is an idiom, I, a non native, dont know.

the solution to this trick is simple. find the clear errors and eliminate the choices with the errors and, accept the remaining choice with the strange pattern. be ready to accept the strange pattern after realizing the clear errors.

apply above rule. in this problem , focus on parallelism and agreement, we can eliminate other choices but choice C.
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GMATNinja, could you please explain when that+modifier should refer back to immediately preceding noun, and when it can refer back to other nouns in the previous clause? Why it is not correct in this case that+modifier should refer to one of the communities, and not communities?
It's all about meaning here.

If we treat the "that" clause as a modifier for "communities" (plural), then we are basically saying:

  • "There are a large number of communities that are looking to use their waterfronts to improve the quality of urban life and attract new businesses."
  • "Trenton, New Jersey, is just one of those communities."

That makes perfect sense. But if we treat the "that" clause as a modifier for the single community, then we are basically saying:

  • "Trenton, New Jersey, is looking to use its waterfront {...}."
  • "Also, Trenton, New Jersey, is just one of a large number of communities."

Wait -- a large number of communities that what? Exist? Is the author simply trying to let the reader know that there are other communities out there besides Trenton, New Jersey? Well, that would be silly. The author wants us to know that Trenton is one of a specific subset of communities, all of which are trying to use THEIR waterfronts.

So, yeah, technically the "that" clause could refer to either, but one of those interpretations makes no sense at all.

I hope that helps!
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RonTargetTestPrep

query usage of article 'the'

''Trenton, New Jersey, is but ???the one of??? a large number of communities ???that is looking??? to use its waterfront as a way for it to improve the quality of urban life and attract new businesses''

In this case, since the definite article ???the??? is present the focus prima-facie shifts to the article ???the???, which restricts the number to singular. Hence, the modifier ???that??? in spite of its essentiality will go along taking a singular verb ???is looking???.


Is understanding above correct?
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Bunuel, or another expert -- can you please post a similar question where "one" vs "the one" singular/plural indicators are tested? I got this wrong because I figured that the subject is singular.
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Bunuel, or another expert -- can you please post a similar question where "one" vs "the one" singular/plural indicators are tested? I got this wrong because I figured that the subject is singular.
You can refer to this question, which uses the structure the only one, and is hence singular.

Other than this, one would usually expect the following structure:

James is one of the people who donate regularly.

p.s. Our book EducationAisle Sentence Correction Nirvana discusses "One of the" mysteries, its application and examples in significant detail. If you or someone is interested, PM me your email-id; I can mail the corresponding section.
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Can you please elaborate on the subject verb agreement for such usages that use 'one of...' phrase?
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