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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
Expert Reply
pollymonkey wrote:
EMPOWERgmatVerbal wrote:
Hello Everyone!

Let's take a look at this question, one problem at a time, and determine which option is the best one! There are many ways to attack this question, but let's focus on the quickest way to get to the correct answer!

To get started, here is the original question with any major differences between each option highlighted in orange:

Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Africa, dance teams represent their own chief at the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for food, drink, and lodging.

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for
(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for
(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on
(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for
(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on

Right away, we can see two major differences between each option:

1. How they begin (refer to only two tribes / refer to many tribes)
2. How they end (in return for / as a return for / as a return on)

There are other differences, but these two are the easiest to spot and deal with quickly. To begin, let's tackle #1 on our list: how each option begins. The Tsonga is a group of several tribes, with each tribe having its own dance team. Each tribe is able to visit any other tribe it wants, and then provide entertainment to gain access to food, drink, and lodging.

However, some of the options below make it sound like there are only 2 tribes who send dance troupes to each other, rather than all of the tribes being able to visit any other tribe. So let's take a look at each option, and rule out any that are unclear or sound like only 2 tribes are involved:

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for
This is wrong because saying "each other" means we're only talking about 2 tribes visiting each other, instead of one tribe visiting any other tribe it wants.

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for
This is okay because "another" means the dance troupe can visit any of the other troupes, not just one.

(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on
This is wrong because "the other" suggests there is only one other tribe they can travel to, which isn't true.

(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for
This is wrong because "each other's" suggests the 2 tribes always trade dance troupes, which isn't always the case.

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on
This is okay because "another's court" means the dance troupe can visit any of the other tribes it wants, not just one.

We can eliminate options A, C, and D because they incorrectly state there are only 2 tribes involved in this behavior, not ALL of the tribes!

Now that we're left with only options B and E to choose from, let's try #2 on our list: their endings (in return for / as a return on). Whenever we talk about two people or groups exchanging something, we say:

X is doing [insert action here] in exchange for Y
OR
X is doing [insert action here] in return for Y

Let's see which of our remaining options uses this correctly:

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for

This is the CORRECT answer! It's clear that we're talking about several tribes being able to visit any other tribe it wants, and it's clear that they provide entertainment in exchange for / in return for food, drink, and lodging!

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on

This is INCORRECT because it says that the tribe's dance troupe provides entertainment as a return on food, drink, and lodging. This not only sounds awkward, but it also suggests that tribes provide entertainment after they've already been given food, drink, and lodging, which doesn't really make sense.

There you go - option B is the correct answer!


Don't study for the GMAT. Train for it.


thanks for the explanation. But I've once seen an example sentence on Manhattan SC prep: These groups often INTERACT WITH ONE ANOTHER (or EACH OTHER). Doesn't it mean that "each other" can be used to indicate more than 2 group members?


Thanks for your question pollymonkey!

This depends on the context. In this case, there is a distinction between saying how the dance troupes interatct with each other:

the court of each other / each other's court / the court of the other = suggests we're only talking about 2 courts trading dance troupes, instead of all the dance troupes visiting any of the others

the court of another / another's court = suggests that a dance troupe can visit any of the other courts in the tribe

None of the options here use the phrase "one another," so that doesn't really apply here. You can absolutely use "each other" and "one another" interchangeably in the example you gave, but this GMAT question doesn't ask you to choose between "each other" and "one another" - it asks you to choose between "each other" and "another's/of another."

I hope that helps!
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
hazelnut wrote:
The Official Guide for GMAT Review 2018

Practice Question
Question No.: SC 796
Page: 706

Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Africa, dance teams represent their own chief at the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for food, drink, and lodging.

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for

(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on

(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on



Hi daagh AjiteshArun mikemcgarry VeritasKarishma

I am now confused after reading few answers, which mention that the usage of 'providing' as a Verb + 'ing' is incorrect in option 'A'. However, I think the usage is correct as 'providing' modifies the verb 'represent' in the previous clause and tells us about some additional information, as in the teams 'represent' their chiefs and provide entertainment in return for food and other things.

Is there a gap in my understanding here?


Thanks
Saurabh
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
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Suarabh,
You are 100% on the dot. A present particple preceded by a comma can never be a verb. It is a verbal and verbals are not infinite in their timings;They take the tense of the main clause.

Originally posted by daagh on 28 Sep 2019, 05:57.
Last edited by daagh on 28 Oct 2019, 06:32, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
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Expert Reply
Sarjaria84 wrote:
hazelnut wrote:
The Official Guide for GMAT Review 2018

Practice Question
Question No.: SC 796
Page: 706

Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Africa, dance teams represent their own chief at the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for food, drink, and lodging.

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for

(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on

(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on



Hi daagh AjiteshArun mikemcgarry VeritasKarishma

I am now confused after reading few answers, which mention that the usage of 'providing' as a Verb + 'ing' is incorrect in option 'A'. However, I think the usage is correct as 'providing' modifies the verb 'represent' in the previous clause and tells us about some additional information, as in the teams 'represent' their chiefs and provide entertainment in return for food and other things.

Is there a gap in my understanding here?


Thanks
Saurabh


Saurabh, "providing" in option (A) is not correct. "represent" and "provide" need to be independent verbs. "providing" does not explain "represent". They don't represent their chiefs by providing entertainment. They represent their chiefs and provide entertainment.

Look at a simpler example:
I will read the text and will write its summary. (Two independent actions of reading and writing) - Correct
I will read the text, writing its summary. (writing its summary doesn't explain reading the text so writing should not be a modifier) - Not correct
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
EMPOWERgmatVerbal wrote:
Hello Everyone!

Let's take a look at this question, one problem at a time, and determine which option is the best one! There are many ways to attack this question, but let's focus on the quickest way to get to the correct answer!

To get started, here is the original question with any major differences between each option highlighted in orange:

Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Africa, dance teams represent their own chief at the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for food, drink, and lodging.

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for
(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for
(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on
(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for
(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on

Right away, we can see two major differences between each option:

1. How they begin (refer to only two tribes / refer to many tribes)
2. How they end (in return for / as a return for / as a return on)

There are other differences, but these two are the easiest to spot and deal with quickly. To begin, let's tackle #1 on our list: how each option begins. The Tsonga is a group of several tribes, with each tribe having its own dance team. Each tribe is able to visit any other tribe it wants, and then provide entertainment to gain access to food, drink, and lodging.

However, some of the options below make it sound like there are only 2 tribes who send dance troupes to each other, rather than all of the tribes being able to visit any other tribe. So let's take a look at each option, and rule out any that are unclear or sound like only 2 tribes are involved:

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for
This is wrong because saying "each other" means we're only talking about 2 tribes visiting each other, instead of one tribe visiting any other tribe it wants.

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for
This is okay because "another" means the dance troupe can visit any of the other troupes, not just one.

(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on
This is wrong because "the other" suggests there is only one other tribe they can travel to, which isn't true.

(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for
This is wrong because "each other's" suggests the 2 tribes always trade dance troupes, which isn't always the case.

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on
This is okay because "another's court" means the dance troupe can visit any of the other tribes it wants, not just one.

We can eliminate options A, C, and D because they incorrectly state there are only 2 tribes involved in this behavior, not ALL of the tribes!

Now that we're left with only options B and E to choose from, let's try #2 on our list: their endings (in return for / as a return on). Whenever we talk about two people or groups exchanging something, we say:

X is doing [insert action here] in exchange for Y
OR
X is doing [insert action here] in return for Y

Let's see which of our remaining options uses this correctly:

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for

This is the CORRECT answer! It's clear that we're talking about several tribes being able to visit any other tribe it wants, and it's clear that they provide entertainment in exchange for / in return for food, drink, and lodging!

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on

This is INCORRECT because it says that the tribe's dance troupe provides entertainment as a return on food, drink, and lodging. This not only sounds awkward, but it also suggests that tribes provide entertainment after they've already been given food, drink, and lodging, which doesn't really make sense.

There you go - option B is the correct answer!


Don't study for the GMAT. Train for it.


EMPOWERgmatVerbal absolutely love your explanations.

Just one question - how did you get the sentence says in the highlighted part?

or this line - However, some of the options below make it sound like there are only 2 tribes who send dance troupes to each other, rather than all of the tribes being able to visit any other tribe.
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
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Nipungupta9081 wrote:
EMPOWERgmatVerbal wrote:
Hello Everyone!

Let's take a look at this question, one problem at a time, and determine which option is the best one! There are many ways to attack this question, but let's focus on the quickest way to get to the correct answer!

To get started, here is the original question with any major differences between each option highlighted in orange:

Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Africa, dance teams represent their own chief at the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for food, drink, and lodging.

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for
(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for
(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on
(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for
(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on

Right away, we can see two major differences between each option:

1. How they begin (refer to only two tribes / refer to many tribes)
2. How they end (in return for / as a return for / as a return on)

There are other differences, but these two are the easiest to spot and deal with quickly. To begin, let's tackle #1 on our list: how each option begins. The Tsonga is a group of several tribes, with each tribe having its own dance team. Each tribe is able to visit any other tribe it wants, and then provide entertainment to gain access to food, drink, and lodging.

However, some of the options below make it sound like there are only 2 tribes who send dance troupes to each other, rather than all of the tribes being able to visit any other tribe. So let's take a look at each option, and rule out any that are unclear or sound like only 2 tribes are involved:

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for
This is wrong because saying "each other" means we're only talking about 2 tribes visiting each other, instead of one tribe visiting any other tribe it wants.

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for
This is okay because "another" means the dance troupe can visit any of the other troupes, not just one.

(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on
This is wrong because "the other" suggests there is only one other tribe they can travel to, which isn't true.

(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for
This is wrong because "each other's" suggests the 2 tribes always trade dance troupes, which isn't always the case.

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on
This is okay because "another's court" means the dance troupe can visit any of the other tribes it wants, not just one.

We can eliminate options A, C, and D because they incorrectly state there are only 2 tribes involved in this behavior, not ALL of the tribes!

Now that we're left with only options B and E to choose from, let's try #2 on our list: their endings (in return for / as a return on). Whenever we talk about two people or groups exchanging something, we say:

X is doing [insert action here] in exchange for Y
OR
X is doing [insert action here] in return for Y

Let's see which of our remaining options uses this correctly:

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for

This is the CORRECT answer! It's clear that we're talking about several tribes being able to visit any other tribe it wants, and it's clear that they provide entertainment in exchange for / in return for food, drink, and lodging!

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on

This is INCORRECT because it says that the tribe's dance troupe provides entertainment as a return on food, drink, and lodging. This not only sounds awkward, but it also suggests that tribes provide entertainment after they've already been given food, drink, and lodging, which doesn't really make sense.

There you go - option B is the correct answer!


Don't study for the GMAT. Train for it.


EMPOWERgmatVerbal absolutely love your explanations.

Just one question - how did you get the sentence says in the highlighted part?

or this line - However, some of the options below make it sound like there are only 2 tribes who send dance troupes to each other, rather than all of the tribes being able to visit any other tribe.


Thanks for your question Nipungupta9081!

I'm not 100% sure what you're asking here, so if I miss the mark on this, let me know by tagging me in another question or sending me a PM. :)

I came to the conclusion that the Tonga is comprised of more than 2 tribes based on the non-underlined portion of the sentence:

Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Africa, dance teams represent their own chief at the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for food, drink, and lodging.

We only use "group" to talk about 3+ items, and would have to use "pair" or "couple" if we were only talking about 2 items. Since the Tsonga are referred to as a "group," we need the rest of the sentence to reflect that we're talking about multiple tribes sending dance teams to multiple other tribes to entertain them in exchange for food, drink, and lodging.

We hope that helps! If not, let us know and we'll try to be more specific.
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
its an easy break out if you have read aristole

each other vs one another.
each other is use between 2 people
and
one another is use for more than
Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Africa, dance teams represent their own chief at the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for food, drink, and lodging.

here it is dance teams =who are representing at the court of one another
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
sayantanc2k wrote:
Lucy Phuong wrote:
Dear expert GMATNinja, can you please elaborate on how to decide between (A) and (B)? In other words, how does "each other" differ from "another" in this sentence?
Thank you.


"Each Other" is used when the whole group performs an act mutually.
The attendants shook hands with each other...... "The attendants" is a group.

"Another" is used when an individual/individuals of the group is/are referred to.
The captain shook hands with another (captain)... "The captain" is an individual.

Here you would notice that an individual is referred to, not a group: "their chief" is an individual. Hence "another" is correct. The intended meaning is:
The dance teams represented their own chief in the court of another chief.

Hence B is correct.


You are wrong. They shook hands with "one another". Alone "another" makes incomplete sense imho.
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
VeritasKarishma wrote:
Sarjaria84 wrote:
hazelnut wrote:
The Official Guide for GMAT Review 2018

Practice Question
Question No.: SC 796
Page: 706

Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Africa, dance teams represent their own chief at the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for food, drink, and lodging.

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for

(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on

(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on



Hi daagh AjiteshArun mikemcgarry VeritasKarishma

I am now confused after reading few answers, which mention that the usage of 'providing' as a Verb + 'ing' is incorrect in option 'A'. However, I think the usage is correct as 'providing' modifies the verb 'represent' in the previous clause and tells us about some additional information, as in the teams 'represent' their chiefs and provide entertainment in return for food and other things.

Is there a gap in my understanding here?


Thanks
Saurabh


Saurabh, "providing" in option (A) is not correct. "represent" and "provide" need to be independent verbs. "providing" does not explain "represent". They don't represent their chiefs by providing entertainment. They represent their chiefs and provide entertainment.

Look at a simpler example:
I will read the text and will write its summary. (Two independent actions of reading and writing) - Correct
I will read the text, writing its summary. (writing its summary doesn't explain reading the text so writing should not be a modifier) - Not correct


Thanks VeritasKarishma - this is the right reason to reject A over B. Thanks.
Because I think demonstrative pronoun should be "one another" and not "another" alone. Do you agree?
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Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
GMATNinja and egmat,

I am a little confused with the verbing changing its own form in the original sentence. In option A verbing, for me, correctly shows the HOW aspect. How does the dancers represent -> by providing entertainment.

In the correct option B that verbing action is changed to a verb. Now i donot have a problem with the meaning of B as much as the issues with the change of meaning from A to B. From explaining how it represent, now entertain is an independent action.

I see this is used in a lot of sentences where the modifier which is correctly mentioned in option A is changed later in the correct option.

Any thoughts on how to examine/ evaluate such choices? Thanks.
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
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rinkuda wrote:
GMATNinja and egmat,

I am a little confused with the verbing changing its own form in the original sentence. In option A verbing, for me, correctly shows the HOW aspect. How does the dancers represent -> by providing entertainment.

In the correct option B that verbing action is changed to a verb. Now i donot have a problem with the meaning of B as much as the issues with the change of meaning from A to B. From explaining how it represent, now entertain is an independent action.

I see this is used in a lot of sentences where the modifier which is correctly mentioned in option A is changed later in the correct option.

Any thoughts on how to examine/ evaluate such choices? Thanks.

It sounds like you're saying that you're fine with the meaning in (B), but you don't like how the meaning in (B) is different than the meaning in (A)? Just to be clear, there is nothing special about the meaning in (A), and the correct answer certainly doesn't need to match the meaning in the first option.

Also, having "providing entertainment" as an independent action arguably makes more sense. The dance teams don't represent their chief BY providing entertainment. Instead, they (1) represent their chief (just by showing up) and (2) provide entertainment.

At the very least, there's nothing wrong with the meaning in (B). Choice (A) has other issues, so (B) is our winner.

I hope that helps!
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
EMPOWERgmatVerbal wrote:
Hello Everyone!

Let's take a look at this question, one problem at a time, and determine which option is the best one! There are many ways to attack this question, but let's focus on the quickest way to get to the correct answer!

To get started, here is the original question with any major differences between each option highlighted in orange:

Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Africa, dance teams represent their own chief at the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for food, drink, and lodging.

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for
(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for
(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on
(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for
(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on

Right away, we can see two major differences between each option:

1. How they begin (refer to only two tribes / refer to many tribes)
2. How they end (in return for / as a return for / as a return on)

There are other differences, but these two are the easiest to spot and deal with quickly. To begin, let's tackle #1 on our list: how each option begins. The Tsonga is a group of several tribes, with each tribe having its own dance team. Each tribe is able to visit any other tribe it wants, and then provide entertainment to gain access to food, drink, and lodging.

However, some of the options below make it sound like there are only 2 tribes who send dance troupes to each other, rather than all of the tribes being able to visit any other tribe. So let's take a look at each option, and rule out any that are unclear or sound like only 2 tribes are involved:

(A) the court of each other, providing entertainment in return for
This is wrong because saying "each other" means we're only talking about 2 tribes visiting each other, instead of one tribe visiting any other tribe it wants.

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for
This is okay because "another" means the dance troupe can visit any of the other troupes, not just one.

(C) the court of the other, so as to provide entertainment as a return on
This is wrong because "the other" suggests there is only one other tribe they can travel to, which isn't true.

(D) each other's court, entertainment being provided in return for
This is wrong because "each other's" suggests the 2 tribes always trade dance troupes, which isn't always the case.

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on
This is okay because "another's court" means the dance troupe can visit any of the other tribes it wants, not just one.

We can eliminate options A, C, and D because they incorrectly state there are only 2 tribes involved in this behavior, not ALL of the tribes!

Now that we're left with only options B and E to choose from, let's try #2 on our list: their endings (in return for / as a return on). Whenever we talk about two people or groups exchanging something, we say:

X is doing [insert action here] in exchange for Y
OR
X is doing [insert action here] in return for Y

Let's see which of our remaining options uses this correctly:

(B) the court of another and provide entertainment in return for

This is the CORRECT answer! It's clear that we're talking about several tribes being able to visit any other tribe it wants, and it's clear that they provide entertainment in exchange for / in return for food, drink, and lodging!

(E) another's court and provide entertainment as a return on

This is INCORRECT because it says that the tribe's dance troupe provides entertainment as a return on food, drink, and lodging. This not only sounds awkward, but it also suggests that tribes provide entertainment after they've already been given food, drink, and lodging, which doesn't really make sense.

There you go - option B is the correct answer!


Don't study for the GMAT. Train for it.


Thank you for the xplanation. I enjoy and refer to your SC posts very religiously.
However in this question, can you explain how
The attendants shook hands with each other - is correct in reality but comes to be wrong as per your logic given above.
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Re: Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
sayantanc2k wrote:
Lucy Phuong wrote:
Dear expert GMATNinja, can you please elaborate on how to decide between (A) and (B)? In other words, how does "each other" differ from "another" in this sentence?
Thank you.


"Each Other" is used when the whole group performs an act mutually.
The attendants shook hands with each other...... "The attendants" is a group.

"Another" is used when an individual/individuals of the group is/are referred to.
The captain shook hands with another (captain)... "The captain" is an individual.

Here you would notice that an individual is referred to, not a group: "their chief" is an individual. Hence "another" is correct. The intended meaning is:
The dance teams represented their own chief in the court of another chief.

Hence B is correct.


sayantanc2k
The attendants shook hands with one another. Is it wrong ?
Also as suggested by other answers , can we remember this rule that " Each-other" is used for two in GMAT?
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I chose B directly because it made “represent” and “provide” parallel.

Is that a wrong way to attack this question?

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AhmedMoharam89 wrote:
I chose B directly because it made “represent” and “provide” parallel.

Is that a wrong way to attack this question?

Posted from my mobile device


Hello AhmedMoharam89,

We hope this finds you well.

To answer your query, yes; your reasoning is correct in this context because representing the chief and providing entertainment are separate actions.

We hope this helps.
All the best!
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AhmedMoharam89 wrote:
I chose B directly because it made “represent” and “provide” parallel.

Is that a wrong way to attack this question?

Posted from my mobile device

You certainly want to eliminate choices that have parallelism issues, but eliminating the others just because they don't use parallelism doesn't seem like a prudent strategy. What if an option with good parallelism has other problems, while the correct choice uses an -ing modifier (or some other structure) instead of a parallel list?

For example, (A) isn't wrong simply because it uses an -ing modifer ("providing") instead of a parallel list; it's wrong because the meaning is off, as described here.

In general, you want to make sure you aren't turning off your brain and trying to rely on overly simplified mechanical issues. In order to do well on SC, you'll have to think really hard about meaning, and grammar rules will only take you so far.

I hope that helps a bit!
Among the Tsonga, a Bantu-speaking group of tribes in southeastern Afr [#permalink]
GMATNinja wrote:
rinkuda wrote:
GMATNinja and egmat,

I am a little confused with the verbing changing its own form in the original sentence. In option A verbing, for me, correctly shows the HOW aspect. How does the dancers represent -> by providing entertainment.

In the correct option B that verbing action is changed to a verb. Now i donot have a problem with the meaning of B as much as the issues with the change of meaning from A to B. From explaining how it represent, now entertain is an independent action.

I see this is used in a lot of sentences where the modifier which is correctly mentioned in option A is changed later in the correct option.

Any thoughts on how to examine/ evaluate such choices? Thanks.

It sounds like you're saying that you're fine with the meaning in (B), but you don't like how the meaning in (B) is different than the meaning in (A)? Just to be clear, there is nothing special about the meaning in (A), and the correct answer certainly doesn't need to match the meaning in the first option.

Also, having "providing entertainment" as an independent action arguably makes more sense. The dance teams don't represent their chief BY providing entertainment. Instead, they (1) represent their chief (just by showing up) and (2) provide entertainment.

At the very least, there's nothing wrong with the meaning in (B). Choice (A) has other issues, so (B) is our winner.

I hope that helps!

GMATNinja
So, from your explanation it seems that ''meaning is the king''. But, can you confirm that whether grammar is ok or not in choice A, please?
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