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In Episode 7 of our GMAT Ninja CR series, we are rounding up the oddballs, the misfits, and the format-benders: EXCEPT, Fill-In-The-Blanks, and other unusual Critical Reasoning question types. When you see a question that ends with a literal blank line
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Anyone know the answer to this and can explain: I will post right answer after giving you guys a shot
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Dreading her trip to the cat clinic, her vet was persuaded to treat her cat at her home, a rather combative two year old black male.
1. her vet was persuaded to treat her cat at her home, a rather combative two year old black male
2. she persuaded her vet to treat her cat at her home, the cat being a rather combative two year old black male
3. Jessica persuaded her vet to treat her cat, a rather combative two year old black male, at her home
4. Jessica persuaded her vet that her rather combative two year old black male cat would best be treated at her home
5. she persuaded her vet that her home should be the place that her rather combative two year old black male cat was treated at
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And one more down the drain...so you were correct...
what I don't understand is that Jessica is NOT refered to anywhere in the sentence. i get the concept that there needs to be a subject. But how can you assume its Jessica...It could Be Sam, Tina or Tom.
I get that only Jessica in the sentence was provided....but...I'm still not convinced of going with Jessica...if the sentence didn't refer to it.
Does this mean that in a SC where there's no subject in the sentence and you are correcting it, pick a choice with offers a subject (not pronouns he/she/...but a proper noun - person name)...?
And one more down the drain...so you were correct...
what I don't understand is that Jessica is NOT refered to anywhere in the sentence. i get the concept that there needs to be a subject. But how can you assume its Jessica...It could Be Sam, Tina or Tom.
I get that only Jessica in the sentence was provided....but...I'm still not convinced of going with Jessica...if the sentence didn't refer to it.
Does this mean that in a SC where there's no subject in the sentence and you are correcting it, pick a choice with offers a subject (not pronouns he/she/...but a proper noun - person name)...?
Show more
Ditto!
But C is by far the best of the choices available...
And one more down the drain...so you were correct...
what I don't understand is that Jessica is NOT refered to anywhere in the sentence. i get the concept that there needs to be a subject. But how can you assume its Jessica...It could Be Sam, Tina or Tom.
I get that only Jessica in the sentence was provided....but...I'm still not convinced of going with Jessica...if the sentence didn't refer to it.
Does this mean that in a SC where there's no subject in the sentence and you are correcting it, pick a choice with offers a subject (not pronouns he/she/...but a proper noun - person name)...?
Show more
We could use "he/she" but choice B and E have other errors.
Archived Topic
Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
Still interested in this question? Check out the "Best Topics" block above for a better discussion on this exact question, as well as several more related questions.