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jimmyjamesdonkey wrote:
To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, and she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance


Sentence presents two facts about JB-
1) To JB, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate
2) she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance

Structure: Noun phrase, clause1 and clause2.
To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate[/u], and she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance

JB is the subject of both the parts. "and" indicates parallelism and for meaning clarity, these clauses should be parallel. In other words, the subject pronoun "she" should refer to the subject noun of the preceding clause and hence JB should be the subject of the first clause.

A. To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate- JB should be the subject of the former clause

'her' is redundant.


B. For Joshephine baker, long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, paris was her home- JB should be the subject of the former clause

Structure: noun phrase, modifier, clause 1 and clause 2 - placement of introductory elements is bad


C. Joshephine baker made Paris her home long before to be an expatriate was fashionable

Structure: Clause 1 modifier and clause 2

The construction is reversed.


D. Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home

Structure: Modifier, Clause 1 and Clause 2- Looks good!



E. Long before it was fashionable being an expatriate, Paris was home to Josephine Baker- JB should be the subject of the former clause


Hope this helps!
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Dear Friends,

Here is a detailed explanation to this question-
jimmyjamesdonkey wrote:
To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, and she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance

(A) To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate

(B) For Josephine Baker, long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Paris was her home

(C) Josephine Baker made Paris her home long before to be an expatriate was fashionable

(D) Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home

(E) Long before it was fashionable being an expatriate, Paris was home to Josephine Baker


Concepts tested here: Parallelism + Verb Forms + Awkwardness/Redundancy

• For referring to the purpose or intent of an action, the infinitive verb form (“to + base form of verb" – “to + be” in this sentence) is preferred over the present participle ("verb+ing" - "being" in this sentence) construction.
• Any elements linked by a conjunction ("and" in this case) must be parallel.

A: This answer choice fails to maintain parallelism between "Paris was her home..." and "she remained in France..."; remember, any elements linked by a conjunction ("and" in this case) must be parallel. Further, Option A uses the needlessly wordy and indirect construction "To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home", leading to awkwardness and redundancy.

B: This answer choice fails to maintain parallelism between "Paris was her home" and "she remained in France..."; remember, any elements linked by a conjunction ("and" in this case) must be parallel. Further, Option B uses the needlessly wordy and indirect construction "For Josephine Baker...Paris was her home", leading to awkwardness and redundancy.

C: This answer choice uses the passive and needlessly indirect construction "long before to be an expatriate was fashionable", leading to awkwardness and redundancy.

D: Correct. This answer choice correctly maintains parallelism between "Josephine Baker made Paris her home" and "she remained in France...". Further, Option D uses the infinitive verb form ("to + base form of verb" - "to + be" in this case) to refer to the intent of the action "it was fashionable". Additionally, Option D is free of any awkwardness or redundancy.

E: This answer choice uses the present participle ("verb+ing" - "being" in this sentence) to refer to the intent of the action "it was fashionable"; remember, for referring to the purpose/intent of an action, the infinitive verb form ("to + base form of verb") is preferred over the present participle ("verb+ing"). Further, Option E uses the needlessly indirect clause "Paris was home to Josephine Baker", leading to awkwardness and redundancy.

Hence, D is the best answer choice.

All the best!
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freakygeek wrote:
Hi e-gmat,

I am wondering if there are any other others in this sentence except the one that OG has pointed out, that is 2 independent clauses when connected by ', and' are most clear when their subject is same.

Can you please help me here ? Also, In D answer choice since opening modifier is about Paris, doesnt it seem to be modifying 'Josephin Baker' rather than Paris ?


Hi there,

Thank you for posting your query here.

The parallelism error between the two clauses seems to be the only grammatical error in option A, but you can also see this as a meaning issue. The subject of the sentence should be Josephine Baker, since the main point of the sentence is to tell us something about her. This focus is lost when Paris is made the subject of the sentence.

Modifiers about time periods tell us when the subject performed an action; they don't describe the subject itself. This modifier could theoretically be replaced by a modifier such as the following: In 1940, Josephine Baker made Paris her home. Here, the time period doesn't have to tell us more about the subject; it merely tells us about the time in which she performed a certain action. The modifier in option D functions in pretty much the same way: it tells us when Baker made Paris her home.

I hope this helps to clarify your doubts!

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Two independent sentences are coordinated using “and”. The subject of the second sentence “She” and it would be clear if the Subject of the first sentence clarifies “She”.

A. To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate [ Paris … and She … not clear and Parallel – eliminate it]
B. For Joshephine baker, long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, paris was her home [ Paris … and She … not clear and Parallel – eliminate it]
C. Joshephine baker made Paris her home long before to be an expatriate was fashionable expatriate [o be an expatriate was fashionable expatriate – awkward – eliminate it]
D. Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home [Hold it]
E. Long before it was fashionable being an expatriate, Paris was home to Josephine Baker [ Paris … and She … not clear and Parallel – eliminate it]

Answer: D
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OreoShake wrote:
Dont really get why C is wrong, to me it felt unidiomatic but no real grammer issues. 'to be an expatriate' acts as a noun and should be correct as well.

Any comment is appreciated.


If you recollect the use of "placeholder IT", then you would probably realize why C is awkward.

It is fashionable to be expatriate... correct ( The placeholder "it" replaces "to be expatriate").

The placeholder is used to eliminate the awkwardness in the following sentence:
To be an expatriate is fashionable... awkward.
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sakshamchhabra wrote:
Greetings AjiteshArun

I have second thoughts about the opening modifier in Option (D)

Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home

The subject for the opening modifier should follow after the comma, and the correct subject seems to be "paris" not JB

Please add your thoughts
Hi sakshamchhabra,

We do sometimes need to be careful about which noun we choose as the subject in such constructions. For example:

Long before it was discovered by scientists digging in sediments, the ancient burial site was used by a local tribe. ← Here the it points to the ancient burial site, which is the intended meaning.

Long before it was discovered by scientists digging in sediments, a local tribe used the ancient burial site. ← This sentence seems to be telling us that a local tribe was what the scientists discovered. This sentence is not as clear as the first one, and therefore we'd try not to mark this option.

In this question though, the it is not a problem.

Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate... ← Here the it points to to be an expatriate. We can see that by asking ourselves what was fashionable. To be an expatriate was fashionable.

This means that we are not restricted in our choice of subject after the comma, as the it is not pointing to anything after the comma.

So "long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home" is fine. We don't need to make Paris the subject, as the it does not refer to Paris.
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jimmyjamesdonkey wrote:
To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, and she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance

A. To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate
B. For Joshephine baker, long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, paris was her home
C. Joshephine baker made Paris her home long before to be an expatriate was fashionable expatriate
D. Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home
E. Long before it was fashionable being an expatriate, Paris was home to Josephine Baker


Betweem B and D:

B) "For Josephine.. Paris was her home" just doesn't sound right. We already know "her" refers to Josephine, and the addition of "her" in this place is just awkward. Also, the "for" in the beginning kind of distorts the intended meaning of the author.

D) First we're given an inessential clause, then Josephine is introduced and the rest of the underlined portion is parallel to "she remained in France" .. So D is correct
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I agree with paralelizm issue between SHE and JB. Now I think between answeres C and D.
Both are grammatically correct. But it is GMAt and we have to choose the one that sounds better.

The only differencу is TO BE AN E. WAS FASHIONABLE OR IT WAS FASHIONABLE TO BE AN E.
There is a rule: all the time I see the clause starts with INFINITIVE OR THAT- CLAUSE, I know grammatically the sentence is correct but I still look for a better sounded sentence with an IT prep in the beginning.
EX : To talk to Alesia is pleasure. correct grammatically. But better to say It is pleasure to talk to Alesia.
That Alesia is a member of gmatclub gives her an advantage. BETTER- it is an advantage her an advantage to be a member of gmatclub.

So, if You see think between two of these sentences choose the second one. If you have only one option- the first one- and other 4 choices are grammatically incorrect- choose the first option.

hope it helps
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jjindal wrote:
I get the logic for why others are incorrect. However, with D, "Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home and she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance". Doesn't this make she redudant? Also, is made a complete verb in the first clause?


jimmyjamesdonkey wrote:
To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, and she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance

A. To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate
B. For Joshephine baker, long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, paris was her home
C. Joshephine baker made Paris her home long before to be an expatriate was fashionable expatriate
D. Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home
E. Long before it was fashionable being an expatriate, Paris was home to Josephine Baker


Query 1:
No, "she" is required in the second clause. Notice the comma before "and". Comma + and separates two independent clauses. If the comma were not there, then "she" would be redundant -"and" without comma can join two verbs.

I play, and I sing.... correct.
I play and sing.... correct.
I play and I sing..... wrong.
I play, and sing. .....wrong.

Query 2:
Yes, "made" is a complete verb (simple past form of "make"). Why do you think there could be an issue with "made"?
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KHow wrote:
Hello,

Could someone specify how D is correct given the way that the last words before the comma split come together? I feel that "and she remained in France" does not match with the first sentence (before the comma) in D.

Any insight would be great! :)

KHow
If you're asking whether the structures are similar, this is what the and does in option D:

Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home,
and
she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance.


The and joins two clauses here ("JB made..." and "she remained...").
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AliciaSierra wrote:
I have silly doubt about this sentence. Is "Paris was her home long before Paris was fashionable to be an expatriate" correct sentence/English ?


No, that's not correct, for a few reasons, for one because the city Paris cannot be "an expatriate" (only people could be). But I think I see why you're asking. In the sentence "Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate," the "it" does not refer to "Paris". This is an example of what is sometimes called the "empty 'it' ", where the "it" doesn't refer to anything in particular, and is just used to talk about the general circumstances. We use "it" that way very often, for example in a sentence like "it is raining".
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warrior1991 wrote:
GMATNinja VeritasKarishma AndrewN

How to eliminate option B??

Hello, warrior1991. There are a few issues with (B) that I cannot ignore. For one, what is it trying to say? Are we trying to understand that Josephine Baker was an expatriate, or that she called Paris her home? The double-stacked phrase and introductory clause are confusing. Is the information about being an expatriate, for example, simply interrupting the thought that Josephine Baker called Paris her home?

For Josephine Baker, long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Paris was her home

Also, when you jump across the comma to the non-underlined portion, you are left with two strangely paired independent clauses:

Paris was her home, and she remained in France...

Yikes! Notice how the correct sentence avoids these issues:

Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home, and she remained in France...

By combining the phrase and clause in (B), we now have a clear lead-in to the main clause. The expatriate is Josephine Baker, and she was an expatriate before being one was considered fashionable. Furthermore, she has a clear referent in Josephine Baker, without having to sort out the possessive in (B).

If nothing else, I guess the question illustrates why you cannot go by your ear. I hope that helps clarify why (B) is suboptimal next to a clearer alternative. Thank you for thinking to ask me.

- Andrew
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pareshbitm wrote:
Please help me understand how "Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate" part of the sentence modifies Josephine Baker in option D.

I wouldn't necessarily say that "Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate" modifies "Josephine Baker".

"Long before...." is a dependent clause (an adverbial clause) and so modifies the "verb" made. Basically this adverbial clause is answering the question:

When did Josephine Baker make Paris her home?

Answer: Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate.

D makes sense from a parallelism perspective. Notice the following parallel structures:

i) Josephine Baker made Paris her home
ii) She remained in France during Second world war

Quote:
Also, in Option C - Is it incorrect because "Paris was her home" and "she remained in France" are not in parallel to each other.

Notice the clause in C:

To be an expatriate was unfashionable.

Notice that the infinitive ("To be") is the subject of this clause. This is something like:

To work hard is my motto.

Purely from a stylistic perspective, a better way to articulate this would be:

It is my motto to work hard.
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Piotrek wrote:
hey guys,

Could you elaborate a little bit on KarishmaB explanation? More specifically I want to ask about B.

1. What is double stacked phrase?
2. When is it necessary?
3. Why we can't use it here?

Below you will find what KarishmaB wrote about it.

(B) For Josephine Baker, long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Paris was her home

The double stacked phrases ("for J..." and "long before it was...") are not suitable if not really necessary hence will avoid this option.


While using a modifier, we try to place the noun/verb etc. that it modifies close to it. When I want to tell you something about someone, I would like to tell you who that someone is as soon as possible for clarity. The communication should be as clear as possible.

Now look at this:

For a while, Anthony, the most intelligent boy in the class, thought that he would be made the class President.

'for a while' is a prepositional adverbial modifier modifying the verb 'thought'. He thought so for a while (answers 'how long?')
'the most intelligent boy in the class' is an appositive modifying Anthony.
This sentence is acceptable because when we mention the subject 'Anthony' after 'for a while', we know that 'for a while' is modifying the verb that will appear next. The appositive after 'Anthony' is ignored in our mind and we connect 'for a while' with 'thought.'

We can move the modifiers around.

For a while, the most intelligent boy in the class, Anthony thought that he would be made the class President.
Here the two modifiers are stacked (one on top of the other) and we have lost the 'for a while' and 'thought' connection. After 'for a while,' we have another modifier and now we don't know what is being referred to by which modifier. So we shouldn't put one modifier on top of another until and unless they are both modifying the same thing. Even then, we prefer to not stack them, if possible.
such as 'The most intelligent boy in the class, my favourite brother, Anthony thought that he would be made the class President.'
Both modifiers are stacked. It would be better to re-write this as:
'The most intelligent boy in the class, Anthony, my favourite brother, thought that he would be made the class President.'
Anthony is the subject and the two modifiers are around it.
Or we could rewrite it as 'The most intelligent boy in the class and my favourite brother, Anthony thought that he would be made the class President.'
In effect, there is only one modifier 'The most intelligent boy in the class and my favourite brother' and that is modifying Anthony.
There are many other ways of writing this, of course.

The most intelligent boy in the class, Anthony thought that he would be made the class President for a while.
Here 'for a while' seems to be modifying the closer verb 'made'. So it looks like he would be made class President for a while. So this is not acceptable.

The most intelligent boy in the class, Anthony thought, for a while, that he would be made the class President.
This is fine. Each modifier is modifying what it should.

Often, it may not be about what is correct, what is not. It may be about getting the best possible option (the one that makes things clear).

P. S. - If you tag me (by putting '@' front of my username), I would myself be able to help.
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bv8562 wrote:
[url=https://gmatclub.com:443/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&un=GMATNinja%5D%5Bb%5DGMATNinja%5B/b%5D%5B/url%5D In options A and B, can the introductory phrases "To Josephine Baker" and "For Josephine Baker" modify both the clauses?

In theory, there's no reason why a prepositional modifier such as "to" or "for" couldn't modify the following clause or clauses, but the phrases "to Josephine Baker" and "for Josephine Baker" don't make sense here.

Often, if I begin a sentence with the phrase "To [some person]" or "for [some person] the following clause will be something this person believes:

    "To Tim, the Sixers have no hope of winning a title, because their coach likes to run injury-prone players into the ground."

Here, we get information about what Tim believes about the prospects of a basketball team. Makes sense.

But in the SC question, it doesn't make sense to write that Josephine Baker believed Paris was her home, because we know that she lived there. It WAS her home. No opinions needed!

All to say: sure, an opening modifier can potentially describe more than one clause. There's no rule about that. But context will tell us whether that modification is clear and logical. Here, it isn't. Simple as that.

I hope that helps!
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souvik101990 wrote:
To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, and she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance.

A. To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate,

B. For Josephine Baker, long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Paris was her home,

C. Josephine Baker made Paris her home long before to be an expatriate was fashionable,

D. Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home,

E. Long before it was fashionable being an expatriate, Paris was home to Josephine Baker,



A. To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate -- Sort of passive arrangement, making Paris as the subject

B. For Josephine Baker, long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Paris was her home -- redundant

C. Josephine Baker made Paris her home long before to be an expatriate was fashionable -- distorts the meaning, wordy

D. Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home -- Correct

E. Long before it was fashionable being an expatriate, Paris was home to Josephine Baker -- Passive voice and use of being


Answer D
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ashutoshsh wrote:
CrackVerbalGMAT wrote:
jimmyjamesdonkey wrote:
To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, and she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance


Sentence presents two facts about JB-
1) To JB, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate
2) she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance

Structure: Noun phrase, clause1 and clause2.
To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate[/u], and she remained in France during the Second World War as a performer and an intelligence agent for the Resistance

JB is the subject of both the parts. "and" indicates parallelism and for meaning clarity, these clauses should be parallel. In other words, the subject pronoun "she" should refer to the subject noun of the preceding clause and hence JB should be the subject of the first clause.

A. To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate- JB should be the subject of the former clause

'her' is redundant.


B. For Joshephine baker, long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, paris was her home- JB should be the subject of the former clause

Structure: noun phrase, modifier, clause 1 and clause 2 - placement of introductory elements is bad


C. Joshephine baker made Paris her home long before to be an expatriate was fashionable

Structure: Clause 1 modifier and clause 2

The construction is reversed.


D. Long before it was fashionable to be an expatriate, Josephine Baker made Paris her home

Structure: Modifier, Clause 1 and Clause 2- Looks good!



E. Long before it was fashionable being an expatriate, Paris was home to Josephine Baker- JB should be the subject of the former clause


Hope this helps!
Dolly Sharma
CrackVerbal


Hey!
Thanks for the above explanation. I agree with that. However, i don't understand what does "it" refers to in option D. Moreover, i think option D portrays "it" as "josephine Baker" (applying comma subject role). Will not that work here. If no, how will we make out when to apply comma subject rule and when to not.
Thanks


The pronoun "it" can be used as a placeholder. For a placeholder "it", no antecedent is required. Placeholder "it" refers to a subject or an object that needs to be moved in order to avoid awkwardness.

Example:
It is nice to see you.
The meaning is: To see you is nice. But the usage is awkward and hence the infinite subject "to see you" is moved to the end of the sentence. However its place is held using the placeholder "it".

It is good that you came.
Place holder "it" is used to hold the place of "that you came".

Similarly in option D, placeholder "it" is used to hold the position of "to be an expatriate"
The meaning is: To be an expatriate was fashionable.
GMAT Club Bot
Re: To Josephine Baker, Paris was her home long before it was fashionable [#permalink]
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