Max.MayankG
Since the 1980s, when Chile adopted free market economic policies that attracted significant investment, copper has been the country’s top commodity, quadrupling the production of its next biggest competitors, China and the United States.
A. Since the 1980s, when Chile adopted free market economic policies that attracted significant investment, copper has been the country’s top commodity,
B. Since Chile adopted free market economic policies in the 1980s that attracted significant economic investment, it has produced more copper than any country,
C. Chile attracted significant economic investment in the 1980s by adopting free market economic policies, and ever since then, it has produced more copper than has any other country,
D. Copper has been Chile’s top commodity since the 1980s, when free market economic policies attracted significant investment,
E. After Chile adopted free market economic policies that attracted significant economic investment in the 1980s, it has produced more than any other country,
warrior1991
generis The one you were looking for.
The Comma+VERBing form of question.
waiting for some great explanation from you.
warrior1991 , the only explanation, great or not, for this question?
It is flawed in the non-underlined part. On the GMAT, none of these answers would be correct.
Quadrupling is incorrect:
(1) it does not modify the previous clause or any nouns or verbs in that clause; and
(2) its direct object, what got quadrupled, is production of copper in China and the U.S.
The question is not official. I will tag it Poor Quality. I would not spend another minute on this question.
I suspect that the author meant to use the word
quadruple. See below.
• Intended meaning = four times as much as-- The sentence is supposed to mean that Chile produced four times as much copper as China and the U.S. produced.
--
four times as much as =
adjective =
quadruple--
On Black Friday, the demand for stupid but well-marketed devices was quadruple the supply for those devices.
• Quadrupling, part of speech?
-- [i]quadrupling is the present participle of the verb
to quadruple-- to quadruple means to become four times as big as (intransitive, no object), or to multiply an amount by 4 (transitive, object)
The stock's price rose rapidly, quadrupling in one year alone.• The question is grammatically incorrect and logically incoherent"Quadrupling" incorrectly acts upon copper production in other countries.
Quadrupling in this case means
a fact that has quadrupled Quadrupling has a direct object. The logic is absurd[/color][/b]
Chile quadruples
China's production of copper? No.
-- the direct objects of "quadrupling," the things that got quadrupled, are
(1) the production of China and (2) the production of the United States. Not correct.
• The sentence should use the word quadruple-- Chile has produced more [copper] than any other country,
quadruple the amount produced by China or the U.S.
• Participial modifiers / comma + verbING-- comma + verbING can modify nouns, verbs, and entire clauses, but even the latter structure will not work in this case.
--
Quadrupling cannot modify
Chile, copper, or
any other country. Chile, the country, was not quadrupled.
Copper, the metal, was not quadrupled.
Any other country was not quadrupled.
--
Quadrupling could modify the whole previous clause if the words that followed were something that referred to Chilean production, this way:
[Chile] has produced more copper than has any other country, quadrupling its exported tonnage of the metal, [something about the U.S. and China] But as the sentence stands, the logic is absurd.
The fact that Chile produced more copper than any other country
increases the amount of copper produced by China and the U.S.? No.
The question is flawed.
Hope that helps.