Last visit was: 24 Apr 2026, 14:39 It is currently 24 Apr 2026, 14:39
Close
GMAT Club Daily Prep
Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.

Customized
for You

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History

Track
Your Progress

every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance

Practice
Pays

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Close
Request Expert Reply
Confirm Cancel
User avatar
abhinav11
Joined: 04 Sep 2012
Last visit: 02 Apr 2016
Posts: 114
Own Kudos:
174
 [53]
Given Kudos: 27
Posts: 114
Kudos: 174
 [53]
6
Kudos
Add Kudos
46
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Most Helpful Reply
User avatar
daagh
User avatar
Major Poster
Joined: 19 Feb 2007
Last visit: 16 Oct 2020
Posts: 5,262
Own Kudos:
42,465
 [14]
Given Kudos: 422
Status: enjoying
Location: India
WE:Education (Education)
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 5,262
Kudos: 42,465
 [14]
2
Kudos
Add Kudos
11
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
User avatar
VeritasPrepBrian
User avatar
Veritas Prep Representative
Joined: 26 Jul 2010
Last visit: 02 Mar 2022
Posts: 416
Own Kudos:
3,270
 [8]
Given Kudos: 63
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 416
Kudos: 3,270
 [8]
2
Kudos
Add Kudos
5
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
General Discussion
avatar
akashb106
Joined: 22 Apr 2013
Last visit: 17 Nov 2013
Posts: 73
Own Kudos:
294
 [3]
Given Kudos: 32
Location: India
Concentration: Finance
GMAT 1: 660 Q48 V33
GMAT 1: 660 Q48 V33
Posts: 73
Kudos: 294
 [3]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
A.The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.---- Incorrect, I feel the use of As would be better.
B.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and contains some indigenous influences.--- The first its is confusing, We do not know if it refers to food or Brazil. The second it could again refer to food or people
C.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.--- CORRECT
D.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian and contains some indigenous influences.--- Its again could refer to food or Brazil. Also people cannot contain indigenous influences. This sentence is illogical.
E.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people with a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and some indigenous influences.--- I think this sentence changes meaning. It is trying to say that the food of brazil is as heterogeneous as the country's people with a cross mostly between ....
User avatar
maaadhu
Joined: 04 Apr 2013
Last visit: 16 Sep 2014
Posts: 96
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 36
Posts: 96
Kudos: 194
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
akashb106
A.The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.---- Incorrect, I feel the use of As would be better.
B.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and contains some indigenous influences.--- The first its is confusing, We do not know if it refers to food or Brazil. The second it could again refer to food or people
C.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.--- CORRECT
D.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian and contains some indigenous influences.--- Its again could refer to food or Brazil. Also people cannot contain indigenous influences. This sentence is illogical.
E.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people with a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and some indigenous influences.--- I think this sentence changes meaning. It is trying to say that the food of brazil is as heterogeneous as the country's people with a cross mostly between ....


can someone help me explain the use of "with"

a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.

Here the statement after comma followed by word "with" is correct.

However, I saw GMAT sentences that marked such statements as incorrect.

Any experts can help me explain why some statements with " "comma" followed by the word "with" is correct and why some are not.
User avatar
PiyushK
Joined: 22 Mar 2013
Last visit: 31 Aug 2025
Posts: 588
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 235
Status:Everyone is a leader. Just stop listening to others.
Location: India
GPA: 3.51
WE:Information Technology (Computer Software)
Products:
Posts: 588
Kudos: 5,054
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
I am bit confused here, who is cross between Portuguese and Italian? is it food or people.
Original sentence says food is a cross between Portuguese and Italian.

In option C. country's people are placed right before explanation after colon and here it changing the meaning, is it right ?
the country’s people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.
User avatar
JusTLucK04
User avatar
Retired Moderator
Joined: 17 Sep 2013
Last visit: 27 Jul 2017
Posts: 270
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 139
Concentration: Strategy, General Management
GMAT 1: 730 Q51 V38
WE:Analyst (Consulting)
Products:
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
VeritasPrepBrian
One really subtle but totally-GMAT flaw with choice A (and that took me forever to see) is that word "its" in "like its people". Your mind is conditioned to just *know* that it means Brazil, but the subject of the sentence *is* "the food", so you're definitely dealing with two singular nouns in the first four words, so "its" has an unclear referent.

To me one of the biggest takeaways from this question is "make all the decisions you're great at first" - if it's a pronoun, a modifier, or a verb (either tense or agreement), you have an excellent chance of making the right decision. With strange modifiers and idiomatic expressions - including things like "is it okay to use like here?" and "what's the proper usage of comma-with" - we all struggle from time to time, and often the GMAT is just setting a "smokescreen" to distract you from a much more concrete, binary error. I'll admit - on this one I was trying to figure out some strange-usage decisions in the back half of the sentence until the author of the question laughed and said "I knew you'd overlook that pronoun its".

Word to the wise - whenever there's a common decision to be made (and I'm big on MVP first - Modifiers, Verbs, Pronouns) - see if you can make that decision first before you get too deep in a much trickier application of grammar.

I see only one logical referent for Its...can you elaborate on how is it ambiguous?
User avatar
VeritasPrepBrian
User avatar
Veritas Prep Representative
Joined: 26 Jul 2010
Last visit: 02 Mar 2022
Posts: 416
Own Kudos:
3,270
 [3]
Given Kudos: 63
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 416
Kudos: 3,270
 [3]
3
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
"Its" is probably more "dead wrong" than ambiguous, actually. Because the subject of the sentence is "the food", with "of Brazil" as a prepositional phrase telling us more about "which food", then "its" refers to "the food". But food doesn't have people that a country does! My point with even mentioning the "unclear" reference there is that your mind almost naturally processes it as "Brazil's people" because "the food's people" is so illogical. But when you look at what the sentence really says, "its" means "the food's".
User avatar
JusTLucK04
User avatar
Retired Moderator
Joined: 17 Sep 2013
Last visit: 27 Jul 2017
Posts: 270
Own Kudos:
1,366
 [1]
Given Kudos: 139
Concentration: Strategy, General Management
GMAT 1: 730 Q51 V38
WE:Analyst (Consulting)
Products:
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
VeritasPrepBrian
"Its" is probably more "dead wrong" than ambiguous, actually. Because the subject of the sentence is "the food", with "of Brazil" as a prepositional phrase telling us more about "which food", then "its" refers to "the food". But food doesn't have people that a country does! My point with even mentioning the "unclear" reference there is that your mind almost naturally processes it as "Brazil's people" because "the food's people" is so illogical. But when you look at what the sentence really says, "its" means "the food's".

Ohh..this was a tough one..I doubt If I will be able to spot such errors on the GMAT even after practicing this or more similar ones...it is just too small for the naked eye I can say.. :-D
User avatar
vipulgoel
Joined: 03 May 2013
Last visit: 09 Oct 2025
Posts: 89
Own Kudos:
63
 [1]
Given Kudos: 114
Location: India
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.


MY reasoning to omit the OA was , I couldn't
find the acting verb after the colon , in order to make the whole part after colon IC2
avatar
rohitkumar77
Joined: 19 Nov 2014
Last visit: 01 Oct 2016
Posts: 50
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 57
Location: India
Concentration: Technology, General Management
Schools: ISB '18
WE:Information Technology (Computer Software)
Products:
Schools: ISB '18
Posts: 50
Kudos: 36
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.

A.The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.
B.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and contains some indigenous influences.
C.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.
D.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian and contains some indigenous influences.
E.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people with a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and some indigenous influences.

for C - in case of colon watever you need to modify it should be placed closest to it ; IN C it seems the people is a cross ;
Well in this case both B and C is wrong then .
User avatar
daagh
User avatar
Major Poster
Joined: 19 Feb 2007
Last visit: 16 Oct 2020
Posts: 5,262
Own Kudos:
42,465
 [1]
Given Kudos: 422
Status: enjoying
Location: India
WE:Education (Education)
Expert
Expert reply
Posts: 5,262
Kudos: 42,465
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Let us deal with a few important aspects of the use of a colon.
1.
vipulgoel wrote:
Quote:
MY reasoning to omit the OA was , I couldn't find the acting verb after the colon , in order to make the whole part after colon IC2
A. It is imperative that what is said before the colon is a complete sentence. B. What comes after that colon need not be a clause; only thing is that the second part should be related to the first and should define or complement the first part. However, it is not necessary that the second part should be an independent clause with a verb of its own.

For a clear perception of this tenet of grammar please vast this link.

https://www.quickanddirtytips.com/educat ... mar/colons


2.
Rohitkumar wrote

Quote:
For C - in the case of a colon, whatever you need to modify it should be placed closest to it; In C it seems the people is a cross; Well in this case both B and C is wrong then.

In C, the phrase that follows the colon is an absolute modifier like an adverbial modifier, modifying the subject of the previous clause and its verb. Therefore, the 'cross' does refer to the food and it being a hybrid of Portuguese and Italian cuisines. More importantly, proximity is an eligible contender only after logic. You do not expect all the people of Brazil today to be a cross between Portuguese and Italians; at least, Brazil was a colony of Portugal, but Italy never laid its hand on Brazil; the worst connotations is the phrase, ‘with some local influence’. It is too much to infer that the contemporary people of Brazil are a three way cross between Portugal, Italy, and the locals. So have no doubts, the reference of a cross is indeed pointing to the food. We may see that it is befitting to take a regional cuisine as a multiple amalgam. So, what follows after a colon need not necessarily refer to the factor just before.
User avatar
EducationAisle
Joined: 27 Mar 2010
Last visit: 24 Apr 2026
Posts: 3,906
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 159
Location: India
Schools: ISB
GPA: 3.31
Expert
Expert reply
Schools: ISB
Posts: 3,906
Kudos: 3,586
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
akashb106
A.The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.---- Incorrect, I feel the use of As would be better.
The use of like actually seems to be fine here.
avatar
Prateek176
Joined: 12 Mar 2017
Last visit: 10 Jun 2021
Posts: 172
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 87
Location: India
Concentration: Strategy, General Management
GMAT 1: 700 Q49 V37
GPA: 4
GMAT 1: 700 Q49 V37
Posts: 172
Kudos: 92
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
abhinav11
The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.

A.The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.
B.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and contains some indigenous influences.
C.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.
D.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian and contains some indigenous influences.
E.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people with a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and some indigenous influences.

GMATNinja , MartyMurray , VeritasKarishma

I still have a confusion despite the above explanations.

Why is "its" in A and B unclear. its may have 2 referants: Food and Brazil. We can't say "food's people" so by default the "its" must refer to "brazil". Why can't a pronoun refer to a noun inside a prepositional phrase. Please help!!!!
User avatar
GMATNinja
User avatar
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
Joined: 13 Aug 2009
Last visit: 24 Apr 2026
Posts: 7,391
Own Kudos:
70,809
 [3]
Given Kudos: 2,132
Status: GMAT/GRE/LSAT tutors
Location: United States (CO)
GMAT 1: 780 Q51 V46
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Products:
Expert
Expert reply
GMAT 2: 800 Q51 V51
GRE 1: Q170 V170
GRE 2: Q170 V170
Posts: 7,391
Kudos: 70,809
 [3]
3
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Prateek176


I still have a confusion despite the above explanations.

Why is "its" in A and B unclear. its may have 2 referants: Food and Brazil. We can't say "food's people" so by default the "its" must refer to "brazil". Why can't a pronoun refer to a noun inside a prepositional phrase. Please help!!!!
In general, the best way to handle pronouns on the GMAT is to start by being strict and literal. In theory, "its" could refer to either "Brazil" or "food", so this is arguably a case of pronoun ambiguity. And given the choice, I suppose it's clearer to say "the country's people" than "its people."

In practice, though, I don't think it's a big deal in this case. The potential ambiguity in (A) and (B) doesn't really cause much confusion, since "Brazil" is the closest singular noun to "its." More importantly, pronoun ambiguity isn't an absolute rule on the GMAT. More on that issue in this video.

And please also keep in mind that the GMAT spends thousands of dollars developing each individual GMAT question, and even the very best test-prep companies can't possibly compete with that. So don't overthink this particular issue in this particular question, since there's a lot of nuance to the way that the GMAT actually handles pronoun ambiguity.

I hope this helps!
User avatar
Helium
Joined: 08 Jun 2013
Last visit: 01 Jun 2020
Posts: 452
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 118
Location: France
GMAT 1: 200 Q1 V1
GPA: 3.82
WE:Consulting (Other)
GMAT 1: 200 Q1 V1
Posts: 452
Kudos: 822
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Difficult one :

The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.

A.The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences. - Pronoun ambiguity (food's people...really?)

B.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and contains some indigenous influences.-Pronoun ambiguity

C.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences. - Correct

D.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian and contains some indigenous influences.-Pronoun ambiguity

E.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people with a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and some indigenous influences.-Nonsensical
User avatar
KarishmaB
Joined: 16 Oct 2010
Last visit: 23 Apr 2026
Posts: 16,442
Own Kudos:
79,404
 [1]
Given Kudos: 485
Location: Pune, India
Expert
Expert reply
Active GMAT Club Expert! Tag them with @ followed by their username for a faster response.
Posts: 16,442
Kudos: 79,404
 [1]
1
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
Prateek176
abhinav11
The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.

A.The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.
B.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and contains some indigenous influences.
C.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.
D.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian and contains some indigenous influences.
E.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people with a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and some indigenous influences.

GMATNinja , MartyMurray , VeritasKarishma

I still have a confusion despite the above explanations.

Why is "its" in A and B unclear. its may have 2 referants: Food and Brazil. We can't say "food's people" so by default the "its" must refer to "brazil". Why can't a pronoun refer to a noun inside a prepositional phrase. Please help!!!!

As Brian mentioned in his comment above, it is not really a case of ambiguous antecedent but rather incorrect antecedent.

The food of Brazil, like its people ...

"of Brazil" is a modifier for "food". We don't "carry it" along, so to say, to the other side of like. So when we say "like its people", we are talking about food here. This is problematic.
User avatar
globaldesi
Joined: 28 Jul 2016
Last visit: 23 Feb 2026
Posts: 1,141
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 67
Location: India
Concentration: Finance, Human Resources
Schools: ISB '18 (D)
GPA: 3.97
WE:Project Management (Finance: Investment Banking)
Products:
Schools: ISB '18 (D)
Posts: 1,141
Kudos: 1,999
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
VeritasKarishma
Prateek176
abhinav11
The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.

A.The food of Brazil, like its people, is heterogeneous; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.
B.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people; it is a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and contains some indigenous influences.
C.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, with some indigenous influences.
D.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as its people: a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian and contains some indigenous influences.
E.The food of Brazil is as heterogeneous as the country’s people with a cross mostly between Portuguese and Italian, and some indigenous influences.

GMATNinja , MartyMurray , VeritasKarishma

I still have a confusion despite the above explanations.

Why is "its" in A and B unclear. its may have 2 referants: Food and Brazil. We can't say "food's people" so by default the "its" must refer to "brazil". Why can't a pronoun refer to a noun inside a prepositional phrase. Please help!!!!

As Brian mentioned in his comment above, it is not really a case of ambiguous antecedent but rather incorrect antecedent.

The food of Brazil, like its people ...

"of Brazil" is a modifier for "food". We don't "carry it" along, so to say, to the other side of like. So when we say "like its people", we are talking about food here. This is problematic.
'
Are ":" allowed to refer independent sentences. Shouldn't option "C" have ";" instead of ":"
User avatar
Nups1324
Joined: 05 Jan 2020
Last visit: 12 Sep 2023
Posts: 104
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 353
Posts: 104
Kudos: 65
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
VeritasPrepBrian
"Its" is probably more "dead wrong" than ambiguous, actually. Because the subject of the sentence is "the food", with "of Brazil" as a prepositional phrase telling us more about "which food", then "its" refers to "the food". But food doesn't have people that a country does! My point with even mentioning the "unclear" reference there is that your mind almost naturally processes it as "Brazil's people" because "the food's people" is so illogical. But when you look at what the sentence really says, "its" means "the food's".

"WOW" - This is what I uttered went I realised it. This was something amazing. It's deadly subtle. I got into the trap. I thought the repetition of "country" is redundant when A has a pronoun. Good question.

I really liked your explanation..very well explained.

Thank you. :)

Posted from my mobile device
User avatar
kittle
Joined: 11 May 2021
Last visit: 07 Feb 2026
Posts: 298
Own Kudos:
Given Kudos: 619
Posts: 298
Kudos: 161
Kudos
Add Kudos
Bookmarks
Bookmark this Post
VeritasPrepBrian
One really subtle but totally-GMAT flaw with choice A (and that took me forever to see) is that word "its" in "like its people". Your mind is conditioned to just *know* that it means Brazil, but the subject of the sentence *is* "the food", so you're definitely dealing with two singular nouns in the first four words, so "its" has an unclear referent.

To me one of the biggest takeaways from this question is "make all the decisions you're great at first" - if it's a pronoun, a modifier, or a verb (either tense or agreement), you have an excellent chance of making the right decision. With strange modifiers and idiomatic expressions - including things like "is it okay to use like here?" and "what's the proper usage of comma-with" - we all struggle from time to time, and often the GMAT is just setting a "smokescreen" to distract you from a much more concrete, binary error. I'll admit - on this one I was trying to figure out some strange-usage decisions in the back half of the sentence until the author of the question laughed and said "I knew you'd overlook that pronoun its".

Word to the wise - whenever there's a common decision to be made (and I'm big on MVP first - Modifiers, Verbs, Pronouns) - see if you can make that decision first before you get too deep in a much trickier application of grammar.

Amazing catch. I think all miss that.
 1   2   
Moderators:
GMAT Club Verbal Expert
7391 posts
504 posts
358 posts