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GMAT 1: 750 Q49 V44
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Can we have a full sentence on one side of a conjunction 'and' and a 'phrase with no working verb' on the other side?
Would it made a difference if there was no 'and'? I mean was the sentence still correct?

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ishan261288
Can we have a full sentence on one side of a conjunction 'and' and a 'phrase with no working verb' on the other side?
Would it made a difference if there was no 'and'? I mean was the sentence still correct?

Thanks

No but the mathematical principle that a*(b+c) = a*b + a*c is a valid sentence construction, even without the said brackets, on GMAT. This is how the "phrase with no working verb" gets it's verb in this problem.
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Can someone please explain why e is preferred over D
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A) it was only the second that came to be known for the ambition of an Indian director - use of 'it' : wrong parallelism

B) it was only the second that an ambitious Indian director produced- use of 'it' : wrong parallelism

C) the second one only that an ambitious Indian director produced - only emphasis ambitious director. Rather, it should emphasize second to be known

D) the second one only produced by an ambitious Indian director-- only emphasis ambitious director. Rather, it should emphasize second to be known

E) only the second to be known for the ambition of an Indian director - correct
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