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Hi DisciplinedPrep,

Will you clear the below doubt ?
Can "who" modify/refer to Non-person ?
If in option E , it was something like this
unlike its wild counterparts, who can be found
Would that be correct ?

I think "Which" can be used rather than "who" .

Thanks in advance



MofeBhatia - Hello there.

Relative Pronouns Who and Whom must be used for Person, whereas Relative Pronouns Which and That must be used for Non-Person. Whose can be used for both Person and Non-Person.

To answer your question, no, the re-worded Option E would still be incorrect because it still includes the comparison error: domestic chinchilla, a singular entity, is compared to plural wild counterparts, a situation which is always incorrect on the GMAT. Moreover, usage of relative pronoun "who" is incorrect in this case because the question talks about a Non-Person entity, the domestic chinchilla.
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generis

Project SC Butler: Day 57 Sentence Correction (SC2)


For SC butler Questions Click Here

The domestic chinchilla is a diminutive creature, especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found high in the Andes.

A) especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found

B) as opposed to their wild counterparts, which can be found

C) particularly when compared to its wild counterpart, found

D) as compared against its wild counterparts that can be found

E) unlike its wild counterparts, who can only be found

The best or excellent answers get kudos, which will be awarded after the answer is revealed.

The answer to this question has nothing to do with the difference between compare to and compare with, a difference that the GMAT does not test.

Noun is singular and it will have only 1 counter part

A - noun is singular but their is used in the modifier - incorrect

B - Same as A - incorrect

C - seems good - correct

D - counterparts and also compared against- incorrect

E - incorrect comparision - incorrect
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IMO C

A) especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found----> incorrect, no antecedant of their

B) as opposed to their wild counterparts, which can be found--> incorrect, same error as A

C) particularly when compared to its wild counterpart, found-->correct

D) as compared against its wild counterparts that can be found--> compared against, wrong idiom,

E) unlike its wild counterparts, who can only be found--> incorrect, who is used for humans and not animals
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Project SC Butler: Day 57 Sentence Correction (SC2)


For SC butler Questions Click Here

The domestic chinchilla is a diminutive creature, especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found high in the Andes.

A) especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found
B) as opposed to their wild counterparts, which can be found
C) particularly when compared to its wild counterpart, found
D) as compared against its wild counterparts that can be found
E) unlike its wild counterparts, who can only be found

The answer to this question has nothing to do with the difference between compare to and compare with, a difference that the GMAT does not test.

OFFICIAL EXPLANATION

The sentence contains a pronoun error. The sentence is trying to compare
the domestic chinchilla to the wild chinchilla.

• Choices A and B incorrectly use the pronoun their to refer to the [singular] domestic chinchilla

Eliminate A and B. Look at the other choices.

• The correct idiom in the remaining options is compared to.
Choice D uses compared against, which is incorrect.

Eliminate D.

• The next thing to check is the parallel structure [between remaining choices C and E]
-- Choice E adds the word only, which changes the meaning of the sentence. [No other answer implies that the wild chinchilla is found ONLY in the high Andes. Infer from the absence of that word in all four other answers that E incorrectly adds "only."]
-- Choice E also incorrectly compares the singular domestic chinchilla to plural counterparts.

The correct answer is C.

COMMENTS

That OE is pretty good.
How do we know that chinchilla is singular?
In the non-underlined portion, the verb IS = singular.
" . . . chinchilla is . . ."

DisciplinedPrep , your answer is superb. Best answer. Kudos!
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Can someone help to decipher the meaning of the sentence?

Is the sentence trying to convey that the "chinchilla" is found in the Andes or its Wild Counterpart?
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generis

The domestic chinchilla is a diminutive creature, especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found high in the Andes.

A) especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found
B) as opposed to their wild counterparts, which can be found
C) particularly when compared to its wild counterpart, found
D) as compared against its wild counterparts that can be found
E) unlike its wild counterparts, who which can only be found
pikolo2510
Can someone help to decipher the meaning of the sentence?

Is the sentence trying to convey that the "chinchilla" is found in the Andes or its Wild Counterpart?
Hi pikolo2510 , the sentence means that the domestic chinchilla,
an animal that people keep as pets, is very small, especially when compared to
the wild chinchilla. The wild chinchilla is found high in the Andes.

In every option, the modifier that follows "wild chinchilla" applies to the wild chinchilla.
found is a past participle, a verbED.
Past participles, as in answer A and in correct answer C, modify the preceding noun or noun phrase (on the GMAT)
• In answer B, comma + which modifies the nearest logical noun, the wild counterpart, i.e. the wild chinchilla
"that can be found" is an essential modifier of wild counterparts (wild chinchillas) in answer D
comma + who [WHICH] can only be found (option E with the pronoun corrected) is the same as B.

Hope that helps.
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generis
generis

The domestic chinchilla is a diminutive creature, especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found high in the Andes.

A) especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found
B) as opposed to their wild counterparts, which can be found
C) particularly when compared to its wild counterpart, found
D) as compared against its wild counterparts that can be found
E) unlike its wild counterparts, who which can only be found
pikolo2510
Can someone help to decipher the meaning of the sentence?

Is the sentence trying to convey that the "chinchilla" is found in the Andes or its Wild Counterpart?
Hi pikolo2510 , the sentence means that the domestic chinchilla,
an animal that people keep as pets, is very small, especially when compared to
the wild chinchilla. The wild chinchilla is found high in the Andes.

In every option, the modifier that follows "wild chinchilla" applies to the wild chinchilla.
found is a past participle, a verbED.
Past participles, as in correct answer C, modify the preceding noun or noun phrase (on the GMAT)
• In answer B, comma + which modifies the nearest logical noun, the wild counterpart, i.e. the wild chinchilla
"that can be found" is an essential modifier of the wild chinchilla in answer D
comma + who [WHICH] can only be found (option E with the pronoun corrected) is the same as B.

Hope that helps.

Thank you for the awesome explanation!
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generis


The domestic chinchilla is a diminutive creature, especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found high in the Andes.

A) especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found

B) as opposed to their wild counterparts, which can be found

C) particularly when compared to its wild counterpart, found

D) as compared against its wild counterparts that can be found

E) unlike its wild counterparts, who can only be found


Hey generis

Is the usage of the phrase 'when compared to' correct? I remember reading a rule, long back, in E-gmat's SC course that the usage of below phrases in comparisons is wrong.

when compared to, when compared with, and as compared with.

Please correct me if I'm wrong here. Thank you in advance for your valuable inputs.

Cheers!
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generis


The domestic chinchilla is a diminutive creature, especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found high in the Andes.

A) especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found
B) as opposed to their wild counterparts, which can be found
C) particularly when compared to its wild counterpart, found
D) as compared against its wild counterparts that can be found
E) unlike its wild counterparts, who can only be found
Hey generis

Is the usage of the phrase 'when compared to' correct? I remember reading a rule, long back, in E-gmat's SC course that the usage of below phrases in comparisons is wrong.

when compared to, when compared with, and as compared with.

Please correct me if I'm wrong here. Thank you in advance for your valuable inputs.

Cheers!
Hi Diwakar003 - a little bit of jargon, sorry: this construction is a hidden zero conditional.

The use of "when" is acceptable if the sentence is actually a zero conditional in disguise, even in the context of "compared to."

Conditionals/Statements of fact

Option C is a zero conditional in disguise.

If we have statements of fact that use when, look for a zero conditional.

Generally, conditionals are IF/THEN constructs.

Zero conditionals

Zero conditionals often use the words if and then, but there really is no doubt about outcome.

Zero conditionals are used to express general truths and facts—things that are always true.
If she eats peanuts, then she has a dangerous allergic reaction.

If this thing happens or is true, then that thing happens or is true.

Always true: the domestic chinchilla is a small animal
Always true: the domestic chinchilla is always smaller than the wild chinchilla

• The time frame for a zero conditional is now and always.

The domestic chinchilla is a small animal, [a fact that is evident] particularly IF [the domestic chinchilla is] compared to its [always larger] wild counterpart

Zero conditionals can use the word "when" instead of "if."

Zero conditionals and the use of WHEN:

When does THAT thing happen if THIS thing happens? ALWAYS.
-- Because the time frame is always, we are allowed to use "when."

WHEN this thing happens, then that thing happens.

Correct: If it rains, the ground gets wet.
Correct: When it rains, the ground gets wet.
Correct: The ground gets wet when it rains.

This resource, HERE about conditionals is among the best I have found.

Finally, we transform the IF statement in green typeface from above

The domestic chinchilla is a small animal, [a fact that is evident] particularly WHEN [the domestic chinchilla is] compared its [always larger] wild counterpart

That sentence is very close to Option C:
The domestic chinchilla is a diminutive creature, particularly when compared to its wild counterpart . . . [found high in the Andes.]

In this case, "when" is correct.

I found an e-gmat blog post that explains the instances in which the use of WHEN is acceptable even though
the "when" does not refer to any particular time period. The post is about IF/THEN.

Hope that helps.
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generis


The domestic chinchilla is a diminutive creature, especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found high in the Andes.

A) especially as compared with their wild counterparts, found
B) as opposed to their wild counterparts, which can be found
C) particularly when compared to its wild counterpart, found
D) as compared against its wild counterparts that can be found
E) unlike its wild counterparts, who can only be found
Hey generis

Is the usage of the phrase 'when compared to' correct? I remember reading a rule, long back, in E-gmat's SC course that the usage of below phrases in comparisons is wrong.

when compared to, when compared with, and as compared with.

Please correct me if I'm wrong here. Thank you in advance for your valuable inputs.

Cheers!
Hi Diwakar003 - a little bit of jargon, sorry: this construction is a hidden zero conditional.

The use of "when" is acceptable if the sentence is actually a zero conditional in disguise, even in the context of "compared to."

Hope that helps.


Hi generis,

Thanks a lot for taking time to write an elaborate explanation and going the extra bit to find out the E-Gmat blog. We're very fortunate to have mods like you! Thanks again!

Cheers!
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Hi generis,

I am not completely understanding why C is correct.

C would read like this: The domestic chinchilla is a diminutive creature, particularly when compared to its wild counterpart, found high in the Andes.

This indicates that the domestic chinchilla is found high in the Andes (doesn't make sense to me).

Or am I reading this wrong?
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The correct option uses the idiom " When Compared To", isn't is wrong as explained by you in your tutorial that correct use of idiom is only as menitoned below:

1. As + Compared + To
2. Compared + to
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Definitely answer C.

But I have a question - is there a difference in this sense between especially and particularly. Let's assume that sentence 1 was absolutely fine from a grammar perspective, would we see a difference of usage between especially vs particularly?
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In (C), isn't "particularly" adverb is modifying the noun "chinchilla"? Isn't an adverb should modify a verb?
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In (C), isn't "particularly" adverb is modifying the noun "chinchilla"? Isn't an adverb should modify a verb?

Hi Lakshya

An adverb need not necessarily modify only a verb; it can modify any feature other than a noun or a pronoun - it can even modify other adverbs, entire phrases or clauses.

For eg:

Adverb "fast" modifying the verb "runs" --> Usain Bolt runs very fast.
Adverb "incredibly" modifying the adjective "happy" --> My cat is incredibly happy to have his dinner.
Adverb "quite" modifying another adverb "frequently" --> Isadora jogs quite frequently.

In this question, the adverb "particularly" is modifying the phrase "when compared to its wild counterpart" ie; it conveys that the domestic chinchilla is "diminutive" and this characteristic is more prominent or relevant ("particularly) when it is "compared to its wild counterpart".

Hope this helps.
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Hi Generis/ Experts,

The idiomatic expression, when compared to, in the answer choice C is incorrect. I say this because the same has been mentioned in the course offered by e-gmat. So how can it be the correct answer choice? I rejected this choice based on that knowledge.

And if it is correct then please help me understand the idiomatic usage of "compared/ contrast".

Thanks,
Parikshit
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Hi Generis/ Experts,

The idiomatic expression, when compared to, in the answer choice C is incorrect. I say this because the same has been mentioned in the course offered by e-gmat. So how can it be the correct answer choice? I rejected this choice based on that knowledge.

And if it is correct then please help me understand the idiomatic usage of "compared/ contrast".

Thanks,
Parikshit
Hi Parikshit07,

I cannot, without further information, comment on the source you mentioned, but it'd be best to keep an open mind on idiomatic usage unless you are absolutely sure that something is incorrect. Here is a sentence from the Cambridge English Corpus that uses when compared to:

The environment within the host, when compared to the external environment, is comparatively constant.
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