OFFICIAL EXPLANATIONProject SC Butler: Sentence Correction (SC2)
THE PROMPTBecause plant, but not animal, cells have walls stiffened by cellulose, herbivorous mammals such as horses, cattle, and elephants have millstone-like teeth for grinding cellulose, quite different from the shearing teeth of carnivores and the needle-like teeth of insectivores.
• Causality and contrast
The sentence sets up causality: because plants cells have stiff walls, and because herbivores eat plants, herbivores have millstone-like teeth with which to chew the plants.
Those millstone-like teeth, in turn, are contrasted with the "shearing" teeth of carnivores and insectivores.
•
different from, not different than
Different from is always correct and heavily preferred to
different than.
In formal print,
different from reigns.
GMAC may break ranks and join the crowd that allows different
than. Such a move is unlikely but not impossible.
(You will not see the British English expression "ABC is different to XYZ" on the GMAT. That phrasing sounds bizarre to North American ears.)
THE OPTIONSQuote:
A) Because plant, but not animal, cells have walls stiffened by cellulose, herbivorous mammals such as horses, cattle, and elephants have millstone-like teeth for grinding cellulose, quite different from
• correct
→ The use of
because sets up the causal relationship implied in the sentence.
→ The correct idiom is
different from.
KEEP
Quote:
B)
Even though plant, but not animal, cells have walls stiffened by cellulose, herbivorous mammals such as horses, cattle, and elephants have millstone-like teeth for grinding cellulose, quite different
than• "Even though" is wrong - we need a causality word, not a contrast word
This part of the sentence is nonsensical.
Herbivorous mammals have millstone-like teeth for grinding cellulose
because (not
even though) plant cells have walls stiffened by cellulose.
•
different from is idiomatic, not
different thanELIMINATE B
Quote:
C)
Just as plant, but not animal,
cells have walls stiffened by cellulose,
so herbivorous mammals such as horses, cattle, and elephants have millstone-like teeth for grinding cellulose, quite different from
• Distorted meaning
The use of
just as….. so distorts the meaning of the sentence by suggesting a similarity between plant cells and herbivorous mammals.
The plant cells are not similar to the herbivorous mammals.
ELIMINATE C
Quote:
D)
Because plant, but not animal, cells have walls stiffened by cellulose,
so herbivorous mammals such as horses, cattle, and elephants have millstone-like teeth for grinding cellulose, quite different
than• redundancy
The use of
because and
so is redundant.
•
different from is idiomatic, not
different thanELIMINATE D
Quote:
E)
Like plant, but not animal,
cells have walls stiffened by cellulose,
such herbivorous mammals as horses, cattle, and elephants have millstone-like teeth for grinding cellulose, quite different from
• Meaning and comparison error
The use of
like distorts the meaning of the sentence by suggesting a similarity between
plant cells and
herbivorous mammals.
• Like is a preposition that should
not be followed by a clause with a working verb in it.
→ Prepositions are followed by nouns, pronouns, and noun phrases
→ Easy test case: Is
like followed by a working verb? If so,
wrong.Like is a preposition that must be followed by an object, and in this case, a noun, pronoun or noun phrase.
Like is used to compare nouns, not clauses. (Because clauses requires verbs,
like cannot be followed by verbs.)
As is used to compare clauses (and should be followed by a verb.)
ELIMINATE E.
The answer is A.COMMENTShuyeenbuii , welcome to SC Butler.
You and two other newcomers (on this day's second question) will make it easier for even more aspirants to accept my standing invitation to post in SC Butler.
These answers range from good to stellar.
I see pockets of insightful analysis.
Nicely done.