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vscid
Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans and so was probably very difficult for a foreign traveler to learn in a short time.

a] Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans

b] Old English had three genders resembling those of the Germans

c] The three genders of Old English resembled a German's

d] Old English's three genders resembled the German's

e] The three genders of old English that resembled those of the Germans

I chose D on this - the only choice that is coherent and parallel.
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The sentence talks abt German language. So German's is the correct usage.
Between C and D.
C- a German's is not correct.

I choose D.
What is OA?
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I choose D as well we are comparing German language and not Germans.
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please provide Official Answer ?
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Guys, I initially chose D, but now I realise that we need "old english" as the subject of the sentence. It is "old english" that was "very difficult", not "genders". So, it looks like we need to choose between A and B.

I have 2 issues with A and B:
1. How "Old English had three genders" can be parallel to "those of the Germans"?
2. Grammatically A and B are exactly the same - "that resembled" and "resembling" mean the same thing. So, how would you choose between the two?

On the test day, however, I would choose B only because "resembling" takes the tense of the main clause(simple past); even if "had" and "that resembled" in A are both in the simple past tense, I think, specifying the tense of "resemble" leaves doubt that the two events ( having and resembling) started and finished at not exactly the same time.

vscid
Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans and so was probably very difficult for a foreign traveler to learn in a short time.

a] Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans

b] Old English had three genders resembling those of the Germans

c] The three genders of Old English resembled a German's

d] Old English's three genders resembled the German's

e] The three genders of old English that resembled those of the Germans
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That's the same reason I went with B.

botirvoy


On the test day, however, I would choose B only because "resembling" takes the tense of the main clause(simple past); even if "had" and "that resembled" in A are both in the simple past tense, I think, specifying the tense of "resemble" leaves doubt that the two events ( having and resembling) started and finished at not exactly the same time.

vscid
Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans and so was probably very difficult for a foreign traveler to learn in a short time.

a] Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans

b] Old English had three genders resembling those of the Germans

c] The three genders of Old English resembled a German's

d] Old English's three genders resembled the German's

e] The three genders of old English that resembled those of the Germans
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we are talking perhaps about the language english vs german; hence, germans is out.
Thus, I went with D.
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vscid
Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans and so was probably very difficult for a foreign traveler to learn in a short time.

a] Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans

b] Old English had three genders resembling those of the Germans

c] The three genders of Old English resembled a German's

d] Old English's three genders resembled the German's

e] The three genders of old English that resembled those of the Germans

C D E have issues.

B uses resembling in a continuous tense. It is not needed.

A remains
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botirvoy
Guys, I initially chose D, but now I realise that we need "old english" as the subject of the sentence. It is "old english" that was "very difficult", not "genders". So, it looks like we need to choose between A and B.

I have 2 issues with A and B:
1. How "Old English had three genders" can be parallel to "those of the Germans"?
2. Grammatically A and B are exactly the same - "that resembled" and "resembling" mean the same thing. So, how would you choose between the two?


On the test day, however, I would choose B only because "resembling" takes the tense of the main clause(simple past); even if "had" and "that resembled" in A are both in the simple past tense, I think, specifying the tense of "resemble" leaves doubt that the two events ( having and resembling) started and finished at not exactly the same time.

vscid
Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans and so was probably very difficult for a foreign traveler to learn in a short time.

a] Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans

b] Old English had three genders resembling those of the Germans

c] The three genders of Old English resembled a German's

d] Old English's three genders resembled the German's

e] The three genders of old English that resembled those of the Germans

You are absolutely right (for what you said in italics)
Because of 1. as mentioned above, a MGMAT instructor mentioned that this may not even be a GMAT quality sentence.
In any case,
OA B.
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vscid
botirvoy
Guys, I initially chose D, but now I realise that we need "old english" as the subject of the sentence. It is "old english" that was "very difficult", not "genders". So, it looks like we need to choose between A and B.

I have 2 issues with A and B:
1. How "Old English had three genders" can be parallel to "those of the Germans"?
2. Grammatically A and B are exactly the same - "that resembled" and "resembling" mean the same thing. So, how would you choose between the two?


On the test day, however, I would choose B only because "resembling" takes the tense of the main clause(simple past); even if "had" and "that resembled" in A are both in the simple past tense, I think, specifying the tense of "resemble" leaves doubt that the two events ( having and resembling) started and finished at not exactly the same time.

vscid
Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans and so was probably very difficult for a foreign traveler to learn in a short time.

a] Old English had three genders that resembled those of the Germans

b] Old English had three genders resembling those of the Germans

c] The three genders of Old English resembled a German's

d] Old English's three genders resembled the German's

e] The three genders of old English that resembled those of the Germans

You are absolutely right (for what you said in italics)
Because of 1. as mentioned above, a MGMAT instructor mentioned that this may not even be a GMAT quality sentence.
In any case,
OA B.

In my opinion, although B is OA, it should sound like:

Old English had three genders resembling those of the German (not Germans - because German is the language, Germans are people, who live in Germany)
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Before delving into this question, let us remember something. English refers to the language of English; the English refers to the people of English. The Germans refers to the people of Germany. If we want to refer to German language, we have just to say German. German being a language, we can not describe it as Germans or a German or the Germans. In all the choices, the genders of the second part do not refer to German language but to the German natives.
Viewed that way, how good is the comparison in each choice, comparing the genders of a language to the genders of the people. I am unable to select any choice as legitimate
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Ignoring the use of the article ‘the’ with a language, if we have to choose among the choices, then we may have to lean on A and B for the sake of maintaining the subject in both parts of this two part sentence. But between A and B , I would rather prefer A for the reason that the use of a relative clause using ‘that’, by virtue of its restrictive nature, pin- points the resemblance between the two objects, namely, the genders, more sharply than the present participial ‘resembling’.

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