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acer2knight
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acer2knight
OA is D it is ....can some one please explain the explanation given??

acer2knight, I've seen that type of explanation before (use of "the" and "their" in this case). Honestly, I think that's pushing the explanation a bit too far, but of course they're professionals, I can't argue with that. However, I highly doubt that, at the end of the day, the answer will lie between the usage of "the" and "their", such as in this case. But to answer your question, I'm not quite sure as to the explanation of the usage of "the" in this case by the MGMAT folks...
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Sorry for opening a old thread..

I have a specific question about this SC.

In the solution to this problem MGMAT says "The plural pronoun “their” is properly used to refer to the plural antecedent “municipal governments,” and the verb “leading” is parallel to the verb “beginning” in the non-underlined portion of the sentence."

How is verbs leading and beginning parallel?
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gaurav107 wrote

Quote:
In the solution to this problem MGMAT says "The plural pronoun “their” is properly used to refer to the plural antecedent “municipal governments,” and the verb “leading” is parallel to the verb “beginning” in the non-underlined portion of the sentence."

How is verbs leading and beginning parallel?

I can see a valid point in Gaurav’s poser.

Parallelism is required to be maintained in two - part sentences connected by a coordinator. On the contrary, in simple sentences, You may not compare two verbs or subjects and such kinds of symmetrical //ism may not be a critical issue. Maybe list //ism or series will matter.

Quote:
and the verb “leading” is parallel to the verb “beginning” in the non-underlined portion of the sentence."


After all ‘beginning’ is part of the verb ‘are beginning’, while leading is not a verb, but a simple present participle doing its normal job of modifying; So any attempt to parallelize two essentially different parts of speech will amount to pseudo //ism. You can in fact see that leading will not even pair with restraining costs, or with limiting services, in which cases, both the ing verbals are essentially gerunds.

A kudo each to bakefed and Guarav (his maiden post and kudo) for their through dissection.



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