be known as真的有错吗?
Manhattan上面写了:
RIGHT: we know her to be brilliant. She is known to be brilliant.
we know him as "Reggie". He is known as "Reggie".
Wrong: we know her as brilliant. (know as=named)
所以know as的用法没错,只是后面不能加介词,只能是名词吧。和约束力啥的感觉没什么关系。
E不是known as错了,而是没有bones这个同位语先行词。
这个约束力的说法 真的迷惑 很多解释还是ron说的比较好
那B选项怎么解释呢
B也是就近修饰的问题啊,known就近修饰cave或者Europe
纠结了E选项 但原文是“conferred moral standing on the party”,选项是enhance。我以为这不一样嘛。。。
文章逻辑:LWH的一个现象reject...,BC的观点...
但是他没有揭示LWH更深层次的影响,即....
有人C认为这个变化1871年就出现了
但是事实上。。。
最后一句作者点明LWH的意义
B选项取非:unemployed population concentrated in certain area >> some people would not know anyone who is unemployed >> 加强了Sharon想要反驳的 Roland的论点:90% people know someone who is unemployed is an alarming fact, 削弱了Sharon的论点。Sharon的论点要成立,必须基于unemployment rate在地域上是较为均衡的,才能推断出90% people know someone who is not employed is normal.
服气,看到这种明显的数字要敏感。
服气,看到这种明显的数字要敏感。
过去完成时的标志
总量的变化也会影响份额的变化,所以份额下降不代表M公司销量下降
the other
第一种情况:总数是两个,one....the other....一个另一个;
第二种情况:总数是多数,“some.....the other+名词复数”,一些......剩余的那些......”,相加等于同一个类型的总数
B中有干扰因,相对于6%的移民,原有居民才是饮食消耗量的主要决定因素,所以鱼的消耗量没有家禽多,直接把主要原因归结到移民的饮食偏好上不准确
又遇到这题,C后面的结构怎么理解啊?
what the effects on workers' performance are that changes in working conditions would cause,这里的what在are后面作表语的话,后面的that句子是什么成分呢? that的先行词是谁呢? 跳跃修饰the effects吗? 跳的有点远啊……
rampant vs rampantly:
You're all correct that "rampant" is an adjective (modifies a noun), and "rampantly" is an adverb (modifies a verb). But you could actually use either an adjective or an adverb in this case.
In this case, I think "rampant" or "rampantly" could both be perfectly fine. I'll strip down the sentence a little bit for clarity:
Kudzu has grown rampant in the southern United States. --> "rampant" is an adjective, and we're just saying that the kudzu itself is rampant
Kudzu has grown rampantly in the southern United States. --> "rampantly" is an adverb, and we're just saying that the kudzu has grown in a rampant (or uncontrolled or unchecked) way
for doing :
Two key things to remember:
(1) "for" is a preposition and therefore cannot have a true verb in its prepositional phrase and
(2) any modifier (including prepositional phrases) must refer to the right item.
A pen is for writing ('for writing' tells us what a pen is used for)
I picked up the pen for writing a letter ('for writing a letter' is fine as a modifier, but it incorrectly modifies the word pen- I have five pens on my desk, but I picked up the one that I use for writing letters)
here's another attempt at explanation:
* if you use "for VERBing" to explain the purpose of an action, that purpose should be (at least somewhat) indirect.
e.g.,
(nb: a "walking foot" is a component of a sewing machine)
i bought a new walking foot for working with leather.
--> indirect purpose. i.e., the purchase itself is not directly involved with leatherworking, although the two are indirectly (though rather closely) related.
i used the new walking foot to work with leather.
--> direct purpose.
the other legitimate uses of "for VERBing" that i've seen have mostly been idiomatically connected to particular meanings. moreover, essentially all of these constructions would work the same way with nouns substituted for the "VERBing" parts.
e.g.,
Clara was paid $600 for working 20 hours of overtime.
--> this one depends on idiomatic usage: you are paid for x.
note that this construction works identically if x is a noun: clara was paid $600 for her work.
https://www.manhattanprep.com/gmat/forums/when-is-use-of-for-objectionable-why-is-it-not-here-t16521.html
If we look very literally at (C), it's saying that the vine has grown rampant in the time since it was introduced in the 1920s. That makes perfect sense, and the word "since" is a reference to time.
But as soon as we put the comma before "since" in (E), the word "since" takes on a different meaning. The phrase "since it was introduced in the 1920s to thwart soil erosion" becomes a non-essential modifier -- and it seems to be giving us an explanation. "Since" now functions as a synonym for "because": "the vine growing rampantly in the southern US, because it was introduced to thwart erosion, has overrun..."
That's not quite what we're trying to say here: the vine hasn't grown rampant because it was introduced in the 1920s to thwart erosion -- it's just become rampant in the time since the 1920s.
Nasty and subtle, no? :(
错选A
”the threshold of economic viability for solar power“是指“令太阳能发电比燃油发电更economical,那么燃油发电每桶油需要上升到多少钱”
油价是一个衡量标准,就是考虑其他设备、工人工资、效率等情况,油价应该是多少,这个是算出来的。说实际生活中油价上升还是下降是完全无关的。
比如燃油发电成本=油价+设备=太阳能发电成本,则threshold=油价=太阳能发电成本-设备
m-5=n(n-1)
n(n-1)为偶 m-5为偶 m为奇
文章首先给了一个观点:女性的经济地位附属于同级男性
后来提出一个新的观点:女性的经济地位和男性的隔离开来,女性(无论你是工人阶级还是中层阶级)都属于一个经济地位,并给出了例子。
后来又提出一个新观点(质疑了第二个看法):工人阶级女性,中层阶级女性,以及工人阶级男性的经济地位还有有差别的,在19世纪末期,不同阶级的女性间的地位差距逐渐扩大,例子:工人阶级女性已被中层阶级以家务和志愿事务为中心的女性文化所排斥了,
中间还有第三个:中产阶级和工人阶级妇女的法律地位的相同点大于差异
A,as compared做伴随状语,当和……比较时,逻辑主语是the average price,价格和车比,错误。
时间状语从句吧,省略了it is ,原来是as it is compared with,没什么逻辑主语
C的解释同样可用于D啊,不免有从答案倒退的嫌疑吧。
对的,我也觉得答案就是知道选项不对然后说跟方案无关,毫无逻辑
C的解释稍微有点问题吧。当局的目标时为了争取所需资金,C的作用只是延缓其增长,但最终还是能获得所需资金。D这么操作,可能导致交通局收到的钱不变甚至更少
我的理解是第二个wings才是真正主语,因为前半句话是since打头,所以主语应该在逗号后面。ps:smooth自己就是副词。
兄弟,我又来了😓…
这个since是个介词,它加了时间名词the 1930s后作状语,所以逗号前面是个主谓宾完整的句子,其实逗号后面应该是同位语从句,解释wings的属性的;
另外“smooth自己就是副词”一说我也不太认同,查了下个人觉得较为权威的OELD词典,它作副词时的解释是In a way that is without difficulties,偏向于解释为“顺利地,没什么阻碍地”(例the course of true love never did run smooth),这里用来修饰shaped不太合适吧。所以这里smooth就是形容词,意为“光滑的”修饰wings,而perfectly是副词修饰shaped,两者加起来perfectly shaped又变成noun modifier,和smooth并列修饰wings,来解释其属性。
来了老弟~谢谢解释,让我看到另一种分析方法。我之前一直认为同位语从句,就应该是另一个同样意思的名词开头解释前面的名词,或者v-ed/v-ing解释这种,重复前面的名词写一个句子算是主句。看过你的解释后再看这个题,发现第二个wings如果是主语的话,主句是不完整的。
and 为啥不能和前面的整个句子平行?it指代an option。
我也错了,实在是…… 后面三个noun modifier都是修饰opinion的属性,它们平行最好。如果是B则是,S had an opinion, and the opinion was changed,从了解到的SC题型上来讲,这种and后面完整句子的主语指的是前面句子的宾语,在GMAT中很少被接受,逻辑上一它们不是一个层级的事情。个人看法~
谢谢啦~
D是more 和rather than的搭配的问题吧?
而且感觉than前面少了谓语,will plan移到前面来好些?