cshen02 Wrote:[color=#FF40BF]Hey,
Would anyone check whether I get the following right?
In choice A, "it" refers to "the global economy". I recall that the pronoun it can only refer to the same actual thing, so doubted whether "it" is correct here. But since A is the key, I would say "economy" is a changing noun as it performs differently in separate time periods. Does the analysis sound right?
It's still the global economy.
You need to distinguish between (a) the same entity at different points, and (b) legitimately different entities.
People and things evolve with time, but, as long as you're still talking about the same people/things, you can use pronouns.
E.g.,
Tom is almost 6 inches taller than he was two years ago.It should be clear that "he" = "Tom" is ok. I.e., Tom is not a different person because he's two years older! He's still Tom.
Or,
The air quality of Los Angeles is substantially higher now than it was twenty years ago.Also ok.
If the noun
has a timeframe attached to it, THEN any pronoun will carry that same timeframe. E.g., if a sentence contains "The air quality of Los Angeles 20 years ago", then "it" would carry that particular timeframe.
E.g.,
The air quality of Los Angeles 20 years ago was substantially worse than it is now.This sentence is wrong, because, this time, "it" = "the air quality of L.A. twenty years ago". That's not something that exists in the present.