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WenjiaC918
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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by WenjiaC918 Tue Sep 30, 2014 11:20 pm

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Last edited by WenjiaC918 on Fri Oct 03, 2014 12:39 am, edited 1 time in total.
soulwangh
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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by soulwangh Fri Oct 03, 2014 12:31 am

tim Wrote:None of us moderators know what "sth" means, so we can't help you until you spell out what you mean.

Everyone, please understand that when you use non-universal abbreviations in your questions, the result is that we will have to ask you to clarify, which ironically will mean that the process will take way longer than if you had just spelled everything out clearly from the beginning.


Tim

Very sorry!

“Sth” is short for something.
I have been taught this abbreviation by teachers since the first day I learned english in China.
I see someone has used it in this forum and thus take it for granted.
Sorry again.
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Re: * Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by soulwangh Fri Oct 03, 2014 11:47 am

RonPurewal Wrote:Your issue seems to be something along the lines of "I thought that ____ was incorrect usage, but it showed up in an official correct answer."

The response is always the same:
If it's in an official correct answer, then it's correct usage-- and now you're aware of it.

There's not much to say here, other than "It's not wrong".


Hey,watch the Straw man fallacy.
I know the correct answer is correct and I must be wrong for some reason.
That is why I give my line of reasoning to have Manhattan Gmat SC experts help me correct my wrong and wired thinking.

My question is what is the property of "as" in "view X as Y"?
Prep or something else?
If prep, why it can be followed by an adj?

Thanks in advance.
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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by tim Sat Oct 04, 2014 12:10 pm

I don't see this as a straw man at all. It looks to me like Ron accurately summed up your observation, and his response was totally on point. If you're asking us to help us resolve the cognitive dissonance you are having about learning something one way only to find out the GMAT disagrees with you, the best possible advice we can give is for you to let go of what you learned - at least for purposes of taking the GMAT. There are things I learned differently in school from what the GMAT expects, and I just have to keep those anomalies in mind when I'm answering GMAT questions.

It also looks like you're asking about parts of speech. Ultimately knowing parts of speech is far less useful on the GMAT than most people realize.
Tim Sanders
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Follow this link for some important tips to get the most out of your forum experience:
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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by soulwangh Sun Oct 05, 2014 2:19 am

tim Wrote:I don't see this as a straw man at all. It looks to me like Ron accurately summed up your observation, and his response was totally on point. If you're asking us to help us resolve the cognitive dissonance you are having about learning something one way only to find out the GMAT disagrees with you, the best possible advice we can give is for you to let go of what you learned - at least for purposes of taking the GMAT. There are things I learned differently in school from what the GMAT expects, and I just have to keep those anomalies in mind when I'm answering GMAT questions.

It also looks like you're asking about parts of speech. Ultimately knowing parts of speech is far less useful on the GMAT than most people realize.


Hi Tim,
Thanks for sharing your personal experience about learning english and Gmat.
Very practical and useful.
For a non-native speaker, it is hard to distinguish the general rule kind of knowledge that you can reason out the right pattern by using some basic premise, from the idiomatic kind of knowledge that you just have to remember. Also it is more harder for a non-native speaker to distinguish the Gmat-useful knowledge form Gmat-useless knowledge.
Anyway, I will learn to let go of my complex and focus on Gmat-useful thing.

Thanks again.
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Re: * Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by RonPurewal Sun Oct 05, 2014 10:26 am

soulwangh Wrote:My question is what is the property of "as" in "view X as Y"?
Prep or something else?
If prep, why it can be followed by an adj?

Thanks in advance.


If you can say "X is Y", then you can also "view X as Y".

Y can be a noun (X is a challenge; Many people view X as a challenge).

It can also be an adjective (X is difficult; Many people view X as difficult).

It could possibly be other things, too, although I can't immediately think of anything else.

(No clue about the grammar terms.)
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Re: * Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by soulwangh Tue Oct 14, 2014 7:57 am

RonPurewal Wrote:
soulwangh Wrote:My question is what is the property of "as" in "view X as Y"?
Prep or something else?
If prep, why it can be followed by an adj?

Thanks in advance.


If you can say "X is Y", then you can also "view X as Y".

Y can be a noun (X is a challenge; Many people view X as a challenge).

It can also be an adjective (X is difficult; Many people view X as difficult).

It could possibly be other things, too, although I can't immediately think of anything else.

(No clue about the grammar terms.)

Thanks for the explanation.
Have Learned a lot from you!
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Re: * Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by RonPurewal Wed Oct 15, 2014 5:13 am

excellent.
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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by HemantR606 Sat Jul 11, 2015 11:16 am

Hi Ron,

In the original answer, 'viewing economy as moderate growth' seemed very strange to me.

How are 'moderate growth' and 'economy' similar?



Thank you in advance
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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by RonPurewal Sun Jul 12, 2015 4:55 am

HemantR606 Wrote:Hi Ron,

In the original answer, 'viewing economy as moderate growth' seemed very strange to me.


that would seem very strange to me, too... IF the sentence actually said that.
but it doesn't.
(the sentence says that people see the economy 'as balanced'.)
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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by vili1108 Wed Aug 12, 2015 2:27 pm

In choice D, can "who" jump over prepositional phrase to modify "policy makers"? It seems occasionally "which" can jump over to modify noun in OG problem.

Thanks
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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by RonPurewal Fri Aug 14, 2015 12:10 am

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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by RonPurewal Fri Aug 14, 2015 12:11 am

also, if you think for a few seconds, you'll realize that it's absolutely impossible to write this sentence WITHOUT 'jumping' over that modifier.
(clearly we can't break up "policy makers at the federal reserve"—if we did, we'd end up with a sentence about policy makers in general.)
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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by wun866 Thu Aug 04, 2016 12:39 am

Ron,

I have looked through all the thread, but still have confusion of the modifier.

What is "now viewing" modified? I thought it should modify policy makers according to the meaning, but how can V-ing modify the noun between other two (financial experts & Federal Reserve)?

For the Noun+prep. phrase "policy makers at the Federal Reserve", in D, why cannot who modifier modify policy makers since Federal Reserve is in the Preposition phrase?
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Re: Many financial experts believe that policy makers

by RonPurewal Tue Aug 09, 2016 8:11 am

it's impossible to split up "policy makers at the Federal Reserve" without destroying the meaning of the phrase -- so you should just process that entire phrase as a single noun.