arpanchandra Wrote:Greetings.
Below question is from MGMAT CAT-
The jersey of the Colombian soccer club Independiente MedellÃn is emblazoned with five stars, each representing one of the club's five national titles
A- each representing one of the club's
B- each of which represent one of its
C- each one representing one of their
D- all of which represent one of the club's
E- each of them represents one of its.
Correct Ans is -A.
But my doubt is with E.
Explanation as per the MGMAT CAT sol for option E is:
In this sentence, the words after the comma ("each of them represents...") form a complete sentence by themselves, creating a run-on sentence overall.
My doubt is what is wrong with run-on-sentence. I chose E over A because of pronoun THEM referring to stars. As Them can be use for people or things.
Hi,
The run-on sentence is a hard and fast rule on the GMAT. You cannot link two complete sentences with a comma and the GMAT will consider any answer wrong that does so.
In your example, compare A to E. Here is A:
The jersey of the Colombian soccer club Independiente MedellÃn is emblazoned with five stars,
each representing one of the club's.
Notice that "each representing one of the clubs" is referring to the noun right in front of this phrase, "stars". This is called a "noun modifier" and it is being used correctly, because the description is sitting right next to the noun the description modifies.
In your answer, E:
The jersey of the Colombian soccer club Independiente MedellÃn is emblazoned with five stars,
each of them represents one of its.
Notice how:
"Each of them represents one of its." can stand alone as a sentence. I have a noun "each", and a verb, "represents". I cannot have this construction. I cannot have two complete sentences linked by a comma; the GMAT will not allow that.
By contrast, in A, "each representing one of the clubs" is not a sentence.
You seem to have chosen this answer because of the pronoun "them". While "them" is used correctly here, the pronoun "its" is not used correctly here. There is no possessive for "its" to refer to.
In general, don't choose an answer just because it has a correct pronoun. Choose an answer because it has no grammatical or meaning errors.