RonPurewal Wrote:it's definitely being used as an adverbial modifier. and yeah, it is a prepositional phrase (with the intention... -- and everything afterward basically just modifies intention)
this is the sort of construction that probably skirts the boundary of acceptability on the gmat - i'd think they would prefer other constructions (such as the one that's in the correct answer to this problem), although i would hesitate to declare this particular construction outright wrong.
in any case, there's a problem with the example you've cited here: 'the state's' should be its, because the use of this sort of modifier implies that alaska is still the subject.
Picking the example up from one of the earlier posts here:
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A)Alaska regularly deposits some of its profits from the sale of oil into a special fund, with the intention to sustain the state’s economy after the exhaustion of its oil reserves.
What is the part of the sentence starting with "with" above ?Certainly not a prepositional phrase.
And is it being used correctly as a modifier in the sentence?
The correct answer though is :
C)Alaska regularly deposits some of its profits from the sale of oil into a special fund intended to sustain the state’s economy
after oil reserves are exhausted**********************************
Ron, if there were another option C-2 (given below), would you prefer this one over C? Please explain why/why not? thanks in advance.C-2) Alaska regularly deposits some of its profits from the sale of oil into a special fund intended to sustain the state’s economy
after exhausting the oil reservesIMO, "exhausting the oil reserves .." is good because it is the subject only that's exhausting the reserve.
e.g. Tom would go to school after finishing his homework. => Tom would be finishing the homework.
Tom would go to school after his homework is finished/done. - anyone could finish/do his homework
I'm adding one more question here:
"intended to sustain state's economy..." - Is it Alaska or the fund that would sustain the economy?"