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MdAbuAsad
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Re: Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists

by MdAbuAsad Thu Sep 28, 2023 3:56 pm

Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists, an asteroid bigger than Mount Everest slammed into North America, which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks the end of the geologic era known as the Cretaceous Period.
A. which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks
B. which caused the plant and animal extinctions marking
C. and causing plant and animal extinctions that mark
D. an event that caused plant and animal extinctions, and it marks
E. an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions that mark

Hello ManhattanPrep Experts,
I have a query on the basis of choice E (the correct coice).
What if someone write a sentence like the below:
... an event that x (verb) blah blah and that y (verb) blah blah.
Can I say the 'y' is the verb of 'an event'? (apart from meaning issue)

Thank you all...
“The heights by great men reached and kept were not attained in sudden flight but, they while their companions slept, they were toiling upwards in the night.”
― Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
MdAbuAsad
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Re: Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists

by MdAbuAsad Thu Sep 28, 2023 4:34 pm

Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists, an asteroid bigger than Mount Everest slammed into North America, which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks the end of the geologic era known as the Cretaceous Period.
A. which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks
B. which caused the plant and animal extinctions marking
C. and causing plant and animal extinctions that mark
D. an event that caused plant and animal extinctions, and it marks
E. an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions that mark

One more query:
What if the choice E is like below?
** an event that caused the plant and the animal extinction that mark
Would the creative choice be correct?

note: 'the' has been added ahead of 'animal extinction' and 's' has been removed from 'extinctions'
“The heights by great men reached and kept were not attained in sudden flight but, they while their companions slept, they were toiling upwards in the night.”
― Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
StaceyKoprince
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Re: Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists

by StaceyKoprince Mon Oct 02, 2023 3:59 pm

Hi! For your first question, yes, you can do that. For example:
...an event that caused mass extinctions and that persisted for 3,000 years.

The event caused something to happen.
The event persisted for a period of time.

For your second question, what if the correct answer were changed to:
** an event that caused the plant and the animal extinction that mark


No, this is not correct for a meaning reason.

If you separate this out in this way ("the plant and the animal"), then you are referring to two different events. But now the word extinction is singular...so it is only one event. So this is illogical.

You'd have to say:
An event that caused the plant and the animal extinctionS that mark...

Even then, this would not be typical—the typical native-speaker construction would be "the plant and animal extinctions." It's not necessary to repeat "the," and you typically want to avoid doing things that unnecessarily add words to a sentence. But it's very unlikely that the GMAT would make you choose between "the plant and animal extinctions" and "the plant and the animal extinctions." That's just too nitpicky, even for the GMAT.

The construction "the plant and the animal extinctions" is also wrong for a different reason that the GMAT wouldn't test. From a scientific perspective, these extinctions were not limited to one type of organism—it wasn't the case, for example, that the plant extinctions all happened in one timeframe and then, in a separate timeframe, the animal extinctions started while all the plants were fine. The extinctions were interwoven / occurring simultaneously. But this requires factual knowledge and the GMAT doesn't expect you to bring in that kind of factual knowledge—so they wouldn't test this. :)
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MdAbuAsad
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Re: Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists

by MdAbuAsad Sat Oct 07, 2023 4:32 pm

StaceyKoprince Wrote:Hi! For your first question, yes, you can do that. For example:
...an event that caused mass extinctions and that persisted for 3,000 years.

The event caused something to happen.
The event persisted for a period of time.


^^ If this is true then why don't we consider the following format/structure? Is it because of meaning issue (specially in this SC meaning)?
1. an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions
2. an event that markS blah blah?

Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists, an asteroid bigger than Mount Everest slammed into North America, which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks the end of the geologic era known as the Cretaceous Period.
A. which, causing plant and animal extinctions, marks
B. which caused the plant and animal extinctions marking
C. and causing plant and animal extinctions that mark
D. an event that caused plant and animal extinctions, and it marks
E. an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions that mark
“The heights by great men reached and kept were not attained in sudden flight but, they while their companions slept, they were toiling upwards in the night.”
― Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
MdAbuAsad
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Re: Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists

by MdAbuAsad Sat Oct 07, 2023 4:52 pm

StaceyKoprince Wrote:
For your second question, what if the correct answer were changed to:
** an event that caused the plant and the animal extinction that mark


No, this is not correct for a meaning reason.

If you separate this out in this way ("the plant and the animal"), then you are referring to two different events. But now the word extinction is singular...so it is only one event. So this is illogical.

You'd have to say:
An event that caused the plant and the animal extinctionS that mark...


E. an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions that mark

If we add article the before animal the sentence looks like as follows:
E. an event that caused the plant and the animal extinctions that mark
The query is:
Which version is correct if we distribute the things to others?
Version 1:
a) an event that caused the plant
note: 'that mark' is not connected with this part
and
b) an event that caused the animal extinctions that mark

Version 2:
a) an event that caused the plant and the animal extinctions that mark
Note: 'that mark' is connected with both 'the plant and the animal extinctions'.
“The heights by great men reached and kept were not attained in sudden flight but, they while their companions slept, they were toiling upwards in the night.”
― Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
StaceyKoprince
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Re: Sixty-five million years ago, according to some scientists

by StaceyKoprince Thu Oct 12, 2023 4:00 pm

If this is true then why don't we consider the following format/structure? Is it because of meaning issue (specially in this SC meaning)?
1. an event that caused the plant and animal extinctions
2. an event that markS blah blah?


I believe you're asking whether we can have one tense be in the past (caused) and the other be in the present (marks)? Yes, this is allowed as long as that meaning is logical for each thing.

My birthday is an event that first occurred many years ago and that brings me joy every year.

For your second post:

an event that caused the plant and the animal extinctions that mark


Here, the word extinctions has to (also) go with plant (or the sentence doesn't make sense. So the X and Y parallel structure is the following:
...an event that caused [X: the plant] AND [Y: the animal] extinctions that mark...

"that mark" modifies extinctions.
"extinctions" finishes off the phrase for both X (plant) and Y (animal) --> plant extinctions and animal extinctions
Therefore, "that mark" applies to both plant and animal extinctions.

This is also true if you don't include the "the" in front of animal:
...an event that caused the [X: plant] AND [Y: animal] extinctions that mark...
Stacey Koprince
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Director, Content & Curriculum
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