Hi Ron,
What is wrong with Ans (D) then? It correctly uses "subject to" and "standard for". So it is wrong because "they" as a pronoun does not have a clear antecedent?
Cheers
RonPurewal Wrote:satish.polumati Wrote:Hi ,
Why the option B is wrong ?
* "Standards of vehicles" doesn't make sense; you need "standards for vehicles" -- i.e., standards that the vehicles must meet. ("Standards of vehicles" implies that the vehicles themselves somehow have "standards", rather than that those standards are imposed upon them.)
* "Subjected to" means "forced to undergo", e.g., Many shelter animals have been subjected to abuse by their previous owners.
Emissions standards are rules that apply to the vehicles, but not processes that the vehicles can be forced to undergo; that's the meaning of "subject to". (You could write, for instance, that the vehicles are subjected to intense emissions tests -- i.e., they are forced to undergo those tests.)
"it & they" generally refer same actual antecedent but "that & those" create a new copy.
"and" creates parallelism in C [ gasoline powered (modifier) and therefore..(modifier)].
in A "almost all of which are gasoline powered, and will not be subjected to emissions-control standards" both parts around "and" are not parallel in terms of meaning.
There was traffic on road and I was late. ( meaning wise this construction is not right)
There was traffic on road and so I was late. (This sentence is right because both parts around and are reinforcing each other)
So can I eliminate A based on above logic.( therefore is required for proper meaning)
A) powered, and will not be subjected to emissions-control standards as stringent as they are for
so in choice (A) Will "they" not refer to same standards for both diesel vehicles and sport utility vehicles ?
Sage Pearce-Higgins Wrote:When we read (A), to make it logical, it needs to say:
...will not be subjected to emissions-control standards as stringent as they [the standards] are [stringent] for...
However, the missing word after "are" could be filled in differently:
...will not be subjected to emissions-control standards as stringent as they are [subjected to] for...
This second reading isn't logical, but it's too easy to read the comparison as comparing two verbs (it would be nicely parallel). This would make the pronoun 'they' refer to 'sports utility vehicles', giving the sentence a totally illogical meaning.