also—
i've NEVER seen a well-written sentence starting with "As well as...".
if you see anything on the GMAT that starts with this sort of thing, you should be safe eliminating it.
RonPurewal Wrote:...well, it's certainly not a modifier (you should be able to tell this immediately!)—so that leaves just one of those possibilities.
RonPurewal Wrote:the 'torture' comment is interesting, by the way. if you consider the gmat your 'enemy', it will be impossible for you to do well on the test.
instead, you need to think of it as a game.
whenever you play a game—whether it's a sport, or a video game, or just a random spontaneous competition with friends—you're probably good at inventing strategies (usually on the spot) and at reacting to the current situation.
there are 2 reasons you're able to do these things, neither of which is 'intelligence':
1/ the fact that you're personally involved in the game,
2/ the fact that you don't hate the game.
#2 is especially important. if you decide that you hate something, you'll NEVER understand it. this goes for puzzles, people, ...anything, even your own self.
RonPurewal Wrote:the most straightforward thing in choice B:
"gas" is singular, so "far fewer of the other gas" is nonsense. (you can't have "fewer" unless you can count things, and you can't count things unless they're plural.)
Sage Pearce-Higgins Wrote:It looks like Ron misread the sentence; let me try to clear things up. If you say "far fewer of the other gases" it means "not so many of the different types of gases". It's quite common that a noun can be used in a countable and uncountable way, with a different meaning for each one. Can you see the difference in meaning between the following sentences (both are grammatically correct)?
Shop A sells less cheese than shop B.
Shop A sells fewer cheeses than shop B.