by Chelsey Cooley Sat Oct 31, 2015 7:52 pm
If you think about it in terms of what you actually have to do on the test, here's what you need to be able to do:
1. Know which flavors of modifiers always modify nouns, which always modify verbs (or more specifically, which ones modify the main subject and verb of a clause), and which can modify either.
The really crucial ones are wh- modifiers (starting with 'which', 'who', 'whose', etc.), which always modify nouns, and -ing/-ed modifiers separated by a comma at the beginning or end of a clause, which always modify the 'action' of the clause. Be aware of these, because if something is, for instance, a 'wh' modifier, there are limits on what it can grammatically modify. Even if there's a verb in the sentence that it could logically be modifying, it's still ungrammatical without a noun. For instance, this sentence is ungrammatical:
I got a 790 on the GMAT, which impressed my family.
Even though it 'makes sense' for 'which impressed my family' to modify 'getting a 790', because we know that wh- modifiers always modify nouns, it can't be right.
On top of that, a lot of modifiers can modify either nouns or verbs. Prepositional phrases, as you mention, are an example. But what's interesting is that you never have to look at a prepositional phrase on the GMAT and decide whether it's a noun modifier or a verb modifier. That's not what you're being tested on - they only care if you can tell whether the sentence is grammatical. And that brings us to my second point...
2. Be able to determine whether a modifier in a sentence makes sense.
If you see a prepositional phrase modifier in a sentence, or any kind of 'goes both ways' modifier, don't ask yourself 'is it modifying a noun, or is it modifying a verb?'. Instead, ask yourself 'is there anything in this sentence that the modifier could be modifying, that makes sense both grammatically and logically?' Doesn't matter if it's a noun or a verb, as long as it's in there, and it's in the right place. You need to recognize these sentences as good:
The book on the table has a blue cover. ('on the table' correctly modifies 'book')
I read the book with great enthusiasm. ('with great enthusiasm' correctly modifies 'read')
I saw the man with the binoculars. ('with the binoculars' could be modifying either 'man' or 'saw', but it's grammatical either way, so it doesn't really matter)
and this as less good:
The book has a blue cover on the table. (Doesn't matter whether 'on the table' is a noun or verb modifier, because there's nothing that it can modify without breaking rules of either grammar or logic.)