messi10 Wrote:Hello,
I got this question down to A and D as well, but chose D on the basis of meaning.
Doesn't choice D actually imply that the male moth chooses to use acoustical signals over olfactory ones i.e. doesn't the use of 'rather than' show that he is making a choice between the two signals? Just as its been used in the second part to show that they do so during the day rather than night.
so, the usual first response --
OFFICIALLY CORRECT ANSWERS ARE CORRECT!
do not question officially correct answers!far too many students on this forum make the mistake of questioning the correct answers; please note that doing so is a
complete waste of your time and effort. i.e., exactly 0% of the time that you spend posting "isn't this official answer wrong?" is productive, and exactly 100% of that time is wasted.
"is this correct?" is NEVER a productive question to ask about one of GMAC's correct answers -- the answer is always yes.
"is this wrong?" / "is this X type of error?" is NEVER a productive question to ask about one of GMAC's correct answers -- the answer is always no.
instead, the questions you should be asking about correct official answers, if you don't understand them, are:
"
why is this correct?"
"
how does this work?"
"
what understanding am i lacking that i need to understand this choice?"
this is a small, but hugely significant, change to your way of thinking -- you will suddenly find it
much easier to understand the format, style, and conventions of the official problems if you dispose of the idea that they might be wrong.
--
::deep breath::
ok. now that we've gotten that out of the way:
no, "rather than..." does not imply that; it just implies a difference in the way two things work. it can be used to represent a conscious choice (
I wore a blazer and jeans rather than a suit), but it can also be used for things where there is clearly no matter of choice (
Deep-sea autotrophs use chemicals in the ocean floor, rather than sunlight, to manufacture food).
in fact, it's "but..." that's problematic here.
see, "but" implies a contrast. if
X but not Y has a contrast, then that would imply that X and Y usually go together.
E.g.,
At the event, I saw Jake but not his wife. --> This sentence only makes sense if I would normally expect to see Jake's wife by his side.
In this sentence, there's no reason to expect that acoustic signals would be accompanied by olfactory ones"”in fact, we would probably expect the opposite, that there would just be one or the other"”so "but" doesn't really make sense.