muralik.abm Wrote:Why do we have to use an appositive (an evnet) in option E.
we don't
have to; it's just one phrasing that works.
just because one version of a sentence is correct, you can't assume that other versions are incorrect!Can't we simply say
"causing the plant and animal extinctions that mark"
- making sure that the result from the preceding independent clause (an asteroid slammed into North America) caused the plant and animal extinctions
that seems ok to me, too.
isn't it a preferred (in GMAT lang.) one to the one (choice E) that uses an appositive (an event)
well, both are legitimate.
even if one of them is "preferred", that issue is irrelevant from the standpoint of a gmat student -- you will never be faced with two correct versions of a sentence and forced to select the "preferred" version. your only job here is to tell right from wrong.
sentence correction is already difficult enough; there's little sense in adding additional, unnecessary layers of distinction, such as "preferred"/"not preferred". that just takes something that's already hard and makes it harder!
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if there is a distinction, i'd say the appositive allows for more indirect causation. i.e., if you use the comma -ING modifier, then there's a sense that the causation was
immediate and direct; if you use the appositive, that *could* still be the meaning, but the appositive also allows for the possibility that "the event" set off a chain of events that caused the extinctions more indirectly after a number of steps.