Hi,instructors,I am confused about parallelism.
whether "have been" and "am/is/are" can parallel or not?
thanghnvn Wrote:the reason to eliminate b and c is parallelism. the parallelism in a is PERFECT ONE. gmat like perfect parallelism. gmat like the same verb form. this is strange becaue there are many oa in og and gmatprep, in which there is no perfect parallelism.
parallelism should be prefered. un-parallelism is not alway eliminated . This means that sometimes, the un-parallelism can be considered correct if there is no better choice. this situation is called "sometimes correct, other times incorrect"
RonPurewal Wrote:saintjingjing Wrote:why can not choose B, in meaning, I think B is clear too
"having" + "was ineffective" doesn't make sense.
"having" adopts the same timeframe as the rest of the sentence -- which is the present (we can discern this by noticing that the sentence is talking about patients who do not respond). however, "was ineffective" seems to suggest that the prescription was ineffective sometime in the past.
taken together, these two contexts seem to indicate that the patient is, for some reason, holding onto an old prescription that was ineffective.
Suapplle Wrote:Hi,Ron,I read all the threads again,but I still confused with choice(B),I don't know why "having" + "was ineffective" doesn't make sense. as I see, patients hold onto an old prescription that was ineffective was part of inadequate treatment.
RonPurewal Wrote:"Was ineffective" doesn't make sense unless paired with "did not respond". The ineffectiveness of the prescription is presented as a reason for the patient's non-response, so these must be presented together.
josefdong Wrote:RonPurewal Wrote:"Was ineffective" doesn't make sense unless paired with "did not respond". The ineffectiveness of the prescription is presented as a reason for the patient's non-response, so these must be presented together.
Hi Tutor,
Is it legitimate to say "a drug prescription is ineffective"? I think we should say "a prescribed drug is ineffective." So, in this way, A is also better than B. I'm not a native speaker, so if wrong, pls. kindly shed light on it.
RonPurewal Wrote:Those issues are already addressed in this thread; please read the earlier discussion. Thanks.
eggpain24 Wrote:RonPurewal Wrote:Those issues are already addressed in this thread; please read the earlier discussion. Thanks.
HI,ron
I am a little bit confused about the mistake on C
can you have a further explanation on it?
also,as to the correct choice A
it is rare to see comma+having done / having been done appear in the correct choice ( but GMAT is the boss = =)
here is choice A
the main verb is “have received” → started in the past and continue to the present timeframe
modifier is “having been prescribed” → happened simultaneously with the main verb(also started in the past and continue to the present timeframe)
that is a perfect match~
is my analysis above right? just feel free to correct if I am wrong
JonathanSchneider Wrote:C would be incorrect because of Parallelism as well. Note that "as" creates a comparison, which is a special case of P-ism. Here the "as" connects "having too low a dosage" with "treatment." The same is the case with E, in a way, as the example give is not an example of a "treatment."
JaneC643 Wrote:Hi,
Can we also eliminate D because "it" has nothing to refer to?