rschunti Wrote:This question is from GMATPREP. I choose "E" but the answer is not that. Also what is wrong in incorrect options.
The proliferation of so-called cybersquatters, people who register the Interner domain names of high-profile companies in hopes of reselling the rights to those names for a profit, led to passing the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act in 1999,allowing companies to seek up to $10,000 in damages against those who register domain names with the sole intent of selling them later.
(A) passing the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act in 1999, allowing companies to seek up to $10,000 in damages against those who register domain names with the sole intent of selling
(B) the passage of the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act in 1999, which allows companies to seek up to $10,000 in damages against those who register domain names with the sole intent that they will sell
(C) the passage in 1999 of the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, which allows companies to seek up to $10,000 in damages against those who register domain names with the sole intent of selling
(D) the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act,which was passed in 1999, and it allows companies to seek up to $10,000 in damages against those who register domain names with the sole intent to sell
(E) the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act,passed in 1999 and allowing companies to seek up to $10,000 in damages against those who register domain names with the sole intent of selling
Ron, pls, continue help me with the following question.
we can see "doing" in only 2 cases, "doing" refer to a general action and "doing" refer to a specific action of a specific noun. there is no the third case.
we can infer the following.
in the oa choice C, "selling in phrase "with the intent of selling" is not a noun refering to general action because "selling" here has "them" as a direct object. dedicated noun can not have direct object. so, "selling" here must refer to a specific noun ("selling" here can be called "participle" but we do not care the name).
so, "doing" in "intent of doing" is alway refering to a noun. is that right?
Oxford dictionary gives us the idiom "intent to do " and I understand that "to do" in "intent to do" dose not need to refer to a specific noun. is that right?
that is the big different between "intent of doing" and "intent to do" . is that right?
Ron, pls, explain. Thank you very much.