Ron, I've read all this whole thread. Your elaborations are fabulous.
However, I still have several questions and I also want to range in order all the errors in each choice, which scatter here and there in different corners of this thread.
I initially choose A.
#1 Choice A is grammatically fine, right? "they" in choice A ,without doubt, refers to "manufacturers" and assumes no ambiguity, right?
The problem with choice A is more of meaning than of grammar?
Choice A seems to imply that manufacturers have recalled all the smalls cars currently on the road and start installing these recalled small cars ,perhaps, with some new engines, to make them now running more fuel-effiently than ever before. Choice A mentions nothing about the new fuel-efficient cars that manufacturers are now producing, right? It diverges from what GMAC want to convey in this question, so Choice A is wrong.
To imitate choice A,I made up two sentences as below:
The new computer-based system allows GMAC to make GMAT tests more difficult now than at any other time in its history.The new computer-based system allows GMAC to make GMAT tests more difficult now than they were at any other time in its history. Lee’s championship in the 500meters Short Track Speed "‹"‹Skating Final at the 2014 winter Olympic Games makes her mother prouder than at any other moment in her mother's life.Lee’s championship in the 500meters Short Track Speed "‹"‹Skating Final at the 2014 winter Olympic Games makes her mother prouder than she was at any other moment in her mother's life.Are above sentences all correct, grammatically and meaningly?
#2 "they" and "their " in choice B grammatically have to refer to the same antecedent? Whether the antecedent is "small cars" or "manufacturers", they can't make sense either way. So B is wrong.
#3 About the OA, I have the same question as joannat, whose post I now quote below and whose question, from my perspective, has not been positively addressed by Tom.
joannat Wrote:Hi Ron,
First I want to thank you for your help. It's just amazing to see that you have been spending so much time and effort replying to our questions.
I have a question, in this post,
since-1990-the-global-economy-has-grown-more-than-it-did-t552.html, you mentioned that by using "that/those", the sentence structure needs to be exactly parallel.
if the second half says 'that during 10,000 years', then the preceding half must say 'the growth of ___ during something else'Now in this question:
Today’s technology allows manufacturers to make small cars that are more fuel-efficient than those
at any other time in production history.
If we use
those here, aren't we missing something like "small cars now" in the preceding part ?
Thank you!
Also, If I add "were" in choice C as below:
Today's techonology allows manufacturers to make small cars that are more fuel-efficient than
were those at any other time in production history.
Is it still correct?
Ron, sorry for such a long post and appreciate every word of your reply. Thank you very much.