RonPurewal Wrote:hmgmat Wrote:prep: In the major cities of industrialized countries at the end of the nineteenth century, important public places such as theaters, restaurants, shops, and banks had installed electric lighting, but electricity was in less than one percent of homes, where lighting was still provided mainly by candles or gas.
The full question is here: http://www.manhattangmat.com/forums/in- ... -t541.html
in case, anyone is interested
wow, that's a great find. i'd buy you a beer for that one if you were in front of me.
that usage is, indeed, inconsistent with the gmat's other usage, which i've detailed in the post above.
here's the saving grace, though: it's not a split.
in other words, ALL of the choices say "less than 1% of homes", so you're not making decisions based on that particular construction. my hypothesis: because they're not splitting that construction, they just didn't pay as much attention to it as they should have.
in a split between "less than 1% of homes" and "fewer than 1% of homes", i strongly suspect that the correct answer would contain the latter.
we can only wait and see.
RonPurewal Wrote:tkotw79 Wrote:if Option C was constructed as:
There are fewer than one-quarter of that number
1) Would it be a right construction?
That would work ok.If so then
2) How should i choose between B and C? or should i choose B over C because it is more concise
How should you choose between two correct answers? Well, you can't. They're two correct answers.
No GMAT problem will have more than one correct answer.
RonPurewal Wrote:are you asking whether the construction would still be OK without "of"?
if so, then, probably yes -- although this is the sort of thing that definitely won't be tested. if it shows up as a distinction in the choices, it's DEFINITELY there as a distraction.
if you actually see this as a difference between choices, IGNORE IT AND LOOK FOR SOMETHING EASIER / MORE FUNDAMENTAL.
RonPurewal Wrote:hmgmat Wrote:But I want to know when I can use "as many" without another "as". Or even more general, when I can say "as [adjective]/[adverb]" without another "as".
Thanks in advance.
in general, you won't need the second half of that construction if you have already mentioned the data elsewhere in the sentence.
the earlier part of this sentence already mentions the # of drive-ins in the u.s. in the 1950's, so it is not stated again. since it is not stated as part of an actual parallel construction, you don't need the second "as".
--
examples:
there were once 20 shirts on this shelf, but, now, barely half as many are left. --> i already mentioned the data (i.e., 20 shirts) earlier in the sentence, so it's not mentioned again.
there are barely half as many shirts on this shelf [i]as there were last week.[/i] --> i didn't mention this comparison point earlier, so i'm mentioning it now.
JustinCKN Wrote:Can I modify the sentence above like this:
There are barely half as many shirts on this shelf as there were 20 shirts last week. [ namely I add "20 shirts" to "there were" _ last week.]
RonPurewal Wrote:JustinCKN Wrote:Can I modify the sentence above like this:
There are barely half as many shirts on this shelf as there were 20 shirts last week. [ namely I add "20 shirts" to "there were" _ last week.]
no.
also, remember—there's no point in trying to learn to WRITE comparison sentences for this exam!
that's an irrelevant skill; at best it's a waste of your time, and at worst it's a dangerous distraction that will make you score lower.
you only need to be able to make RELATIVE judgments.
RonPurewal Wrote:in the "less than %1 of homes" problem, honestly, 'less' is a mistake. my only guess is that they probably didn't edit that part quite as carefully, because it wasn't at issue in the problem.
(i think this is the only time i've seen an actual error in an official problem.)
if you see "less than [%/fraction] of [THING YOU CAN COUNT]" versus "fewer than [%/fraction] of [THING YOU CAN COUNT]", then "less" is wrong and "fewer" is right.