When drive-ins were at the height of their popularity in the late 1950s, some 4,000 existed in the United States, but today there are less than one-quarter that many
A. there are less than one-quarter that many
B. there are fewer than one-quarter as many
C. there are fewer than one-quarter of that amount
D. the number is less than one-quarter the amount
E. it is less than one-quarter of that amount
There is a post about this question but the post is locked because this question appears on the paper test set.
Now, this question has been moved to the GMATPrep software. Hope that instructors here can offer some light...
The OA is B.
I found the explanation of "as many" in Longman Dictionary:
as many=a number that is equal to another number
examples:
- They say the people of Los Angeles speak 12 languages and teach just as many in the schools.
- A great trip! We visited five countries in as many days.
My questions:
- Why "fewer than" is used in B? In OG10/11/Prep, "less than X percent of Y" is used regardless whether Y is countable. I assume that "one-quarter" here is logically equal to "25 percent". So should it be "less than one-quarter"?
- According to Longman Dictionary, "as many" in B is equal to "some 4000"; if I plug it into the sentence, the sentence reads:
When drive-ins were at the height of their popularity in the late 1950s, some 4,000 existed in the United States, but today there are fewer than one-quarter some 4000.
Should it be "one-quarter of some 4000"?
Thanks in advance.