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6. Comparisons: Sample Questions |
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EASY 1. Even though he does not like crowds, John still likes New York City more than Sybil.
1. This question tests comparison. (A) is improperly compared because it compares how much John likes New York City to how much he likes Sybil, NOT to how much Sybil likes New York City. (B) and (E) moves around the words, but still maintain improper comparisons. (C) uses is liking which is grammatically incorrect. (D) is the only choice which compares Johns affinity for New York City to Sybils affinity for New York City, without adding new errors. 2. In his work, George Santayana is more reminiscent of Plato's poetic narratives and Henry David Thoreau's obsessive detailing than Bertrand Russells scientific precisions.
2. This question tests comparison. Because the sentence compares the styles of several writers, it must be made clear that Santayana's work is the subject of the sentence, not Santayana himself. Choice C, omitting any mention of 'work', is therefore incorrect. Though choices A and B do mention work, they fail to do so in a manner that maintains parallelism with the non-underlined part of the sentence, which refers to Plato's narratives and Thoreau's detailing. Choice D makes incorrect use of the word 'reminiscent', which is not generally used in literary comparisons. Choice E maintains parallelism and uses the word 'resembles', which is preferable to 'reminiscent', and is therefore the best choice. |
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