Australians Often Debate whether Kangaroo, the only Large Animal  GMAT Sentence Correction

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Question: Australians often debate whether kangaroo, the only large animal that hops, is a pest to be eradicated, given that kangaroos are twice as much as humans in Australia, or a resource to be exploited for its low-fat, high-protein meat or its leather to make athletic gear or a beloved national animal to be conserved.

(A) kangaroos are twice as much as humans in Australia
(B) in Australia there are twice as many kangaroos as there are humans
(C) kangaroos are twice as many in Australia as humans
(D) there are two times kangaroos in Australia as humans
(E) in Australia, kangaroos are twice of humans

“Australians often debate whether kangaroo, the only large animal that hops, is a pest to be eradicated” - is a GMAT sentence correction question. These types of questions contain grammatical errors in the underlined sentence, and we have to choose the correct statement from the options. GMAT sentence correction is part of GMAT verbal.

Answer: B
Explanation
:

The following recommendations could be utilised as a means of validating the suggested alteration to the phrase:

  • Parallelism
  • Considering two distinct facts
  • Modifiers

This is how the sentence is put together:

Given that there are twice as many kangaroos as people in Australia. The country's residents frequently argue over whether the only large mammal with the ability to hop is a pest that needs to be eliminated. A resource that should be exploited for its low-fat, high-protein meat or its leather to make athletic gear, or a beloved national animal that should be preserved.

Option A is incorrect:

A is an incorrect response. The phrase "twice as much" does not specify the quantity of kangaroos or what is meant by "twice as much" of them. As a result, they cannot be compared to humans in this manner. The statement might be changed to read, "Kangaroos make up twice as many people as humans do."

Option B is correct:

This choice is correct. The number of kangaroos ("twice as many") is compared directly to humans "as there are [many] humans."

Choice C is incorrect:

This is an incorrect option. It compares how many kangaroos there are directly to humans, not how many humans there are.

Choice D is incorrect:

D is the correct choice. Like (A), (D) omits a specific explanation of how kangaroos are "two times... as humans." The phrase "there are twice as many kangaroos in Australia as there are humans" could be used in place of (D).

Choice E is incorrect:

This is the incorrect choice. Like (A) and (D), "twice of people" is an inappropriate comparison between the numbers of kangaroos and humans.

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