GMAT语法:Like用法总结及题目训练(2)

二.Og对like的讲解

  1. Like many self-taught artists, Perle Hessing did not begin to paint until she was well into middle age.

  (A) Like

  (B) As have

  (C) Just as with

  (D) Just like(A)

  (E) As did

  Choice A, the best answer, is concise and grammatically correct, using the comparative preposition like to express the comparison between many self-taught artists and Perle Hessing. Choices B and E, which replace A’s prepositional phrase with clauses introduced by as, use auxiliary verbs that cannot properly be completed by any part of the verb phrase in the main clause: neither have... did not begin nor did... did not begin is logically or grammatically sound. In C and D, Just as with and Just like are both unnecessary wordy.

  

  2. Like Auden, the language of James Merrill is chatty, arch, and conversational—given to complex syntactic flights as well as to prosaic free-verse strolls.

  (A) Like Auden, the language of James Merrill

  (B) Like Auden, James Merrill’s language

  (C) Like Auden’s, James Merrill’s language

  (D) As with Auden, James Merrill’s language(C)

  (E) As is Auden’s the language of James Merrill

  At issue is a comparison of Auden’s language with Merrill’s language. Only C, the best choice, uses the elliptical like Auden’s (language being understood), to compare Auden’s language with Merrill’s language. A, B, and D compare Auden (the person) with Merrill’s language. Choice E is awkward and unidiomatic.

  

  3. Like their male counterparts, women scientists are above average in terms of intelligence and creativity, but unlike men of science, their female counterparts have had to work against the grain of occupational stereotyping to enter a “man’s world.”

  (A) their female counterparts have had to work

  (B) their problem is working

  (C) one thing they have had to do is work

  (D) the handicap women of science have had is to work(E)

  (E) women of science have had to work

  E is the best choice. The meaning is clear despite the relative complexity of the sentence, the comparison of women with men is logical, and parallelism is maintained throughout. In A, the construction unlike men of science, their female counterparts violates rules of parallelism and syntax. It would best be rendered as unlike men of science, women of science.... Choice B incorrectly suggests that a comparison is being made between men of science and a. problem faced by female scientists. In C, the lengthy separation between women and they makes the pronoun reference vague, and the comparison between men of science and one thing (rather than women of science) is faulty. The phrasing is unnecessarily wordy as well. Choice D introduces unnecessary redundancy and awkwardness with the construction the handicap women... have had is to work. Choice D also incorrectly compares male scientists with a handicap faced by female scientists.

美勤精英顾问