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"Despite the fact that"

by lionKing1972 Fri Sep 26, 2008 1:07 pm

Despite entering the courthouse with police escort, the lead attorney and his assistant, manhandled by an aggressive
crowd of reporters that bombarded him with questions, was injured seriously enough to warrant immediate medical attention.


Despite entering the courthouse with police escort, the lead attorney and his assistant, manhandled by an aggressive crowd of reporters that bombarded him with questions, was injured seriously enough to warrant immediate medical attention.
Despite the fact that the lead attorney and his assistant entered the courthouse with police escort, they were manhandled by an aggressive crowd of reporters that bombarded the attorney with questions and injured him so seriously that he needed immediate medical attention.
Despite their entering the courthouse with police escort, the lead attorney and his assistant were manhandled by an aggressive crowd of reporters that bombarded him with questions, injuring him so seriously as to warrant immediate medical attention.
Despite the fact that they entered the courthouse with police escort, the lead attorney and his assistant, having been manhandled by an aggressive crowd of reporters, was bombarded with questions and injured seriously enough to warrant immediate medical attention.
Despite entering the courthouse with police escort, the lead attorney and his assistant were manhandled by an aggressive crowd of reporters that bombarded him with questions and injured him so seriously as to warrant immediate medical attention.



OA is B.

I think "despite the fact that" is wordy. I remember reading in one of the OG qns that "despite the fact that" is awkward. If it's always the case, then I feel this question itself is wrong.
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by StaceyKoprince Fri Oct 24, 2008 7:40 pm

You cannot eliminate just based on wordiness until you have dealt with all potential grammatical issues. In fact, a wordier answer can be right (especially on a more difficult question) if the less wordy options contain grammatical errors.

If you have two options that both appear to be completely grammatically correct and both have a clear and unambiguous meaning, then you can use concision or "wordiness" to decide. But only if you've already dealt with any grammar and clarity issues.

In this case, the four wrong answers have clear grammatical errors.
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by thomaskk Thu Aug 19, 2010 11:50 am

In the explanation of the answers, it says

"despite" is not properly used with a verb phrase. Instead, it requires a noun or noun phrase. For example, "Despite eating the apple..." is not correct, but "Despite his eating the apple..." is correct.

Nevertheless, it seems that the above explanation contradicts the use of "despite" from SC Ch 9 Idioms P. 147, which mentions that below is a grammatically correct sentence:

RIGHT: Despite taking frequent naps, I study effectively.

Here in this correct example, "taking frequent naps" is a verb phrase but is used together with "despite".

Can any instructor pls explain? Thank you!
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by tim Sat Sep 25, 2010 6:29 am

can you provide a source for the problem and the explanation? not only is your quoted explanation incorrect, but "his" is also not even a noun. in other words, WHAT YOU HAVE WRITTEN IN BRIGHT BLUE IS ABSOLUTELY INCORRECT..
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by thomaskk Mon Sep 27, 2010 10:17 am

tim Wrote:can you provide a source for the problem and the explanation? not only is your quoted explanation incorrect, but "his" is also not even a noun. in other words, WHAT YOU HAVE WRITTEN IN BRIGHT BLUE IS ABSOLUTELY INCORRECT..


This problem comes from Q9 of the bonus SC question bank from MGMAT web site. The explanation is also directly quoted from there.

So do you mean the "official" explanation in MGMAT web site is absolutely incorrect? If it's really incorrect, can you tell me what the correct use of "despite" is? Thank you!
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by tim Wed Oct 06, 2010 11:00 pm

My apologies for calling you out like that. This is MGMAT's fault, and yes that part of the explanation is wrong. Simply changing "eating" to "his eating" does not change this from a verb phrase to a noun phrase; i think i know what the question author was trying to do here, but the change is to subtle to be meaningful. To answer your question, the best use of "despite" is perhaps best exemplified by the "despite the fact" phrasing in the correct answer to the problem at hand here..
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by thomaskk Sun Oct 24, 2010 2:41 am

Thanks for your reply. In the explanation of choice E there, it says

"the word "despite" is incorrectly followed by the verb "entering" instead of a noun or noun phrase".

So is it also an incorrect explanation there?

Can 'despite' be followed by a "gerund", such as
" Despite entering the courthouse with police escort, ..." (as in Choice E)?

Thanks.
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by ChrisB Sat Nov 20, 2010 12:29 pm

Hi Thomas,

Great catch! You have spotted an error in our explanation. I'm very sorry about that and we'll get it fixed up quickly. Regarding your larger point, despite is a preposition and can be followed by a gerund such as entering.

The explanation for this answer choice incorrectly identifies "entering" as a verb. Remember that we'll often see gerunds on the test as they are often confused with finite verbs that have qualities such as tense and number. These gerunds are a type of non-finite verb, or verbal, that actually do not fulfill a verb or action like role. Other verbals include participles and infinitives.

Thanks again for the catch and we'll get the test explanation fixed!

Chris
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by rikky.bora Thu Jul 07, 2011 9:17 am

I had the exact confusion as thomaskk, a little while ago while going through the MGMAT question bank.

1. I was torn between B and E.

2. Wasn't sure about B - because the "Despite the fact.... " has been regarded as awkward here.

3. Wasn't sure about E - because of the little pronoun abiguity with "him" .

In the end, as has been propopounded by RON, I considered pronoun ambiguity as the lesser devil and chose E :(

Any closure on this question and the little confusion regarding " ... the fact... " usage?
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by jnelson0612 Sun Jul 17, 2011 2:09 pm

rikky.bora Wrote:I had the exact confusion as thomaskk, a little while ago while going through the MGMAT question bank.

1. I was torn between B and E.

2. Wasn't sure about B - because the "Despite the fact.... " has been regarded as awkward here.

3. Wasn't sure about E - because of the little pronoun abiguity with "him" .

In the end, as has been propopounded by RON, I considered pronoun ambiguity as the lesser devil and chose E :(

Any closure on this question and the little confusion regarding " ... the fact... " usage?


Actually, I searched and couldn't find any posts about "despite the fact that" having been regarded as awkward. I've seen this construction on several correct answer choices over my years as an instructor.

As to the pronoun ambiguity, this pronoun is REALLY ambiguous. We have two candidates for who "he" and "him" are referring to, but no idea of which who it is (the attorney or his assistant). For this reason I would rule out E.
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by rikky.bora Tue Jul 19, 2011 10:01 am

jnelson0612 Wrote:
Actually, I searched and couldn't find any posts about "despite the fact that" having been regarded as awkward. I've seen this construction on several correct answer choices over my years as an instructor.

As to the pronoun ambiguity, this pronoun is REALLY ambiguous. We have two candidates for who "he" and "him" are referring to, but no idea of which who it is (the attorney or his assistant). For this reason I would rule out E.


Thanks Jamie for the reply.
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by tim Thu Jul 21, 2011 6:28 pm

:)
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by p111 Mon Oct 01, 2012 4:17 pm

Hi Tutors,
in OA(B) "they were manhandled by an aggressive crowd of reporters that bombarded the attorney with questions", I find the use of That referring to "crowd of reporters". That/Which shld not be used to refer human beings.
So is the OA good or pls correct me in case I am not right here..
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by tim Tue Oct 02, 2012 1:42 am

first --
OFFICIALLY CORRECT ANSWERS ARE CORRECT!
do not question officially correct answers!
far too many students on this forum make the mistake of questioning the correct answers; please note that doing so is a complete waste of your time and effort. i.e., exactly 0% of the time that you spend posting "isn't this official answer wrong?" is productive, and exactly 100% of that time is wasted.

"is this correct?" is never a productive question to ask about one of GMAC's correct answers. the answer is always yes.
"is this wrong?" / "is this X type of error?" is never a productive question to ask about one of GMAC's correct answers. the answer is always no.

instead, the questions you should be asking about correct official answers, if you don't understand them, are:
"why is this correct?"
"how does this work?"
"what understanding am i lacking that i need to understand this choice?"

this is a small, but hugely significant, change to your way of thinking.
you will suddenly find it much easier to understand the format, style, and conventions of the official problems if you retire the idea that they might be wrong.

now, to your question: do you honestly prefer "a crowd who did something" to "a crowd that did something"? if so, you need to just memorize the correct version. note that if we used "who", it would refer to "reporters" instead of "crowd", so in that sense the only way to be sure you are referring to "crowd" is to use "that"..
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Re: "Despite the fact that"

by p111 Tue Oct 02, 2012 1:55 am

I agree with your point Tim !! :)
I came across below explanation in MGMAT Q.(The Diary of Anne Frank tells the true story of a young girl and her family [i]that were hidden during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands by a gentile Dutch couple, though they were eventually discovered.[/i])
"The original sentence uses the relative pronoun "that" where "who" is preferred because the antecedent is a group of people."

& Crowd of reporters shld also be referring to a grp of people(i suppose).
Could you clarify..
Moreover are my facts clear, when I say "That/Which" shouldnt be referring to human beings OR there are other exceptions to it.

Tx in advance