Hi everyone,
I took my GMAT test today, didn't perform too well, and I am planning on taking it again on a later date. I remember one rule that was tested on today's GMAT exam.
I know that I can't post the actual question and frankly, I don't completely remember it either but I do remember that whether you got it right or not hinged on one particular rule, namely, the usage of whereby, hence and for.
The general sentence structure of the choices were:
a) X; whereby, Y
b) X; hence, Y
c) X, for Y
I want to make it clear that the above choices were the ones left after elimination and the Xs and Ys in the answer choices were identical/the same. I understand that this might be a little ambiguous to explain. Therefore, I request you to provide examples and illustrate in which situations which of the above forms would work better/would be considered correct and in which situations which of the above forms would be considered incorrect.
In advance, Thanks for your help!