Comparisons are the most frequent topic on GMAT. The best part about comparison based problems is that they are very easy to spot. Comparisons basically is the discussion of similarities or differences between two elements (people, places, things or ideas)
The law of comparison is that it must be logical and it must be ambiguity free.
Example 1
Example 2
Example 3
Example 4
Example 5
Example 6
RULE#1: Replace Noun elements in comparison by :- that, those, it.
Replace Verb elements in comparison by :- do, does, so.
Example 7
Example 8
RULE#2: LIKE Vs As Vs Such as
1. Use Like to compare NOUNS.
2. Like followed by a clause is wrong usage.
3. As is followed by a clause or a verb.
Examples
IMPORTANT: JUST LIKE and SO AS TO are always wrong on GMAT.
So …X… as to (CORRECT).
GMAT mostly uses these five words for comparisons
Usage - Compared to/with for STATISTICS
If you say "compared with/to" for statistics, you should cite BOTH statistics in the comparison.
The expression "compared to/with" does NOT imply any sort of direction to the comparison; i.e., it gives no hint as to greater/less/like/unlike. Therefore, you need to give both of the relevant statistics, or else the statement won't make any sense.
Example:
• "The unemployment rate in Esteria last month was 5.3%, compared to the rate in Burdistan."
INCORRECT! This makes no sense. We have absolutely no idea what is going on with the rate in Burdistan.
• "The unemployment rate in Esteria last month was 5.3%, compared to a rate of 7% in Burdistan."
CORRECT. Both statistics are cited.
Usage: Double / Twice / Twice as many / Two Times / Doubling
"Twice" CANNOT function as an object of the preposition such as "by".
"Twice" is an adverb.
Example:
When I say “that car is nearly three times as old as you,” I’m making a comparison with numbers using multiplication. Make sure that when we use the word “times” to denote multiplication, we also use the “as…as” comparison structure:
Reserve the “than” comparison for other forms; when using multiplication, stick with the “as…as” structure.
Alternatively, you can also denote multiplication when you leave out “as:”
Relate Quantities by Addition/Subtraction
For addition or subtraction, use more than/less than.
Quantitative Comparisons without Numbers
When using the words more or less without numbers, you have many options to choose from. Notice that the words “more” and “less” can be used as many different parts of speech.
The words “high” and “low,” and “higher” and “lower,” by contrast, should only be used as adjectives.
When something countable increases, we use “more”
Tulips are separate: you can count how many tulips you have.
When something uncountable increases, we also use also “more”
In #1 Land is an uncountable noun, and in #2, the implicit noun is “money”, which is also uncountable.
The question arises: when do we use “greater” rather than “more”?
We use “greater” when the noun in question is a number. We can count the number of tulips, but a tulip itself is not a number.
Some examples of nouns that are themselves numbers are: percent, interest rate, population, volume, distance, price, cost, and number.
(Notice, for certain economic quantities, we will use “higher” for an increase.) In general, things take “more” but numbers take “greater.” The “increasing” case is the easier of the two cases.
The confusion of “less” and “fewer” is very troubling. This is also tested frequently on GMAT.
When something uncountable decreases, we use “less”:
When something countable decreases, we use “fewer”:
It’s quite possible that some of those, or even all of those, “sound” wrong. Many many people would make the mistake of using the word “less” in those sentences even though the word “fewer” is 100% correct. If you can count it, you need to use “fewer” instead of “less.” In other words, whenever you would use “how many?” instead of “how much?”, you need to use “fewer” instead of “less.”
When we compare numbers, and numbers decrease, we can simply go back to using “less.”
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