space/ scope

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henz988

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Hi forum,

Please have a look at this question:

John says that his present job does not provide him with enough _____ for his organizing ability.

A. scope
B. space
C. capacity
D. range
Key A

When I met this question, I chose B on automatic pilot but then I saw the answer was A. :-o

I have googled that both "scope of his ability" and "space for his ability" have many hits and the hit number of the latter is larger. So I feel somewhat confused.
What are your opinions about the choices A and B?


Many Thanks.
 

Raymott

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Hi forum,

Please have a look at this question:

John says that his present job does not provide him with enough _____ for his organizing ability.

A. scope
B. space
C. capacity
D. range
Key A

When I met this question, I chose B on automatic pilot but then I saw the answer was A. :-o

I have googled that both "scope of his ability" and "space for his ability" have many hits and the hit number of the latter is larger. So I feel somewhat confused.
What are your opinions about the choices A and B?


Many Thanks.
The correct answer is A.
The number of Google hits is unrelated to correctness.
 

henz988

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Is that "people" can have enough scope to do something while "ability" can't?
 

Raymott

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Is that "people" can have enough scope to do something while "ability" can't?
"Not enough space" in this context suggests "not enough physical space for his organizing ability" - which could be true if he had bad organizing ability (the opposite, presumably, of the meaning).
"Space" is too ambiguous to use here.
 

henz988

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space: the freedom and scope to live, think, and develop in a way that suits one
a teenager needing her own space.

It seems that "space" can be used in an abstract way.

What have I got lost here?

Thanks again.
 

Raymott

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space: the freedom and scope to live, think, and develop in a way that suits one
a teenager needing her own space.

It seems that "space" can be used in an abstract way.

What have I got lost here?
You've lost perspective and context. Yes, 'space' could be forced into that space, but 'scope' is the better, more appropriate and more specific answer.
 
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