
This lecture analyzes GMAT sentence correction by clarifying the proper use of such as, identifying dangling modifiers, ensuring parallelism, and selecting the correct answer (choice a) from the options.
Master GMAT sentence correction by fixing misplaced modifiers and subject errors, and by preventing run-on sentences with proper conjunctions and punctuation. Illustrate with solar energy and wind farms.
Explore common sentence correction issues, such as misplaced modifiers and ambiguous pronouns, using Uranus and its tilted rotational axis to understand how extreme seasons and hemispheres reveal grammatical errors.
Identify whether the subject is a clause and treat it as singular for GMAT sentence correction. Eliminate redundancies and apply countable-noun guidance, illustrated with practice questions and tests.
Master GMAT sentence correction by examining Bach sentence examples, focusing on modifiers, parallel structure, and proper phrase placement to improve accuracy.
Analyze sentence correction by evaluating grammar, modifiers, and parallel structure in the scriptures of Theravada Buddhism contrasted with three great Western religions to identify the correct answer.
Learn the correct use of if versus whether in sentence correction, including conditional cases and distinguishing 'weather' versus 'whether' in two-choice scenarios.
Analyze and fix GMAT sentence correction errors by examining misplaced and dangling modifiers, misused participles, parallelism issues, and subject-verb agreement, with guided explanation and answer reasoning.
Explore sentence correction strategies using a Ulysses obscenity case to illustrate pronoun antecedent clarity and choosing precise forms, including fewer vs less and less restrictive word choices.
Master parallelism in sentence correction through the Leningrad Symphony example, identifying faulty participles and missing conjunctions to select the correct, parallel structure.
Analyze how to choose the correct verb form in sentence correction by determining the subject number, using singular or plural agreement, and accounting for embedded narrative structure and modifiers.
Learn to spot missing verbs, meaningless distinctions, and awkward modifiers in sentence correction by examining how the eye sees versus what the brain perceives.
Master sentence correction techniques by identifying correct usage of such as versus like, maintaining parallelism with participles and modifiers, and evaluating idioms like 'A is to B' in GMAT-style questions.
Analyze GMAT sentence correction from relief organization’s Brazil report, focusing on subject-verb agreement and the use of as many as with one out of eight children living on the streets.
Focus on pronoun reference and proper agreement in a sentence correction exercise about China's economy and its relative growth rate among major economies.
Explore sentence correction through analysis of subject-verb agreement, pronoun reference, and parallel structure in complex past-tense sentences.
Examine sentence correction answer choices to ensure correct modifier placement and tense, using a scenario about analysts studying Asian markets and a company preparing daily market trends with high accuracy.
Analyze GMAT sentence correction choices, focusing on participial modifiers, parallelism, and correct usage of 'like' versus 'act like' for animate versus inanimate subjects.
Learn how to correctly use the coordinating conjunction 'both' in sentence correction, compare answer choices, and ensure proper subject-verb and pronoun agreement for a singular noun like 'the corporation'.
Explore sentence correction concepts including tense consistency across past and future, identify parallelism errors, and choose correct infinitive or participle forms in Arthur legend examples.
Master parallelism with not only but also and summative phrases in GMAT sentence correction, illustrated by a prescription drug spending example and proper connector usage.
Learn GMAT sentence correction strategies focused on pronoun usage, proper to infinitives, and effective option elimination, including preferred rather than constructions and do so phrasing.
Identify the correct sentence-correction choice by analyzing subject-verb agreement with 'group' as the subject, using a singular verb, and selecting concise, clear options over longer references.
Master GMAT sentence correction by identifying correct idioms and parallel structure, choosing between means to, means of, and means for, and selecting economic sustainability over sustainability economically.
Analyze a GMAT sentence correction problem by identifying the correct antecedent, choosing between fear for and fear of, and improving modifiers and subordinating structures for clarity.
Identify modifiers by distinguishing countable nouns (teachers) from uncountable nouns (time) and apply fewer with teachers and less with time in classroom contact.
Master GMAT sentence correction techniques by examining modifiers, verb tense, and parallelism through a detailed review of the Atlantic Ocean example and form choices.
Develop mastery of sentence correction by analyzing modifiers, ensuring correct subject-verb agreement, and applying parallelism and verb tense rules through practice questions.
Analyze how to select the correct sentence by examining subject-verb agreement, modifiers, and present-tense usage across answer choices, including idioms such as so great as to require.
Master GMAT sentence correction through 180 practice questions and 3 tests, focusing on verb problems, pronoun references, and idioms like refer not to and according to.
Examine sentence correction pitfalls, including past perfect tense, unclear antecedents, awkward expression, and idiom usage, with Darwin and Freud comparisons guiding the correct choice (E).
Master subject-verb agreement in either x or y constructions by aligning the verb with the y subject and avoiding pronoun ambiguity through a clear subject.
Master the correct use of fewer versus less by distinguishing countable and uncountable nouns, with examples like books and water, and apply this to sentence correction tasks.
Demonstrates solving a sentence correction item by identifying modifier errors, tense consistency, and double negatives in a context about Avogadro’s number and gas volumes.
Learn how tense choices—past, past perfect, present, and conditional—shape correct Gmat sentence correction, using the governor's budget note as the guiding example.
Learn to craft accurate sentence corrections by evaluating proper comparisons among geometry, theorems, and theories. Identify incorrect modifiers and missing verbs to choose the correct option.
Explore how to select the most precise and concise answer in sentence correction by using 'imply that' instead of 'implication,' and favor simple wording.
Analyze pronoun antecedents and adjective usage in sentence correction, showing why 'correspondingly the highest mountains on the earth' aligns with Eurasia as Earth's largest landmass.
Explore parallelism and redundancy in a sentence about diversifying long term equity holdings, streamlining claims processing, and balancing the added liability for seniors through premium changes.
Master the correct use of rather than vs instead of and the infinitive after to. Analyze examples with Hannibal's Alps journey and past perfect constructions to distinguish proper comparisons.
Analyze subject-verb agreement in a sentence about Epsilon Corporation; identify singular verbs, choice accuracy, and pronoun usage, including who vs which and consultants vs they.
Analyze sentence correction items to spot parallelism errors, compare answer choices, and select the correct parallel construction, such as 'to the United States government's satisfaction' within trade negotiation contexts.
Analyze sentence correction choices by distinguishing independent clauses from modifiers, applying 'a number of' versus 'the amount of,' and avoiding run-on errors with commas and conjunctions.
Identify singular gerund phrases as subjects, evaluate modifiers and prepositional phrases, and choose correct verb forms and pronoun antecedents when solving sentence corrections.
Master parallelism in sentence correction by evaluating options about Monet's cathedral paintings, ensuring consistent verb forms and avoiding ambiguity in participle clauses.
Spot and fix dangling modifiers and misplaced participles in sentence correction, using active voice and elimination strategies. Apply these rules with a battlefield-style example to choose the correct option.
Explain gmat sentence correction choices, clarifying when to use not with versus with, and when to prefer rather than instead, to identify the correct option.
Identify and fix dangling modifiers and unclear pronouns in sentence correction, using fat-diet examples like depriving the body of carbohydrates and ketosis linked weight loss.
explain modifier placement and subject agreement in a sentence correction exercise, illustrating how dangling modifiers distort meaning about the Mars landing being imminent and the Moon landing.
Analyze correct usage of due to versus because of in GMAT sentence correction, focusing on modifiers, parallelism, and clear noun modification through practical drowning and lifeguard examples.
Analyze GMAT sentence correction strategies, focusing on present perfect, past, and present progressive tenses, and elimination tactics to identify the correct choice, highlighted as option E.
Analyze answer choices to uphold parallel structure in sentence correction, applying the 'to... is to...' pattern, verb tense, and modifiers to ensure unity.
This sample question shows how a participial or adverbial modifier attaches to the subject of an independent clause, illustrating parallelism and best-answer selection in gmat sentence correction.
Analyze answer choices to identify correct sentence structure in GMAT sentence correction, focusing on independent clauses, participial phrases, and proper use of because and because of.
Develop GMAT sentence correction skills by analyzing parallelism and voice, using the example that the union as a group addresses a grievance to management, versus multiple individual employees.
Master participial phrases, subject-verb agreement, and mood with GMAT sentence correction through analysis of connectors and option elimination.
Explore ancient Near East beliefs about dry land, water above and below, and a sky ocean to illustrate tense shifts from past beliefs to past perfect and present forms.
Explore proper use of known for vs known to in sentence correction, with a focus on precise, concise phrasing about an opponent of evolution on religious grounds.
Practice in sentence correction focuses on avoiding dangling modifiers and correctly linking authors to their works, as in the romantic movement's 1798 publication and lyrical ballads by Wordsworth and Coleridge.
examine a GMAT sentence correction problem involving a judge overturning a ban on personal watercraft and evaluate idiom, tense, and active voice to eliminate incorrect choices.
The lecture analyzes sentence correction answer choices, clarifying present tense versus past perfect, avoiding double negatives with nor, and ensuring independent clauses with proper conjunctions.
Explore GMAT sentence correction by mastering subject-verb agreement with singular subjects and correct idioms like 'fear of,' then practice tense sequencing from past to conditional future.
Analyze parallelism and verb-tense choices in a GMAT sentence correction example about the Atlantic Ocean, selecting the correct sequence with has been expanding and ever since.
Assess not only the not only but also structure and parallelism in sentence correction, practice evaluating GMAT-style choices, and determine correct usage for future tense and hypothetical scenarios.
Explore key sentence-correction rules, including past participle usage, pronoun-antecedent reference, and verb-preposition patterns like prevent from doing something, with an example analysis from the California Republic bear-flag revolt context.
Identify and fix faulty parallelism in sentence correction by aligning action verbs, choosing appropriate quantifiers (less vs fewer) for countable vs uncountable nouns, and ensuring correct pronoun and percentage usage.
Learn to identify problematic preposition–participle structures and replace them with full sentences that include a clear main verb, improving accuracy in Gmat sentence correction.
Analyze GMAT sentence correction strategies by comparing 'known for' vs 'known by', evaluating past perfect and present tense, and using conjunctions to join distinct ideas.
Examine a long sentence correction item, highlighting problems with subordinating conjunctions, missing main verbs, participles, modifiers, logic shifts, and correct tense and idiom usage.
Analyze sentence correction through dangling and misplaced modifiers, parallel structure, and logical consistency, illustrated by Paracelsus's early 16th-century contributions and the origins of toxicology.
Explore how the brain processes written language, showing that a physical book enhances text retention and that physical location of the text on the page influences encoding in long-term memory.
Explore sentence correction with either–or parallelism, the correct use of either x or y, and prepositions like required for versus required by in civil and criminal cases.
The GMAT sentence correction 70 lecture clarifies how to express prohibition of anabolic steroids, human growth hormone, and illegal drugs, using or and any to avoid double negation.
Cognitive psychologists show that constant review can hinder learning and retention; tailor reviews to feel fresh, and apply proper phrasing like rather than instead of to maintain parallelism.
practice correct subject-verb agreement in neither… nor constructions, ensuring the verb agrees with the nearer singular subject like beethoven and avoiding illogical phrasing about composing.
Analyze subject-verb agreement and pronoun usage across options, apply parallelism and comparison rules, and identify why the correct choice preserves meaning in GMAT sentence correction practice.
Master sentence correction by analyzing modifier placement, focusing on the word only and its impact. Practice with Maine and New Hampshire to identify correct modifier scope and eliminate wrong choices.
Explore GMAT sentence correction through practical choices, focusing on correct idioms, parallelism, and modifier and subject problems to improve accuracy. Practice with 75 questions and 3 tests to reinforce concepts.
Explain sentence correction rules for nonrestrictive which versus that, using a suspension system example to show proper pronoun reference, subject-verb agreement, and idiomatic phrasing.
Master sentence correction by identifying subordinating conjunctions, completing with independent clauses, and using proper participial phrases; apply comma rules to produce clear, correct sentence structures.
Master GMAT sentence correction by identifying faulty comparisons, missing word problems, misplaced modifiers, and parallelism and subordinating conjunction errors through practice questions.
Analyze common GMAT sentence correction errors, including awkward construction, pronoun reference, tense, and conciseness, through a detailed walkthrough of a sample problem and elimination of wrong choices.
Develop sentence correction skills by identifying run-ons, improper parallelism, and misplaced modifiers, and applying correct punctuation and tense, as shown in explanations of docile nature and independent clauses.
This lecture explains idioms and pluralism rules in sentence correction, clarifies infinitive and participle usage, and highlights parallelism in distinguishing between A and B.
Explore GMAT sentence correction through analyzing the relation of the physical to the metaphysical, subject clarity, and redundancy, using Aquinas and Aristotle to illustrate parallelism and phrasing.
Explain the correct usage of one another and each other for plural subjects, and how to craft concise, direct phrasing in sentence correction.
Clarifies proper comparison language in sentence correction, using 'such as' for examples, avoiding 'like' for examples, and contrasting the asteroid belt with the Kuiper Belt's frozen volatiles.
Explore proper volume comparison in sentence correction, using 'less than half of' and avoiding awkward phrasings, illustrated by the Lake Superior and Lake Baikal example; identify the correct choice B.
Analyze sentence correction by evaluating modifiers, verb presence, and the countable versus uncountable rules for fewer versus less, using Texas electoral votes as an example.
Learn GMAT sentence correction techniques by analyzing parallelism and verb tense in the nucleus of the hydrogen atom example, choosing correct forms like contains and occupies and understanding participle usage.
Explore how subordinating and participial clauses affect sentence structure in GMAT sentence correction, with examples showing independent and dependent clauses and the impact on meaning around Allport Corporation's summer profits.
Identify subject-verb agreement with the People's Republic of China and fix awkward clauses like with many of which living, preferring considered to be over considered as in GMAT sentence correction.
Analyze GMAT sentence correction techniques, including choosing the simplest, direct expressions over participles, correctly using faster than and prohibited from idioms, and systematically eliminating answer choices.
Learn to spot parallelism and redundancy in GMAT sentence corrections, illustrated by George Clinton’s tenure as vice president under two presidents and the preferred phrasing.
Explore sentence correction fundamentals by mastering subject-verb agreement, correct word choice like previous versus previously, and choosing present tense for universal truths.
Master subject-verb agreement by identifying the sentence subject and choosing the correct verb form. Use such as instead of like for examples and preserve parallelism with not even constructions.
Analyze subject-verb agreement and word choice in a GMAT sentence correction item, selecting concise, direct phrasing such as 'like law' over longer hypothetical forms.
Analyze answer choices to master GMAT sentence correction, using elimination strategies and correct comparative and reference usage. Practice with 180 questions and 3 tests to reinforce concepts.
Explore GMAT sentence correction fundamentals: identifying valid subjects, proper verb tense (past perfect), correct participial phrases and modifiers, and choosing idiomatic constructions in a Vietnam War example.
Analyze pronoun agreement and noun-verb agreement using alloy as a singular subject, and apply tense-sequence rules to choose correct conditional language in past-to-future contexts.
Explore Thoreau’s principled stance to correct sentence structure, focusing on independent and participial clauses, proper conjunctions, and idiomatic usage like felt it was unjust.
Identify the correct idioms and infinitive usage, and resolve subject-verb agreement in singular vs plural references, as seen in the GMAT sentence correction practice.
Master GMAT sentence correction by analyzing comparison constructions, ensuring like is used to compare movies to movies and avoiding non‑movies such as cult status, with independent clauses after subordinating conjunctions.
Explore GMAT sentence correction problems, focusing on appear to have been versus appear to be, using Neanderthals' strength and extinction to illustrate equipped to face as the correct usage.
Sentence correction 101 teaches fixing awkward prepositional phrases, choosing between such as and like, and ensuring correct tense in U.S. trade deficit examples.
Learn how to balance the need for sufficient food with a manageable load in sentence correction, and master idiom and comparison usage for ancient hunting contexts.
Analyze how to pick the correct sentence correction by evaluating result clauses, including as a result, and identify obsolete phrases, participial and prepositional phrases, and antecedent errors.
Explore sentence correction concepts through neuroscience examples, focusing on subject-verb agreement and correct infinitive usage as neuroscientists pinpoint exact locations in the brain for complex sensory responses to various stimuli.
Explore how the famous Bernoulli equation explains airplane wing lift and its historical link to early blood pressure measurement.
Master sentence correction by analyzing singular subjects, appositive phrases, and independent clauses, using such as for examples and preserving parallelism in constructions.
illustrates subject-verb consistency with combined subjects and plural verbs, using examples like ungulates and such as to guide correct GMAT sentence-correction choices.
Identify how coordinating versus subordinating conjunctions affect sentence structure, and master idioms like consistent with, avoiding inappropriate 'that' usage and inconsistent with, inconsistent to, and inconsistent for.
Master the not so much X as Y construction and parallelism in GMAT sentence correction by comparing two actions, practice identifying the correct choice, and avoiding common mistakes.
analyze sentence correction by examining subject–verb agreement, participial phrases, singular versus plural subjects, and tense and voice to justify why option a is correct.
Master GMAT sentence correction by selecting correct modifiers and connectors, using the other rather than every department, and applying because of and correspondingly correctly.
Practice GMAT sentence correction with focus on subject-verb agreement, singular versus plural nouns, neither/nor constructions, modifiers, and avoiding double negatives.
Examine how relying exclusively on radio communication to transmit and receive messages affects the search for extraterrestrial life, and how tense and modifiers guide correct sentence construction.
Explore sentence correction by mastering parallelism with 'just as' constructions, using Edward Jenner as an example and the smallpox vaccine to practice deriving structures from infected organisms.
Master the not only but also construction and subject-verb agreement in sentence correction, using examples like not only x but also y and selecting the correct form.
Explore sentence correction strategies by analyzing modifiers and idioms such as 'such... that' and 'corresponds to' versus 'corresponds with,' using John Pershing's World War One command as an analogy.
Analyze common GMAT sentence correction errors, including misplaced and dangling modifiers and participle usage, using examples like China's tea ceremony to illustrate as exemplified by and as an example of.
Explore the correct idiom for government involvement in the free market, distinguishing interfere in, interfere with, and interfering, through a Gladstone-based GMAT sentence correction example.
Practice GMAT sentence correction with emphasis on correct use of exemplified by versus exemplifying, proper placement after not, and eliminating options through preposition and structure analysis.
Practice GMAT sentence correction with a focus on correct usage of exemplified by, handling not by vs by, and evaluating answer choices to identify the correct option.
Sharpen GMAT sentence correction skills through practical analysis of verb tenses, modifiers, and answer-choice strategies. Learn to identify correct forms and eliminate incorrect options in context.
Analyze GMAT sentence correction choices by testing idioms such as 'such as' and 'for example' and evaluating subject-verb agreement. Identify the most precise option by selecting B.
Apply Gmat sentence correction techniques by analyzing subject–verb structure and relative clauses, using regions of tissue in the intestinal wall that identify antigens and facilitate the immune response as examples.
Master sentence correction by choosing the correct then vs if vs even if usage for hypothetical and evidentiary contexts. Analyze evidence in trials, prosecution, and financial fraud to eliminate ambiguity.
Master GMAT sentence correction by analyzing how to correctly use each other, the others, and one another in group comparisons, with focus on logical structure and adverb placement.
This lecture teaches GMAT sentence correction by analyzing correct verb-preposition usage, such as preventing from versus preventing to, and identifying cause-effect relationships to select the right option.
Master GMAT sentence correction by fixing run-on sentences, using semicolons or commas with conjunctions, and applying these rules to Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Dostoyevsky as founders of existentialism.
Identify independent clauses and choose correct coordinating conjunctions in GMAT sentence correction. Eliminate unlikely options to determine the best answer, understanding contrasts, emphasis, and concise expression.
Analyze GMAT sentence correction strategies by evaluating answer options, eliminating flawed prepositional phrases and pronoun/participle errors, and choosing independent clauses for clarity.
Analyze subject-verb agreement and pronoun reference in a complex sentence about growth stocks, and practice choosing concise modifiers like more slowly while avoiding unclear antecedents and redundancy.
This lecture guides you through sentence correction by choosing correct economic terminology, eliminating redundancy, and crafting concise future-oriented clauses to enable a business plan for the coming year.
Explore sentence correction through grammar nuances such as comparative forms and definite articles, using stock price movement and option pricing examples to identify correct phrasing.
Develop GMAT sentence correction skills by evaluating answer choices for clarity, subject-verb agreement, and proper modifier placement amid dense, awkward phrasing.
This sentence-correction walkthrough explains choosing the correct form by using past perfect tense had clearly cheated and aligning modifiers to the chemistry professor, ensuring all would have to retake it.
This lecture clarifies using fewer instead of less for countable nouns in 'for every' constructions, showing how 'six of the applicants' determines the correct form in the sentence.
Explore a sentence correction problem drawn from the 1876 election, identifying independent clauses and the idiom in exchange for, as it relates to the withdrawal of federal troops.
Analyze a GMAT sentence correction problem about a federal embezzling scheme to practice using but to express contrast, ensuring parallel structure and correct pronoun reference.
Analyze how GMAT sentence correction hinges on clear name-to-name or thing-to-thing comparisons, as shown by Albert Einstein and Linus Pauling, plus Nobel Prize context.
Analyze a GMAT sentence correction question, identifying the correct independent clause and avoiding improper participles, with emphasis on relative and subordinate clauses and verb agreement.
Explore sentence correction through tense and word-choice challenges, including parallelism and proper location phrases. Learn to use in which vs where and the simple present tense for general statements.
Explore sequencing of events by applying tense-shift rules (past, present, perfect) to choose the correct verb forms, exemplified by 'had appeared' and 'had separated'.
Analyze sentence correction concepts such as subordinating conjunctions, independent clauses, and antecedent clarity, and apply them to identify correct verb forms in practice questions.
Analyze the correct use of relative pronouns in a California counties example, choosing 'some of which have' over 'some of them have' and avoiding run-ons and absolute phrases.
Identify and fix parallelism, verb and participle errors in GMAT sentence correction, with examples from GPS devices, the internet, and memory to evaluate answer choices.
Examine sentence correction concepts such as infinitives, participles, and parallelism, using GMAT-style examples to choose the correct form—like keep up the pressure versus keeping up.
Analyze a GMAT sentence correction item, identifying participle and verb tense issues, and selecting infinitive form to express laws that protect the rights and freedoms of Jews throughout the empire.
Master GMAT sentence correction by analyzing not only constructions but also parallelism and idiomatic usage. See how factors like coastline shape and nearshore bathymetry affect meaning.
Examine sentence correction principles using the Charles Babbage example, clarifying independent clauses, modifiers, and punctuation, such as why 'developing the first computer algorithm, ushered in the computer age' is correct.
Explore why the closer the planet is to the sun, the faster it moves in its orbit, and apply this principle to GMAT sentence correction practice.
analyze a sentence correction item about getting adequate sleep and a regimen of physical exercise; fix modifiers, participles, and not only but also parallelism, concluding the correct choice is b.
Explain the power–fuel efficiency trade-off in internal combustion engines, noting that faster zero-to-60 mph acceleration reduces efficiency, and illustrate with sentence-correction examples and idiom usage.
Examine GMAT sentence correction by evaluating verb tense—present vs present perfect vs past—and selecting phrasing to account for meaning, using thus, therefore, and whereas.
Analyze sentence correction by tracing pronoun antecedents and modifiers in a microbiome context, choosing 'discovery' over 'humanity' to reflect the correct oversight by Western medicine.
Master GMAT sentence correction by analyzing tense usage in 'by the time' constructions, selecting future perfect or present perfect forms, and evaluating choices across 180 practice questions and 3 tests.
Explore GMAT sentence correction tactics, focusing on subjunctive that usage, omitting should, and choosing parallel constructions like commanding, creating, and having.
Explore grammar mastery by evaluating the correct use of the 'both...and' connector, parallel structure, and independent clauses in sentence correction, illustrated with Thelonious Monk's lineage and jazz tradition.
Analyze subject-verb agreement and parallel comparisons in GMAT sentence correction, focusing on singular versus plural usage and correct pronoun alignment in cheetah species examples.
Practice GMAT sentence correction with quiz 1 question 2, analyzing parallelism, subject-verb and pronoun agreement, ambiguity, and redundancy in a context about airlines and high oil prices.
Analyze a gmat sentence correction item focused on pronoun reference, active vs passive voice, and correct modifier placement to identify the right answer about who demonstrates and publicizes products.
Explore subject verb agreement and logical comparison as conservatives predict the opposite of techno progressives, who argue that properly regulated technology can empower and emancipate.
Practice correct usage of only and modifier placement in GMAT sentence correction, using Pliny the Elder’s eyewitness account of Vesuvius to distinguish singular vs. plural and dangling modifiers.
Analyze pronoun modification and dangling modifiers to identify the correct sentence, as theory and problem distinctions reveal changing explanations and awkward phrasing.
Analyze proper listing and parallelism in sentence correction, focusing on using X, Y, Z and W with correct conjunctions. Identify correct usage, such as milkshakes with meat is a rarity.
Analyze GMAT sentence correction by identifying subjects and verbs, selecting correct verb forms, and evaluating parallel structures like 'a combination of federal tax incentives and state mandates'.
Explore the idiom usage of however much and no matter how much, emphasize parallel sentence structure, and how distorting meaning leads to wrong choices in GMAT sentence correction.
Analyze a GMAT sentence correction item on seven percent of the globe's surface area in a rainforest claim, learn to use despite, and identify the correct option preserving the contradiction.
Examine how to correct sentence structure in Gmat style by using the best known, avoiding redundancy like 'of them,' and maintaining present tense in the discussion of Martin Luther.
Analyze sentence correction of tomato seed statements, focusing on present perfect and passive voice usage in laboratory engineering and DNA modified phrasing.
Practice test on correct use of less and fewer in GMAT sentence correction, with numbers and count nouns, and identifying the right answer choices.
This practice test question clarifies the correct usage of take it for granted versus it is taken for granted and shows nationwide admission correctly modifies admission rather than students.
Analyze a GMAT sentence correction item about a 1845 observation on electric current within the patent system, focusing on comma use, independent clauses, and pronoun reference.
Practice test question 6 examines pronoun choice and tense usage in comparing Pulitzer and Nobel Prize, covering which versus who, living versus nonliving referents, and present perfect in passive voice.
Master GMAT sentence correction with practice test question 7, focusing on crossbreeding, parallelism, and the correct use of in order to versus to to express purpose and hybrid vigour.
Analyze a genetics chapter and its modifiers, evaluating how the textbook and chapter are described, and identify why answer choice E is correct.
Explore how DNA analysis from a single cell at a crime scene can identify an individual with a 10 million to one certainty, illustrating key Gmat sentence correction concepts.
Explore Gmat sentence correction by analyzing a practice test question that targets dangling and misplaced modifiers, infinitive usage, and proper verb tense for clear, correct expressions.
Master GMAT sentence correction by selecting the correct cause form and modifiers in an oak blight example, including due to versus because of and fungus resistance to herbicides.
Learn when to use because of versus due to, illustrated by a chemical spill delaying the commute; the correct sentence uses because of, avoiding redundant or incorrect constructions.
Analyze a long sentence to determine correct modifiers and usage, focusing on based on versus due to, appositive phrases, and subject-verb agreement in a radiocarbon dating context.
This GMAT sentence correction practice centers on choosing the correct comparison and using 'last scheduled day' to describe automobile workers’ severance eligibility.
Sentence Correction Part is the most important verbal part of GMAT Verbal section. Because if you know the rules and strategies, Sentence Correction Part is relatively easier than other verbal chapters -Critical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension-, and you need to give as many correct answer choices as you can in short time in order to get high score. Most top scorers give full correct answers at Sentence Correction Part. Therefore, you cannot miss any question at this part if you aim to score high. I teach each question explicitly and bring each time prerequisite knowledge in order you to memorize the critical gist information.
In this course you will find carefully selected 180 questions and their solutions. The best beneficial way of studying this course is that:
1- You try to solve each question on yourself, noting that the duration of solving each question.
2- And, then, watch my solution. Note that if you find any information or logical approach to solve the question fast and comfortably.
3- Compare your solution and my solution.
4- Think on where you can accelerate your solution if your answer is correct.
5- Think on where you did mistake if your answer is wrong.
6- Take notes all the important idioms, sentence structures, and grammer rules, which will help you solve questions correctly.
I solve each question in detail in which I give explicit strategy to approach the question, helping you understand the gist of each question type.
I am pretty sure that you will find this course beneficial since I teach you step-by-step how to overcome the GMAT Sentence Correction Part.