GMAT Verbal Reasoning Prep

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Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT)
GMAT Verbal Reasoning Prep Strategies

The Verbal Reasoning section measures your ability to read and comprehend written material, to reason and evaluate arguments, and to express ideas effectively in English.

This section is composed of Reading Comprehension and Critical Reasoning questions.

Learn more about the skills assessed in this section at Exam Content.

Section Strategies

Reading Comprehension Questions

  • Do not expect to be completely familiar with the material presented in passages. Your understanding of the subject matter is not required to answer the question.
  • Read the passage carefully and analyze each passage carefully before reading the questions.
  • Focus on key words and phrases to maintain an overall sense about the context of the passage.
  • Select the answer that fits based on the information given in the passage.
  • Don’t rush through the passages. This section is about comprehension, not speed.

Critical Reasoning Questions

  • Determine exactly what the question is asking. For this section, read the question first and then the material on which it is based.
  • Pay close attention to:
    • What is put forward as factual information
    • What is not said but necessarily follows from what is said
    • What is claimed to follow from facts that have been put forward
    • How well those claims are substantiated.
  • When reading arguments, determine how sound the reasoning is. It is not necessary to pass judgment on the actual truth of anything put forward as fact.
  • If a question is based on an argument, identify what part of the argument its conclusion is.

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