GMAT Verbal Section Sentence Correction
GMAT Verbal Section Sentence Correction
GMAT Verbal Section Sentence Correction
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Sentence Correction
Correct expression
Effective expression
Proper Diction
A correct sentence is grammatically correct and structurally sound. It conforms to all the rules of standard written
English such as subject-verb agreement, verb tense consistency, modifier reference and position, idiomatic expressions
and parallel construction.
In addition to being correct, a sentence needs to be effective. It should express an idea or relationship clearly and
concisely, as well as grammatically. A best choice should have no superfluous words or unnecessarily complicated
expressions. This does not mean that the shortest choice is always the best answer. Proper diction is another important
part of effectiveness. It refers to the standard dictionary meanings of words and the appropriateness of words in
context. In evaluating the diction of a sentence, you must be able to recognize whether the words are well-selected,
correctly presented, and suitable for the context.
One common error that test takers often make in the Sentence Correction section is choosing an answer that sounds
good. Do not go on with your gut feeling in this section. Remember your grammar and look for errors in construction
(e.g., noun-verb agreement) and eliminate answers that you are sure are incorrect.
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Sentence Correction
Remember that the GMAT test-writers will often create answer choices which are grammatically correct, but either
change the meaning of the sentence or are not stylistically the best answer. Since the GMAT tests not only grammar
but also efficiency and effectiveness of communication, you have to look for redundancy, ambiguity, and uncommon
or confusing expressions.
Reading your choice back into the sentence will help you decide which answer communicates the meaning of the
sentence most effectively and prevent you from making careless errors.
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Another example:
Career switchers often schedule interviews with high-level managers, believing that the insight of professionals will
help narrow down the many choices of careers available to graduating MBAs.
A. Career switchers often schedule interviews with high-level managers, believing that the insight of professionals
will help narrow down the many choices of careers available to graduating MBAs.
B. Career switchers, believing that the insight of professionals will help narrow down the many choices of careers
available to graduating MBAs, often schedule interviews with high-level managers.
C. Career switchers believing that scheduling interviews with the insight of high-level professional managers will
help narrow down the many choices of careers available to graduating MBAs.
D. Career switchers, believing that interviews with high-level managers whose insight will help narrow down the
many choices of careers available to graduating MBAs, often schedule them.
E. Career switchers often schedule interviews to narrow down the many choices of careers available to graduating
MBAs, believing that the insight of professionals with high-level managers will help them.
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Sentence Correction
Agreement is based on formal grammar, and plurals do not depend on meaning but on the grammatical relationships
between words. Two single subjects joined by and take a plural verb, but an addition in parentheses, such as as well as,
not to mention, takes a singular verb.
Signals
Collective nouns such as team, audience, staff, family, public or committee are singular.
An intervening phrase which separates the noun from the verb is used to confuse the unwary test-taker.
A sentence structure with the verb before the subject may indicate an Agreement error.
A conjunction such as and; either/or; neither/nor, can be used as a trap.
3.3.3 Tense
Many GMAT questions center upon the relationships between tenses. While the tenses in a sentence do not have to be
the same, they must relate to each other in a way that makes the sequence of actions clear to the reader. The term
sequence of tenses refers to the rules that govern how we alter verb tenses to make clear that all events, past, present or
future, are not simultaneous.
As soon as I hear the dog bark, I knew you were at the door.
The above sentence sets forth a likely condition anticipated by the speaker. The use of the past tense is incorrect. The
sentence may be corrected thus:
As soon as I hear the dog bark, I will know you are at the door.
In the above example, the future tense makes clear that the dog's barking is anticipated by the speaker.
Errors in sequence of tenses often occur with the perfect tenses, all of which are formed by adding an auxiliary or
auxiliaries to the past participle, the third principal part.
Some common auxiliaries are ``had'', ``has'', and ``have''. They are used with the past participle to form perfect tenses.
Unfortunately, the rules governing sequence of tenses are a bit of a jumble. Often you will have to rely on your ear and
common sense to guide you with these questions. But below are some guidelines you can use in order to sort out what
the correct sentence should look like.
In complex sentences, the tense of the verb in the main clause governs the tenses of the verbs in subsequent or
dependent clauses.
Tense in
Main Clause
Present
Purpose of Dependent
Clause
To show same-time action
Tense in
Dependent Clause
Simple Present
Simple Past
Present Perfect
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Future
Example
I am eager to go for a walk
because I enjoy exercise.
He feels that she made a
mistake last year.
The congregation believes
that it has selected a suitable
preacher.
My teacher says that he will
grade the test next week.
To show another
completed past action
Simple Past
Past Perfect
Simple Present
Present
Perfect
Simple Past
Present Perfect
Simple Present
Present Perfect
Past Perfect
Future
Future
Perfect
Sentence Correction
Simple Past
Simple Past
Simple Present or
Present Perfect
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Do not confuse between the present perfect (``has walked'') and the past perfect (``had walked''). While both verbs
convey past action, the present perfect verb actually represents present tense.
Signals
Another example:
When he phones her, she tells him to stop calling, but he acted as if he had not understood her.
A. she tells him to stop calling, but he acted as if he had not understood her.
B. she told him to stop calling, but he acted as if he had not understood her.
C. she tells him to stop calling, but he acts as if he did not understood her.
D. she tells him to stop calling, but he acts as if he has not understood her.
E. she tells him to stop calling, but he acted as if he does not understand her.
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Sentence Correction
Items in a list
Long phrases or clauses connected by a conjunction
Another example:
Our firm is best suited to undertake the project because we have the financial wherewithal, vast experience undertaking
similar projects, and can use our large employee base - all of which is necessary to complete the work on-time and
under-budget.
A. the financial wherewithal, vast experience undertaking similar projects, and can use our large employee base - all
of which is necessary
B. the financial wherewithal, vast experience undertaking similar projects, and a large employee base - all necessary
C. the financial wherewithal, vast experience undertaking similar projects, and a large employee base - all of whom
are necessary
D. the financial wherewithal, vast experience undertaking similar projects, and can use our large employee base
necessary
E. the financial wherewithal, vast experience undertaking similar projects, and can use our large employee base since
they are necessary
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3.3.5 Comparisons
Comparisons are a first cousin of Parallelism. Frequently a sentence with a comparison will appear at first glance to be
correct but will actually compare two or more elements that are not expressed in similar form.
For example:
The judge of the baking contest liked the pastry Sally made better than Bob.
In this sentence, the judge is evaluating the comparative merits of Sally's pastry and Bob himself. Put it in another way,
he is comparing Sally's pastry to Bob, rather than comparing Sally's pastry to Bob's pastry. The correct way of
expressing the idea is thus:
The judge of the baking contest liked Sally's pastry better than Bob's.
Signals
Key words such as than, like, unlike, as, compared to, more than, and less than should alert you to check what is
being compared in the sentence.
Another example:
Unlike its competitors, Globex and MondoCorp, the revenues of Galactic Enterprises increased by cornering the
widget market in the fourth quarter, thus making Galactic Enterprises the world's most profitable company and a
darling of Wall Street.
A. its competitors, Globex and MondoCorp, the revenues of Galactic Enterprises increased by cornering the widget
market in the fourth quarter, thus making
B. Globex and MondoCorp, its competitors, the revenues of Galactic Enterprises increased by cornering the widget
market in the fourth quarter, thus making
C. its competitors, Globex and MondoCorp, Galactic Enterprises increased its revenues by cornering the widget
market in the fourth quarter, by making
D. Globex and MondoCorp, its competitors, Galactic Enterprises increased its revenues by cornering the widget
market in the fourth quarter, thus making
E. its competitors, Globex and MondoCorp, the revenues of Galactic Enterprises cornered the widget market in the
fourth quarter, thus making
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Sentence Correction
For example:
In recent years, Fred has tried to lose its excess weight through numerous diets.
The correct sentence would read:
In recent years, Fred has tried to lose his excess weight through numerous diets.
Reference
Pronoun reference errors occur when ambiguity exists as to the antecedent of the pronoun. Additionally, the pronouns
must clearly refer to only one antecedent. The sentence must leave no doubt in the reader's mind as to what the
pronoun refers. Sentences with multiple nouns are a classic signal of a pronoun reference error:
The attorney argued that students who were denied the use of school facilities for political activities had lost
their right of free assembly.
In the above sentence, the writer does not make clear to what their refers. It could refer to students, facilities or
activities. The sentence must be constructed so that the reader has no doubt about the antecedent of the pronoun their:
The attorney argued that students lost their right of free assembly when they were denied the use of school
facilities for political activities.
Signals
Another example:
The Federalist Papers is a compilation of articles written by Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, as well as a few
by John Jay, since each of them were advocates of the Constitution.
A. since each of them were
B. since they were each
C. since all of them were
D. each of which was
E. because all of the men were
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Sentence Correction
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practice, so do as many practice questions as possible and take note of any examples in which two different versions of
an idiom are used. After you check your answers, make a list of the idioms you did not know and memorize them.
Native speakers often use idioms without thinking about the literal meaning of the words.
For example:
We finished the rest of the tasks in one fell swoop.
The expression in one fell swoop makes little sense literally, but English speakers recognize it as meaning all at once.
Some conventions of Standard English may seem nit-picky, but you should familiarize yourself with some rules which
are commonly tested.
For example:
Wrong
When compared to Greg's ability to carry a tune, Marsha's musical skill is unimpressive.
The correct expression in this case is compared with because the items being compared are dissimilar: the relative
musical abilities of Greg and Marsha. The construction using compared with points out the differences.
Correct
When compared with Greg's ability to carry a tune, Marsha's musical skill is unimpressive.
Use compared to when illustrating similarities.
For example:
He compared his teacher to Bruce Greenwald, the esteemed professor famous for his Value Investing lectures
at Columbia Business School.
May I compare thee to a summer's day? (Shakespeare, Sonnet 18)
In sum, Compare to is used when things are being likened. Compare with is used when the comparison is more
specific and implies differences.
Each .... other refer to two entities; where more than two are concerned, use one .... another.
The two of them hated each other with a passion.
The four of us looked at one another and laughed.
3.3.7.1
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Sentence Correction
an instance of is different in meaning from an example of. An example is one of a number of things while an
instance is an example that proves or illustrates. People may be examples but never instances.
as vs. than The words are not interchangeable. Use as for comparisons of similarity or equality and than for
comparisons of degree or difference. Always use than with the comparative (-er) form of an adjective.
as good as or better than is a cliche and should be avoided. Do not telescope a comparison of similarity - as with a
comparison of degree - than. A better construction is to break the juxtaposition up into separate thoughts.
as ... as is a grammatical way of expressing similarity: he is as tall as his sister.
such ... as is grammatical when both words are used as prepositions in a comparison: such men as he. Avoid as such
when meaning in principle.
based on The phrasal verb based on is grammatical and can be used either actively or passively.
The style of her cooking is based on Southern cuisine.
She bases her thinking on sound logic.
depends on whether The construction is generally accepted and is certainly preferable to depends on if.
His fate depends on whether the governor calls back in time.
different from vs. different than (differ from) Although strict grammarians say that from is the correct word to use
after different, many authorities believe that than may be used in order to avoid elaborate constructions. In contrast, the
authorities agree that from is the correct word when used with differ.
He is a different man than he was in 1985. Compare to: He is a different man from the man that he was in
1985.
Identical with/to Identical may be used with either preposition without changing the intended meaning.
no less a ... than The expression is an accepted idiom meaning great or not less impressive.
not only/but also Not only is always followed by but also in a sentence.
The subways in summer are not only hot, but also humid.
regard as The verb regard may be used with as and either an adjective or a noun.
We regard George's ranting as silly. The tribe regards shaking hands as taboo.
Do not use regard with an infinitive or being: He is regarded to be an expert; He is regarded as being an expert.
regardless The word is correct. Irregardless is non-standard usage.
So ... as The comparative construction may only be used in questions and negative statements. Otherwise, use as ...
as.
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Sentence Correction
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Aggravate/annoy To aggravate is to make a situation worse. To annoy is to irritate. In formal English, people cannot
be aggravated, only annoyed.
When the Chairman of the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates, he aggravated the flailing economy and
annoyed many Wall Street bankers.
Ago/since Ago carries a thought from the present to the past. Since carries a thought from the past to the present.
It was twenty years ago that I first heard that song.
It has been twenty years since I first heard that song.
Among/between Use between when comparing two items and among when comparing three or more
I was torn between studying finance and studying marketing.
After I was accepted into all three MBA programs, I had to choose among Harvard, Wharton and Columbia.
Amount/number Use amount when referring to an uncountable noun and number when referring to a countable
word.
There is a large amount of water in the ocean.
There are a large number of fish in the ocean.
Fewer/less Use fewer when referring to a countable noun and less when referring to an uncountable noun. The usage
of fewer/less is similar to amount/number.
The supermarket express lane is open to customers with ten items or fewer.
There is less rudeness at Dean and Deluca than at Fairway.
Good/well - When used as adjectives, good refers to morality or quality and well refers to health. However, only well
can be used as adverb and good is always an adjective.
I feel good about my work.
I feel well.
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Sentence Correction
I am well.
I'm doing well.
It is good to hear that you feel well today.
Imply/infer To imply is to express a thought indirectly. To infer is to derive a conclusion indirectly.
While the politician never implied that he would raise taxes, the audience inferred that he would soon do so.
Like/as Use like before a noun, or pronoun. Use as before a clause, adverb or prepositional phrase. Like is generally
used as a preposition in such a context. As is generally used as an adverb while sometimes serving as a preposition
with the meaning of ``in the capacity of''.
My mother's cheesecake tastes like glue.
I love frozen pizza because there is no other snack like it.
My mother's cheesecake tastes great, as a mother's cheesecake should.
There are times, as now, that learning grammar becomes important.
He golfed well again, as in the tournament last year.
He served as Captain in the navy.
Less than/under Less than is the correct expression when making a comparison of number or amount. Under is
limited to describing spatial relationships.
I will host the party if the guest list is less than fifty people.
More than/over More than is the correct expression when making a comparison of number or amount. Over is
limited to describing spatial relationships.
We processed more than 1,000 applications in one hour.
You should have already done this, but if you are still stumped, do it again. Remember that a correct answer
retains the meaning of the original sentence. You may be analyzing an answer choice which changes the idea
which the author wished to convey. Make sure that word order has not been switched in the answer to suggest a
different meaning.
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Shorter is better
Wordy or long-winded ways of expressing thoughts are often not the best means of expression. Sometimes the best
answer is the one with the fewest words.
You will seldom encounter a correct answer that employs the use of the passive voice. While use of the passive
voice is not in and of itself grammatically incorrect, expressing an idea actively is preferable. Given the choice
between The ball was hit by me and I hit the ball, the latter is the better choice.
Avoid redundancy
The best answer should be clear and concise. An answer which repeats elements of the sentence unnecessarily is
incorrect.
Don't choose such answer if there are options which don't include the word being. Unless you are positive that
being is a necessary and useful part of the sentence, it is probably just confusing the issue and is better left out.
If you review the rules discussed in the Grammar Review section and follow the six-steps for Sentence Correction
questions, you should have little trouble identifying the best answer among your choices.
Answers to Prior Examples
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Sentence Correction
B. No redundancy
Example: the remarkable growth in increased revenue
C. No ambiguous double negative meanings
D. No possibility for multiple interpretations of the sentence
E.
3.5.1 Modifiers
Be aware:
A. A participle at the start of a sentence must modify the subject of the sentence. Otherwise, it is a dangling
participle.
Wrong
Having read the book, there is no question the book is better than the film.
Correct
Having read the book, I have no doubt that the book is better than the film.
Also please pay attention to:
B. Misplaced modifying clause.
Wrong
Whether baked or mashed, Tom loves potatoes.
Correct
Tom loves potatoes, whether baked or mashed.
C. Ambiguous modifying clause
Example
People who jog frequently develop knee problems.
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Sentence Correction
3.5.2 Agreement
In grammar, Concord (also known as Agreement) refers to the relationship between units in such matters as number,
person, and gender. Consider the following examples:
``THEY did the work THEMSELVES'' (number and person concord between THEY and THEMSELVES).
``HE did the work HIMSELF'' (number, person and gender concord between HE and HIMSELF).
If there is no agreement, then grammatical errors occur. Consider the following example:
``The apples is on the table.'' (Apples is plural; therefore, for concord to occur, the sentence should read: ``The
apples are on the table.'')
A. Number and Person Concord: In Standard English, number concord is most significant between a singular and
plural subject and its verb in the third person of the simple present tense:
``That book seems interesting'' (singular BOOK agreeing with SEEMS), and
``Those books seem interesting'' (plural BOOKS agreeing with SEEM).
Number concord requires that two related units must always both be singular or both be plural.
Both number and person concord are involved in the use of pronouns and possessives, as in ``I hurt MYself,'' and
``MY friends said THEY WERE COMING in THEIR car.''
B. Gender Concord: Gender concord is an important part of the grammar of languages like German and French. In
English, gender concord does not exist apart from personal and possessive pronouns, such as ``Elizabeth injured
HERself badly in the accident,'' and ``Thomas lost HIS glasses.'' These errors are generally couched in a longer
sentence, so the test taker is distracted and misses the simple error.
C. Subject-Verb Agreement: The easiest kind of trick the GMAT will pull is to give you subjects and verbs that do
not agree in time or in number.
TIP: One of the things you always have to look out for is that the GMAT will throw in lots of extra words to confuse
you about what subject the verb is referring to.
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Sentence Correction
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Example
Although the sting of brown honey locusts are rarely fatal, they cause painful flesh wounds.
Please remember:
a. Certain words ending in ``s'' such as ``Diabetes'' and ``News'' are singular.
Other examples include:
two hundred dollars
five hundred miles
United States
b. Compound subject is plural. Exception: ``Romeo and Juliet'' is a singular noun when it is referred to as a play.
c.
g.
Inconsistent tense
Passive voice
Incorrect use of verbs in the subjunctive mood
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Sentence Correction
3.5.4 Parallelism
Please pay attention to the inconsistent use of:
a.
b.
c.
d.
Clauses
Phrases (verb phrases, noun phrases, prepositional phrases, adjective phrases, etc.)
Gerunds
Infinitives (If an infinitive is repeated once in a list, it must be repeated each time.)
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Wrong
I like to jog, swim and to run.
Correct
I like to jog, to swim and to run.
(Occasionally acceptable: I like to jog, swim and run.)
3.5.5 Comparisons
Please pay attention to the use of:
a.
b.
c.
d.
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Sentence Correction
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``Despite'' is not the same as ``Although''. ``Despite'' means with intention, in the face of an obstacle'.
Wrong
Despite having 5% of the world's population, the USA uses 30% of the world's energy.
Correct
Despite his poor education, he succeeded in becoming wealthy.
Idiomatic Prepositions:
based on
composed by meaning ``created by'' vs. composed of meaning ``made up of''
credit with (not credit to)
depend on
differ with (meaning ``disagree with'') vs. differ from (meaning ``be different from'')
discourage from doing something/encourage to do something (from is a preposition here; to is the infinitive here)
prefer _________ to ________
prevent from
prohibit from
Idiomatic Phrases Involving or Omitting ``As''
consider x y (not to be y)
defined as
depicted as
regard x as y
regarded as
think of x as y
view x as y
Idiomatic Phrases Involving or Omitting the Infinitive ``to''
Help someone do something
Make someone do something
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Sentence Correction
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The problem with the sentence as it stands: dismissed with is not idiomatic, it should be dismissed as or dismissed for.
These two idioms mean different things - you can be dismissed for something from a job, but by critics, etc. one is
dismissed AS something.
This leaves you with choices B and D. B includes the word being, which automatically makes it suspect. Also, it is the
longer choice, which makes it less likely to be correct. The adverb merely is placed very far away from the verb,
causing an awkward construction.
This makes D a better choice.
*D* is correct.
Q2. Once almost covered under centuries of debris, skilled artisans have now restored some original famous paintings
during the Italian Renaissance.
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
skilled artisans have now restored some original famous paintings during the Italian Renaissance.
some original famous paintings during the Italian Renaissance now have been by skillful artisans restored.
the restoration of some original famous paintings during the Italian Renaissance has been done by skilled artisans.
skilled artisans during the Italian Renaissance have now restored some original famous paintings.
some original famous paintings during the Italian Renaissance have now been restored by skilled artisans.
What was covered? Some original famous paintings. The rest are like certain garnishes in a cocktail.
With modifying phrases at the beginning of the sentence, just determine what is being modified and select the answer
which places that item directly after the phrase. Which have the correct opening? *B* *E*
B needlessly separates subject from verb, creating a very awkward construction.
This makes *E* the better choice.
Example
Janowitz, as other writers in New York City, considered Woolf as one of the foremost female modernist literary
figures of the twentieth century.
2 mistakes:
Like vs. As in the first part (Janowitz like other artists...)
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Sentence Correction
With
Following
Despite
Having spent
As a result of
*C* is the best choice to indicate the emphasis of the Nomads' unchanging mentality after all the journeys.3pt
Q4. The uniformized set of characters, which some historians date in the late Qing dynasty, was the key to the
sustainability and prosperity of the Chinese culture over thousands of years.
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
Before we look at the answers, let's answer the question: what is occurring? Historians are dating something. What are
they dating? Not the uniformized set of characters itself, but the time when the characters became uniformized (the
uniformization of the characters).
Therefore the correct answer must be *D*.
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