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Important Things to Know About the GMAT's Approach to Sentence Correction |
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Standard written English refers to the grammar rules that you find
in grammar books and in formal writing. Since proper written English
often differs from spoken English, the best answer will not always
sound the best, and will sometimes sound terrible. You cannot rely
on your ear alone: you must become familiar with the grammar rules
of written English. 2. The GMAT tests a limited number of grammar rules. English grammar contains hundreds of nitpicky rules. Luckily, the
GMAT only tests a few. So devote your energies to mastering these
rules: if you try to conquer all of English grammar, you'll likely
do far worse than if you confine your studies to the most commonly-occurring
rules. Missing one obscure-rule question is much better than missing
six parallelism questions. 3. Grammar is key - but style is important, too On the GMAT, the correct answer must not only be grammatically correct:
it must be stylistically correct, too. This means that the best answer
must also be clear, without unnecessary redundancy, and with proper
punctuation. Idioms must be used correctly. 4. Don't change the meaning of the sentence In the sentence correction section, you'll sometimes find two answer
choices that are equally correct in terms of grammar and style conventions.
When this happens, choose the answer that maintains the meaning of
the original sentence. The best answer will never significantly alter
the original meaning. 5. Incorrect answer choices are incorrect Sentence Correction answer choices are variations on the correct answer. Incorrect answers will almost always be identifiable as such: that is, incorrect answers contain errors. Even if an answer choice sounds funny, if you can't find a definite error, then don't rush to eliminate it. |
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