Thursday, March 5, 2020
GMAT Review Series Sentence Correction - Parallelism
GMAT Review Series Sentence Correction - Parallelism GMAT MBA Admissions Blog In todayâs GMAT Review Series video, weâll take a look at a Sentence Correction (Parallelism/Verb Tense) question from GMATâs Official Guide 2019 â" Verbal Diagnostic Exam. Key pointers from this video: Begin by setting up your scratch pad to help you ID the Error CategoryWrite the question number with a line beside it to write any errors you identify in the sentence or the answer choices. List answer choices below to facilitate the process of elimination as you work. Ignore Punctuation as a Standalone IssueThe GMAT does not test punctuation, so never worry about punctuation as a standalone issue. Punctuation can be subjective and all errors on the GMAT have to be absolute. Look to Main Subject Verbs for Errors Look at the subject and verbs for the clearest understanding of any potential errors. Find the subject and any verbs in the underlined portion of the sentence. In this case âdolphinsâ are the subject and ârecognizingâ and âto graspâ are the verbs, these are not parallel verb tenses, so we have identified the error category (parallelism/verb tense). Always default to the original sentence as it was written when considering different meanings. As you move through the answer choices, read the sentence literally to see if it makes sense. This video was produced by MyGuru'sDirector of Online Instructionand expertonline GMATtutor Stefan Maisnier. Visit ourYouTube channelfor more GMAT analogy videos.
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