The number of incorrect answer choices looks perfectly fine. It's not the number of questions to worry about. Your score depends more on the difficulty level of those questions. A 500-level question, for instance, is worth much less than a 750-level question. Plus, there will be experimental questions on the real GMAT. Those don't adversely affect your score if you answer them incorrectly.
hswater
I've worked on verbal for one month, still cannot finished on time. I have 6 questions left when it's time up. I picked up the answers randomly, and got them all wrong
This, however, concerns me. You really need to work on timing. There's nothing wrong with the occasional educated guess (it's actually good strategy sometimes), but so many random answer choices toward the end will present a major problem on test day.
Work on timing during question practice sessions and always take CATs under test conditions (timed, include AWA, respect break time limits, etc.). Two weeks should be enough time to improve.