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I''ve seen people do pretty well by doing as many questions as they can and then guessing on the last handful. That this would occur makes sense, since you can miss more than five questions and score rather high on quant, and OK on verbal.

At the same time, I have also gotten the sense that, if your score is more in question when you get to the last five questions, you can really drive it down. For instance, let's say that you were just managing to score V37 and had already missed some medium questions when you got to the last five questions and missed all of those last five. From what I have seen, you could end up scoring in the low 30s.

So, if you're going to guess, then guess on some of the hardest questions along the way, and maybe on one or two at the end of the section.
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I would think that the GMAT is not going to decrease the difficulty level dramatically within five questions if you were able to consistently perform at a high level. I realize that this is not an ideal situation, but I was hoping to understand how much you are penalized should this situation arise.
The GMAT is not expected to decrease the difficulty in the last 5 questions if accuracy has been high through the test -- but sometimes it does.

The GMAT sometimes throws easier questions when not expected (don't know why, perhaps because the system runs out of hard questions). And if you get these easier questions wrong, then the score can reduce more than expected.

See this post and the subsequent discussion:
https://gmatclub.com/forum/v42-with-onl ... 67002.html

The test taker had only 2 incorrect answers, and those were towards the end of the exam. Yet the score was only 42.

Posted from my mobile device
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MartyTargetTestPrep
I''ve seen people do pretty well by doing as many questions as they can and then guessing on the last handful. That this would occur makes sense, since you can miss more than five questions and score rather high on quant, and OK on verbal.

At the same time, I have also gotten the sense that, if your score is more in question when you get to the last five questions, you can really drive it down. For instance, let's say that you were just managing to score V37 and had already missed some medium questions when you got to the last five questions and missed all of those last five. From what I have seen, you could end up scoring in the low 30s.

So, if you're going to guess, then guess on some of the hardest questions along the way, and maybe on one or two at the end of the section.

MartyMurray
What's the most reliable way to identify the difficulty level of verbal questions?
Personally, what I've found in most cases is that:
1. For CR and RC, the wordier the options are the more difficult the question is. The stimulus/passage of a CR/RC question is a small factor.
2. For SC, the difference between the correct and the incorrect options boils down to the difference between 2 phrases/words/clauses

I know that it's not good practice to predict difficulty levels, but I need to skip some questions to be able to complete the section on time.
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MartyMurray
What's the most reliable way to identify the difficulty level of verbal questions?
Personally, what I've found in most cases is that:
1. For CR and RC, the wordier the options are the more difficult the question is. The stimulus/passage of a CR/RC question is a small factor.
2. For SC, the difference between the correct and the incorrect options boils down to the difference between 2 phrases/words/clauses

I know that it's not good practice to predict difficulty levels, but I need to skip some questions to be able to complete the section on time.
I think you just have to see what's hard for you and ditch if you're bogging down when solving a question.
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