Hi HrithuOlickel.
The most important thing you can do in practicing for verbal is to use every question for all it's worth. You can learn a lot from even easy practice questions if you use them effectively.
So, how do you use them effectively?
You use verbal practice questions effectively by treating each choice as a question to be answered. In other words, in the case of each choice, you should carefully determine and fully articulate why that choice is incorrect or correct. You'll be learning to create your own complete explanation for each choice of every question.
Doing so can be challenging even when you're dealing with easy questions. It may be easy to see which choice in a question is the best, but defining exactly why each incorrect choice is incorrect can still be challenging.
Doing this detailed work can take time. So, most of your verbal practice should be untimed. You'll learn more and learn faster by practicing untimed.
Also, you should shoot for very high accuracy. To score high in verbal, you need to get a high percentage of the medium and hard questions correct. So, you need to achieve super high accuracy when practicing untimed.
For some more detail on how to practice verbal effectively, see this post.
Three Key Practice Tips for Mastering GMAT Verbal