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If you are a non-native speaker, like me, you probably tackle Sentence Correction in a similar manner: try to understand the meaning, check the possible grammar problems and move to answer choices with a POE in mind.
That's nothing wrong with that besides if a completely alien sentence construction come up, or something unrelated to your mother tongue, or even uncovered by your GMAT course. It probably sounds "weird" to your ears, right? It can lead us to consider a right option to be a wrong one , ultimately electing it for elimination.
Tired of relying on my experience and demanding a better understanding of why some questions are "more right" than others, I began to surf around to chase a GMAT-like content (concise, sweet and no bs*). That's when I came across the following link https://www.grammar-quizzes.com/index.html
This website is useful for non-native speakers to understand the nuances in a sentence structure, and to present several identical phrases, meaning similar things, but keeping grammar rules intact - and most important, explaining technically why.
Furthermore, every single breakdown offered by GmatClub (Adjectives and Adverbs, Clauses, Comparisons, etc.) is fully covered there in separated topics.
ALL FREE OF CHARGE :!:
Well, as a user of multiple Gmat courses, it serves as a tip for Gmat courses as well. The way they put together the content is unbelievably useful and as seen, very nicely and neatly organized.
Hope someone else also takes advantage of this tip too.
Cheers :-D :-D :-D
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If you are a non-native speaker, like me, you probably tackle Sentence Correction in a similar manner: try to understand the meaning, check the possible grammar problems and move to answer choices with a POE in mind.
That's nothing wrong with that besides if a completely alien sentence construction come up, or something unrelated to your mother tongue, or even uncovered by your GMAT course. It probably sounds "weird" to your ears, right? It can lead us to consider a right option to be a wrong one , ultimately electing it for elimination.
Tired of relying on my experience and demanding a better understanding of why some questions are "more right" than others, I began to surf around to chase a GMAT-like content (concise, sweet and no bs*). That's when I came across the following link https://www.grammar-quizzes.com/index.html
This website is useful for non-native speakers to understand the nuances in a sentence structure, and to present several identical phrases, meaning similar things, but keeping grammar rules intact - and most important, explaining technically why.
Furthermore, every single breakdown offered by GmatClub (Adjectives and Adverbs, Clauses, Comparisons, etc.) is fully covered there in separated topics.
ALL FREE OF CHARGE
Well, as a user of multiple Gmat courses, it serves as a tip for Gmat courses as well. The way they put together the content is unbelievably useful and as seen, very nicely and neatly organized.
Hope someone else also takes advantage of this tip too.
Cheers
Show more
Despite my awful result in quant, my sentence correction section reached the 81st percentile
So, the tip above from above actually worked, at least for me
Now, I am moving back to the basics of Reading comprehension by reading a book called
How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading (A Touchstone book)
So far I understood that I lacked all the required skills for an analytical reading - despite the passion that many rightfully advocate applying while reading a Gmat passage
Concomitantly, I was reading a basic structure of thinking for Critical Reason called:
How to Think Clearly: A Guide to Critical Thinking
Sometimes I think I wasted a lot of time putting the "carriage ahead of the horses" Let's see how I am going to do in my next official exam
Well, if I get a notable improvement, I let everyone knows it.
A member just gave Kudos to this thread, showing it’s still useful. I’ve bumped it to the top so more people can benefit. Feel free to add your own questions or solutions.