Why Precision Is the Hidden Skill in GMAT Verbal
Many GMAT students mistakenly believe that the Verbal section lacks the clarity and exactness of Quant. They assume Verbal questions do not have firm right and wrong answers, and that belief leads to thinking like this:
- Verbal answers are open to interpretation
- The correct choice depends on the test maker’s opinion
- Getting Verbal questions right is often just luck
Because of these assumptions, such test takers rely heavily on guessing. They choose answers based on what sounds right, what feels reasonable, or they abandon the question altogether. Predictably, this approach makes it extremely difficult to score well in GMAT Verbal.
It is true that Verbal questions do not involve formulas or calculations the way Quant questions do. But that does not mean they are vague or arbitrary. Every Verbal question has objective logic behind it, and every answer choice can be justified as correct or incorrect for concrete reasons, just like in Quant.
For example, in Critical Reasoning, an option may weaken an argument when the question clearly asks for a strengthener. In Reading Comprehension, an answer might directly conflict with a statement in the passage. Missing these flaws is not about bad luck. It is about lacking the training to identify them.
No matter the Verbal question type, there are always specific features that make one answer correct and the others wrong. As you train yourself to spot those features, such as logical gaps, contradictions, scope shifts, and unsupported claims, you rely less on intuition and more on evidence. Your accuracy improves, and your performance becomes far more consistent.
The most effective way to think about GMAT Verbal is as a series of small logic problems. There is one defensible answer, multiple carefully designed traps, and no reliance on gut instinct.
So do not fall for the idea that Verbal is vague or subjective. The precision is built in. You just need to train yourself to recognize it.
If you have questions about GMAT prep, feel free to reach out.
Warmest regards,
Scott Woodbury-StewartFounder & CEO,
Target Test Prep