Sentence Correction - Final
Sentence Correction - Final
Time
No more than 90 seconds on average to answer a Sentence Correction question. To free up even more time for Critical
Reasoning and Reading Comprehension, consider aiming for 75 or even 60 seconds per Sentence Correction question.
Subject-Verb agreement
1. Subject and Verb must both exist – Look for a fragmented sentence i.e. a sentence with no working verb or a
sentence w/o a main clause (starts with a connecting word like because and which).
2. Subject and Verb Must Make Sense Together – Make sure that the subject and the verb actually have a sensible
meaning together!
WRONG: The development of a hydrogen car based on expected performance parameters will be able to travel
hundreds of miles without refueling.
RIGHT: Once developed, a hydrogen CAR based on expected performance parameters WILL BE able to travel
hundreds of miles without refueling.
3. Subject and Verb Must Agree in Number - A singular subject requires a singular verb form: (The dog runs out of
the house) and a plural subject requires a plural verb form (The dogs run out of the house)
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a. The GMAT hides the subject, so that you are unsure whether the subject is singular or plural – By using
Middlemen and warmups
i. Prepositional phrases - group of words headed by a Preposition (of, for, by, in, with, at, to, on, from,
etc). Prepositions are followed by nouns or pronouns, which complete the phrase – Eliminate the PP to
find the subject. Further, a noun in a prepositional phrase cannot be the subject of the sentence
iii. Only the word and can change a singular subject into a plural one. Singular subjects followed by
additive phrases remain singular subjects.
ii. Note that when the words “either” or “neither” are in a sentence alone (without “or” or “nor”), they are
considered singular and take only singular verbs.
i. Flip it
i. Verb appearing before the subject. Flip the position of the verb and see the agreement between subject
and verb
Eg1 - Wrong: Near those buildings SIT a lonely house, inhabited by squatters.
Flip it! A lonely house, inhabited by squatters, SITS near those buildings.
Right: Near those buildings SITS a lonely house, inhabited by squatters.
PARALLELISM
2. How to spot which part of sentence need to be parallel to each other? – Parallel markers (eg – and, both/and,
or, either/or, not/but, not only/ but also, rather than, from/ to)
3. The most important parallel markers are the three common conjunctions: and, but, and or.
4. Lists with AND
a. GMAT always inserts a comma before the and in lists of 3 or 4 item
b. However, if you join 2 clauses with and, you can put an optional comma before the and. Doing so is
especially recommended when the clauses are long, independent, or both.
Eg - I really like candy apples, AND I eat them often.
c. Long list - create a clear hierarchy by repeating words and adding commas where necessary. Also, you
should flip lists so that the longest item is last, if possible.
WRONG: She argues that the agency acts with disregard for human life AND property AND reckless
abandon AND it should therefore be shut down.
RIGHT: She argues THAT the agency acts WITH reckless abandon AND WITH disregard for human life
AND property, AND THAT it should therefore be shut down.
5. Idioms with Built-In Parallel Structure - Certain idioms demand parallelism as a result of their structure. The
most important idioms demanding parallelism, such as both X and Y, have already been described.
6. Superficial Parallelism vs. Actual Parallelism - Do not assume that all verbs and verbal forms in a sentence must
be parallel.
WRONG: Sal applied himself in his new job, arrived early every day, skipped lunch regularly, AND left late every
night.
RIGHT: Sal applied himself in his new job, arriving early every day, skipping lunch regularly, AND leaving late
every night.
The wrong version gives all the activities equal emphasis, instead of making the last three activities subordinate
to the main activity (applied himself in his new job).
7. Watch Out for Linking Verbs - Instead of expressing what a subject does, these verbs express what the subject
is, or what condition the subject is in. The most common linking verb is naturally the verb “to be”.
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PRONOUNS
1. Pronoun errors are so frequent on the GMAT that every time you see a pronoun, such as it, its, they, them, or
their, you should be sure to check whether it is being used correctly.
The first question you must ask yourself is this: What is the antecedent of this pronoun? Once you have found the
antecedent, you must make sure that it makes sense and that
- it agrees in number with the pronoun.
- the match between the antecedent and the pronoun should not be ambiguous.
Watch out for nouns used as adjectives! They cannot be antecedents of pronouns. The antecedent to which you
want to refer must actually exist in the sentence as a noun.
Wrong: The park rangers discussed measures to prevent severe wildfires, which would be devastating to it.
Right: The park rangers discussed measures to prevent severe wildfires, which would be devastating to THE PARK.
What noun does it refer to? We might guess the park. However, you should note that in this sentence, park is not
truly a noun. Rather, park is acting as an adjective in the phrase the park rangers.
Always check that the antecedent makes sense in place of the pronoun.
Wrong: Although the term "supercomputer" may sound fanciful or exaggerated, it is simply an extremely fast
mainframe that can execute trillions of calculations every second.
Right: Although the term "supercomputer" may sound fanciful or exaggerated, it simply REFERS TO an extremely
fast mainframe that can execute trillions of calculations every second.
If we replace the pronoun: ... the term "supercomputer" is simply an extremely fast mainframe...
Antecedent singular = pronoun must be singular / antecedent plural = pronoun must be plural
Wrong: Confronted by radical changes in production and distribution, modern Hollywood studios are attempting
various experiments in an effort to retain its status as the primary arbiter of movie consumption.
Right: Confronted by radical changes in production and distribution, modern Hollywood studios are attempting
various experiments in an effort to retain THEIR status as the primary arbiters of movie consumption.
Right: Confronted by radical changes in production and distribution, the modern Hollywood studio is attempting
various experiments in an effort to retain ITS status as the primary arbiter of movie consumption.
Note that the GMAT tends to test number agreement when you can easily express the relevant concepts either in
singular or in plural form (studio or studios).
Third Person Personal Pronouns—the singular it and its, together with the plural they, them, and their.
Whenever you see one of these five pronouns, find the antecedent and check its viability
Eg: New "nano-papers" incorporate fibers that give THESE MATERIALS strength.
You may also use that or those to indicate a “New Copy” or copies of the antecedent.
Eg: The money spent by her parents is less than THAT spent by her children.
That or those indicating a New Copy or copies must be modified. In other words, you have to add a description to
indicate how the new copy is different from the previous version.
Eg1: The money spent by her parents is less than THAT SPENT bv her children.
Her company is outperforming THAT OF her competitor.
A little oddly, the GMAT insists that any “New Copy” that or those agree in number with the previous version. If
you must change number, repeat the noun.
Finally, on the GMAT, do not use this or these in place of nouns. A sentence such as This is great is unacceptably
vague to the GMAT. Also, do not use that or those in place of nouns, unless you modify that or those to make
them New Copies. Instead, use it, they, or them.
Every it and its must refer to the same singular antecedent. Every they, them and their must refer to the same
plural antecedent.
Otherwise, don’t apply pronoun ambiguity unless you are backed into a corner. If you are down to two answer
choices that are absolutely identical, except that one has they (referring to executives earlier) and the other
has these executives, go with the latter, just to be super-safe.
Eg: Researchers claim to have developed new "nano-papers" incorporating tiny cellulose fibers, which THEY allege
give THEM the strength of cast iron.
What nouns do they and them refer to? You might assume that they refers to researchers (who claim something)
and that them refers to new “nano-papers? However, this confusing switch of reference is not permitted by the
GMAT. Resolve the confusion by recasting the sentence. One solution is to eliminate they and them altogether.
Right: Researchers claim to have developed new "nano-papers" incorporating tiny cellulose fibers, which give
THESE MATERIALS the strength of cast iron, according to the researchers.
Possessive pronouns indicate ownership or a similar relation. my/mine your/yours his her/hers its our/ours
their/theirs whose - Nouns in the possessive case (with s or s’) are often poor antecedents.
WRONG: Caroline receives e-mail from friends who she knows well, from acquaintances who's names are only vaguely
familiar, and from strangers about who she knows nothing at all.
Friends is the antecedent of the first whom. (Who is incorrect because the objective case is required here. Whom is the
direct object of the verb knows\ we would say that she knows them).
Acquaintances is the antecedent of whose. (Who's is incorrect, because who's means “who is”. We need the possessive
pronoun whose to indicate that the names belong to the acquaintances).
Strangers is the antecedent of whom. (Who is incorrect because we need the objective case here. Whom is the object of
the preposition about).
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MODIFIERS
3. VERB MODIFIERS
Most basic Verb Modifier is Adverb. List of verb modifier provided below:
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