GMAT Sentence Correction Tip: Spot the Differences
Don’t you hate it when you’re working a GMAT Sentence Correction problem, you eliminate a couple clearly wrong answers, and yet you just can’t seem to choose between the remaining answer choices? The longer you look at them, the more they seem to blur together, right? You start to convince yourself that one of the […]
Suggested Reading List – Reading Comprehension
GMAT Reading Comprehension questions test — get this — your ability to comprehend what you read! Crazy, huh? Sure, you can learn how to read the passages in a way that is most effective for setting you up for the best chance to identify right answers. Sure, there are tricks for figuring out the main […]
“Who” vs. “Whom” on GMAT Sentence Corrections
In his play “The Life and Death of King John”, William Shakespeare famously wrote, You are the hare of whom the proverb goes, Whose valor plucks dead lions by the beard. In “King Henry VI”, he wrote: To whom God will, there be the victory. The good news is, you don’t have to interpret Shakespeare […]
GMAT Idioms
Merriam-Webster defines an idiom as “an expression in the usage of a language that is peculiar to itself either grammatically or in having a meaning that cannot be derived from the conjoined meanings of its elements.” While a phrase like it’s raining cats and dogs is therefore an idiom, that’s not what we’re talking about […]










