All GMAT Verbal Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #412 : Word Usage Errors
Replace the underlined portion with the answer choice that results in a sentence that is clear, precise, and meets the requirements of standard written English.
The team had to work through the night cleared debris from the wreckage site.
through the night clearing debris from the wreckage site.
through the night cleared debris' from the wreckage site.
through the night cleared debris at the wreckage site.
through the night cleared debris from the wreckage site.
through the night cleared debris from the wreckage's site.
through the night clearing debris from the wreckage site.
The use of the past tense verb "cleared" in the sentence is confusing and incorrect. "Cleared" is not the main verb in the sentence, and should take some other verbal form. Using the gerund, or a verb form that functions as a noun, the correct answer choice is "through the night clearing debris from the wreckage site."
Example Question #413 : Word Usage Errors
Replace the underlined portion with the answer choice that results in a sentence that is clear, precise, and meets the requirements of standard written English.
The ancient Romans create a large network of paved roads that revolutionized travel in the ancient Mediterranean.
The ancient Romans create large network of paved roads
The ancient Romans creates a large network of paved roads
The ancient Romans creating a large network of paved roads
The ancient Romans create a large network of paved roads
The ancient Romans created a large network of paved roads
The ancient Romans created a large network of paved roads
The use of the present tense verb "create" is odd in this sentence, as the verb in the dependent clause is a past tense verb, "revolutionized." The two verbs should be in the same tense for the sentence to be logically correct. "The ancient Romans created a large network of paved roads" is the only answer choice to use the correct verb.
Example Question #131 : Verb Formation Errors
Replace the underlined portion with the answer choice that results in a sentence that is clear, precise, and meets the requirements of standard written English.
The commander was horribly rude to his underlings, cause dissension in the ranks.
The commander horribly rude to his underlings, cause dissension in the ranks.
The commander was horribly rude to his underlings cause dissension in the ranks.
The commander was horribly rude on his underlings, cause dissension in the ranks.
The commander was horribly rude to his underlings, cause dissension in the ranks.
The commander was horribly rude to his underlings, causing dissension in the ranks.
The commander was horribly rude to his underlings, causing dissension in the ranks.
The use of "cause" to connect the dependent clause to the independent clause is confusing and incorrect. A partciple form, which can make the phrase a partcipal clause, would properly connect the action of the verb to the subject of the sentence. The only answer choice which properly uses the participle to make the dependent clause a grammatically correct participial clause is "The commander was horribly rude to his underlings, causing dissension in the ranks."
Example Question #81 : Correcting Verb Errors
Replace the underlined portion with the answer choice that results in a sentence that is clear, precise, and meets the requirements of standard written English.
Tomorrow after I finish my last exam I have finished high school.
I have not
I would have
I would have had
I have
I will have
I will have
Because the event happens "tomorrow," in the future, the future tense needs to be used. "I have" is present tense, so changing "I have" to "I will have" changes it to the correct future tense.
Example Question #83 : Correcting Verb Errors
Select the underlined word or phrase that needs to be changed to make the sentence correct. Some sentences contain no error at all.
I have no reason to suspect that Matt is lying to me, but I still could not shake the feeling that he is deceiving me. No error
could
me
No error
reason
that
could
The sentence uses present tense verbs, so "could not" must be present tense as well— that is, "cannot." Remember to check that verb tenses coordinate in a sentence!
Example Question #81 : Correcting Verb Errors
Replace the underlined portion with the answer choice that results in a sentence that is clear, precise, and meets the requirements of standard written English. One of the answer choices repeats the underlined portion as it is written.
Parents often name their children after relatives, but uncommon names become popular in recent years.
becoming popular
popular have become
popular they have become
become popular
have become popular
have become popular
The underlined words make up an incomplete verb phrase, as the verb "become" is in the wrong form. They appropriate version of "become" is the perfect tense, which indicates what has already happened. "Have become popular" is the correct answer choice.
Example Question #81 : Correcting Verb Errors
Replace the underlined portion with the answer choice that results in a sentence that is clear, precise, and meets the requirements of standard written English. One of the answer choices repeats the underlined portion as it is written.
Problematically, the soldier had backs himself into a corner from which he could not escape.
had backed himself
backed him
had backs himself
had backed him
had back him
had backed himself
The sentence describes what the soldier had already done to his own body. The use of "himself" is correct and necessary to show who the action was done to, but the action occurred in the past, meaning the appropriate verb form is "backed." The correct answer choice is "had backed himself."
Example Question #82 : Correcting Verb Errors
Replace the underlined portion with the answer choice that results in a sentence that is clear, precise, and meets the requirements of standard written English. One of the answer choices repeats the underlined portion as it is written.
The boys and their father eats the meal in silence.
eaten
eating
eat
have been ate
was eating
eat
Although the verb is next to the singular noun "their father," the subject is actually compound, "The boys and their father," and therefore plural. The correct verb needs to be a plural form. "Eat" is the best choice among the answer choices.
Example Question #31 : Correcting Verb Tense Errors
Replace the underlined portion with the answer choice that results in a sentence that is clear, precise, and meets the requirements of standard written English. One of the answer choices reproduces the underlined portion as it is written in the sentence.
The arrangements prevent the groups from developing until they were changed three years ago.
The arrangements prevents the groups from developing
The arrangements prevent the groups from developing
The arrangements are preventing the groups from developing
The arrangements prevented the groups from developing
The arrangements preventing the groups from developing
The arrangements prevented the groups from developing
The phrase "until they were changed" contains a past tense verb and indicates that the use of the present tense verb "prevent" is incorrect. "Prevent" needs to be changed to the past-tense "prevented" to make the sentence grammatically correct. "The arrangements prevented the groups from developing" is the only answer choice that uses the correct verb tense.
Example Question #41 : Correcting Verb Tense Errors
Replace the underlined portion with the answer choice that results in a sentence that is clear, precise, and meets the requirements of standard written English.
We have always sing anthems that celebrate our nation.
always sing
always sang
sung always
sing always
always sung
always sung
The use of "have," a past-tense helping (auxiliary) verb, makes the verb in the sentence past-tense and perfect. However, "sing," a present-tense verb, completes the signaled past perfect form incorrectly and introduces confusion about the sentence's tense. While we could change the verbs in the sentence in many ways to correct the error, only "always sing" is underlined. This means that we can't alter "have," so we need to change "sing" to "sung" to create a correct past perfect verb ("have . . . sung"). The answer choices "always sing" and "sing always" don't correct the sentence's error. "Always sang" may look potentially correct, but "to sing" is an irregular verb in which "sang" is the past tense and "sung" is used in the perfect tense (Example: "She sang the song yesterday, after she had sung the duet."). "Always sang" can't be the correct answer, then, because it incorrectly constructs the past perfect tense. While "always sung" and "sung always" may each look like a potentially correct answer, "sung always" introduces an awkward word order that "always sung" avoids, so "always sung" is the correct answer, making the corrected sentence, "We have always sung anthems that celebrate our nation."