Guide to SC

Essential Guide to GMAT Grammar and Sentence Correction – eBook

This book is an absolute MUST if you want to ensure a perfect SC score.
This Grammar book gives you a thorough yet concise background of English grammar that you  need to succeed in the GMAT Sentence Correction Section.

CR your weak area? Click here for Essential Guide to GMAT Critical Reasoning
RC your weak area? Click here for Essential Guide to GMAT Reading  Comprehension

GMAT grammar can be a daunting experience for the most fluent students, leave alone for someone whose first language is not english.

In fact there are hundreds of brilliant students from the Non English speaking world, who easily score in the 99 percentile in GMAT Math, but struggle desperately when it comes to GMAT Verbal.

Even if you are comfortable with the English language, you might struggle with the 700+ type of questions, where the GMAT Sentence correction section tests deeper understanding of Grammar rather than just testing the standard rules that the commonly available guides provide.

However, if you are NOT comfortable with the nuances of English Grammar, the common list of standard rules will not make much sense anyways. What you need is a thorough understanding of GMAT grammar behind the Sentence Correction section.

Unfortunately, this is easier said than done. It can take months, if not years to get a  good grasp of the grammar fundamentals. The English speakers study the language for more than 10 years starting from primary school, and still struggle with the SC section of the GMAT.

So how do you manage your GMAT Verbal prep? Especially in the Sentence Correction section, where grammar plays a much bigger part than in the GMAT Reading Comprehension or the GMAT Critical Reasoning Section.

The best and the most fail-proof way is to get a thorough background on the specific elements of grammar tested in the GMAT.

You need to watch out though. There are many English grammar books in the market that will teach you much more than you need for the GMAT, and you can spend weeks studying something that is unlikely to have much effect on your Verbal score.

What you need is a concise book that clearly outlines the topics that are tested in the GMAT, and explains these in detail with real examples from the GMAT.

This is where the ‘Winners’ Guide to GMAT Grammar & Sentence Correction’ comes in.

Over the years that I have taught the GMAT Verbal, and from my own GMAT experience (I have scored 99 percentile in GMAT Verbal. See my score here), I have compiled this book to specifically. Over the years that I have taught the GMAT Verbal, and from my own GMAT experience (I help out students who want to score big on the Sentence Correction section.

This book will give you confidence and clarify the quagmire of English Grammar so that you can tackle the sentence correction section successfully.

Some of the unique features of this book are:

It gives you a concise background of the English Language without going into details that you do not require for the GMAT Sentence Correction section

It explains, with multiple examples, the essential concepts and structures of GMAT Grammar.

It takes you through the common concepts tested on the GMAT Sentence Correction section and provides detailed background so that these concepts are easier to absorb.

Provides a comprehensive list of GMAT Idioms (Over 200 Idioms tested in the GMAT)

Over 150 unique Sentence Correction Questions with explanatory answers.

Why Should you Buy this Guide?

If you struggle with the answer choices in the GMAT Sentence correction section, even after going through the standard books, If you have tried to go through standard Grammar books and given up, or if you simply need a good grasp of the English Grammar relevant for Sentence Correction, then this is what you need.

One of the most important parameter that the admissions committee looks for, especially in case of Non Native speakers, is their English score. Your Verbal score doesn’t have to be in the nineties, but the closer the better. It has to be high enough to convince them that you deserve that offer letter.

This guide has been especially written from real life experience teaching the nuances of Sentence correction to hundreds of students..

It includes Key grammar concepts necessary to crack the Sentence Correction section and scores of examples to illustrate these concepts.

This  guide was originally prepared exclusively for students who take private coaching from my- gmat.

Now it is being made available for anyone who has trouble with the GMAT sentence correction section..

ALL this for a special Introductory Price of Only USD 25.00

[wpecpp name=”Essential Guide to GMAT Grammar and SC” price=”25″]

Check out our Special Verbal Offer & get a 30% discount:  click here for Details.

Money Back Guarantee

Try this eBook for a FULL TWO MONTHS at OUR COST

If you are not happy with this guide for whatever reason, you can ask for a full refund, NO QUESTIONS ASKED at anytime.

Just Quote the Paypal Receipt Number and the money will be refunded to you.
No questions asked!!

Here are some of the topics you will cover in the Winner’s Guide to GMAT Grammar & Sentence Correction.

The English Language: A brief background

Beginning—Different Sources—The Present
Three Essentials of Good Writing

Divisions of Grammar

The English Language in a Nutshell

The Sentence

Sentence Classification

Letters

Syllables and Words

Sentence Correction on the GMAT

Grammar Errors commonly Tested on the GMAT

Pronoun errors

Subject-verb errors

Misplaced modifier Errors

Tenses

What the GMAT SC Section Does NOT TEST

Sentence Correction Pitfalls to Avoid

THAT FOR SO
THESE—THOSE
THIS MUCH—THUS MUCH
FLEE—FLY
THROUGH—THROUGHOUT
VOCATION AND AVOCATION
WAS—WERE
A OR AN
ATTRACTION
THE SPLIT INFINITIVE
ONE
ONLY
ALONE
OTHER AND ANOTHER
AND WITH THE RELATIVE
LOOSE PARTICIPLES
BROKEN CONSTRUCTION
DOUBLE NEGATIVE
FIRST PERSONAL PRONOUN
SEQUENCE OF TENSES
BETWEEN—AMONG
LESS—FEWER
FURTHER—FARTHER
EACH OTHER—ONE ANOTHER
EACH, EVERY, EITHER, NEITHER
NEITHER-NOR
NONE
RISE-RAISE
LAY-LIE
SAYS I—I SAID
IN—INTO
EAT—ATE
SEQUENCE OF PERSON
AM COME—HAVE COME
PAST TENSE—PAST PARTICIPLE
PREPOSITIONS AND THE OBJECTIVE CASE
SUMMON—SUMMONS
UNDENIABLE—UNEXCEPTIONABLE

Superfluous Words

A Comprehensive List of GMAT Idioms

Sentence Correction Practice

 

For a strictly limited time, you get a free gift with your copy of the ‘Winners guide to GMAT Grammar and Sentence Correction’.

 

FREE GIFT

Learning to Use Your Mind  by H. D. Katsun, PH.D.

You will find this book invaluable not only for your GMAT prep, but also for life at the Business School and beyond.

Among other things in this seventy page book, you will learn about:

Formation of Study Habits

Brain activity during study

Aids to memory

How to retain attention over long periods

How to become interested in a subject

Bodily conditions for effective studying

……… and much more.

Click here to read how I got a 780 score in the GMAT.

Click here to Learn about the Common GMAT pitfalls and how to avoid them.

Click here for the complete Product Range & Special Discounts

Got Questions?   Check out our FAQ Page here

Chris L. used the ‘Essential Guide to GMAT Grammar & Sentence Correction’. 

Here is what he has to say!

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