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Re: Magoosh TC-109 [#permalink]
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Hey Rashed,
Thank you for the acknowledgement!
As for you problem, you know as well that there is no 1 step solution. :? The reason you are getting low scores in verbal can be multi-faceted. For example, maybe your vocabulary is not strong enough or maybe your patience during reading a long RC runs out quickly leading to faulty comprehension and eventually wrong answer. So my advice to you is that you need a strong dose of self-introspection. At least', that's what I would have done if I were facing the same problem as you are facing right now. Let's see the type of question the verbal section throws at you:
  • Sentence Equivalence
  • Text Completion
  • Reading Comprehension
  • Critical Reasoning or paragraph argument questions

For the first two types of GRE verbal questions you just need to have a strong vocabulary. Without that, it's impossible to ace those sections. The challenge in this new format of GRE is that even possessing a strong vocabulary might not be enough to ace these questions since this new GRE doesn't only test your vocabulary but also the way you understand the subtle difference in applications of the words. Just memorising the meaning of 1000 most frequent GRE words won't get you close. It's how you learn them...through association and application in your life. So if you are not doing this now, I implore you to start doing it ASAP.

Now let's see what we have in store for the last two types of GRE question- the RCs and the CRs. This section tests your ability of comprehending passages with complex mutually conflicting arguments and making a big picture out of it. Having a strong vocabulary is not needed here. but it helps a lot I have to say. Sometimes not knowing the meaning of a certain word can change your entire viewpoint about the passage. But the most important quality you have to have to ace this section is your sharp analytical skills. We all have that to varying degrees. But without using them much, those skills get blunt. Only way to sharpen them? Through practice :)

Recommendations


At the end of the day, it's only you who understands what it is that you lack which is responsible for you getting below average verbal scores. Once you are able to delineate the problems you are facing, I suggest you try to solve them one at a time. In this part I am gonna give you some recommendations for building your vocabulary:
For building your analytical and RC skills go to this forum. These are GMAT RC's which I find at least tougher than GRE RC's and if you practise them you are only gonna find GRE questions to be a lot easier.
I hope this helps you.
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Re: Magoosh TC-109 [#permalink]
Thank u brother.... This was helpful . But , I haven't understood "ASAP"?? What is ASAP??
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Re: Magoosh TC-109 [#permalink]
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As soon as possible :P
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Re: Magoosh TC-109 [#permalink]
Can you please tell me if yet is used as a contrast here? If yes, shouldn't the answer be elaboration? What I understood from the second part is that he has this habit of not living up to the expectation so the first part should contrast with the second part right? I mean let's replace "yet" with as (positive connotation) and the sentence would be something like:-

Most see Gutjens’s latest book as a(n) ---- his previous works – as he has always made it a habit of confounding expectations, and so any of his novels could bear this tag.

Don't you this positive connotation makes more sense here if we are choosing "departure from" as a choice ?

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Re: Most see Gutjens’s latest book as a(n) [#permalink]
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the entire sentence turns around the concept that the author made something different from the past and YET he is able to mix up the style and confounding the audience.

So the only logic blank is that this new work is a departure or something different from the past


Most see Gutjens’s latest book as a(n) ______ his previous works – yet he has always made it a habit of confounding expectations, and so any of his novels could bear this tag.

let me know if now is more clear to you

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Re: Most see Gutjens’s latest book as a(n) [#permalink]
he has always made it a habit of confounding expectations, and so any of his novels could bear this tag.

It means, confounding or frustrating his fans has become his habit, thus it can be inferred that everyone has a good expectation from earlier one, but every time the expectation goes down from the present one.
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Re: Most see Gutjenss latest book as a(n) [#permalink]
soumya1989 wrote:

Explanation


The clue to the question lies in the word ''confounding''. If someone attempting the question doesn't know its meaning its tough to get this one right.

Confounding means to frustrate by making something worse. So the sentence is basically trying to say that the author's new book is worse than the previous books and its a trend, he has a habit of not living upto expectations. So we will be looking for words with negative connotation in the options.

a. Coda means to conclude. So its not the answer.
b. Elaboration also doesn't fit the bill.
c. Departure from means not in sync with his previous works. It has a slight negative connotation and is the answer.
d. Same reason as b.
e. opposite of what we are loking for.

Therefore the answer is C. Please feel free to challenge my argument if you do not agree.
Cheers,
Soumya




How to find Clue Word..Is there any Specific Approach??
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Re: Most see Gutjenss latest book as a(n) [#permalink]
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Thre is not a real strategy. It seems counterintuitive, but is so. At least in my experience.

Th real clue is to read the sentence very carefully. Surely, the clue pops up in front of you, and if not , at the end of the day, the meaning as a whole is important.
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Re: Most see Gutjenss latest book as a(n) [#permalink]
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