Why You Should Stop Picking GMAT Verbal Answers That “Sound Right”

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GMAT Verbal question writers are highly skilled at designing answer choices that appear correct on the surface but are not. Their goal is to make wrong answers feel right and correct answers less obvious. One of the ways they accomplish this is through language manipulation. They often make incorrect options echo key words or phrases from the passage or argument, while correct answers are phrased differently.

This approach works because our brains are naturally drawn to familiarity. When we see a choice that uses the same language as the passage, it feels comfortable and accurate. Conversely, when we see an answer written in new wording, we may instinctively distrust it, assuming that it must differ in meaning. However, this kind of superficial reading is exactly what the test writers are counting on.

The GMAT still tests whether you can think critically, evaluate arguments, and understand written material precisely. Success depends on more than recognizing familiar language. It depends on your ability to assess meaning and logic. Choosing an answer simply because it sounds right or uses familiar phrases will lead you directly into traps designed for that very purpose. Many incorrect answers mirror the text but introduce subtle logical flaws or shifts in meaning. You might find that a choice seems aligned with the passage but actually reverses cause and effect, adds unsupported assumptions, or distorts the author’s intent.

At the same time, correct answers often restate key ideas in new language. They paraphrase or reframe the logic without changing the underlying meaning. Recognizing this requires flexibility and a deeper level of comprehension. The GMAT rewards those who can identify the logical relationship between ideas, even when the wording looks unfamiliar.

To perform well, make logic and meaning your focus. When reviewing answer choices, ask yourself what each one actually says, not what it sounds like. Determine whether the reasoning aligns with the passage or argument and whether it satisfies the specific question task. If a choice feels right only because it uses familiar words, examine it more closely. If it expresses the correct logic in different terms, that may be the correct answer.

The key to excelling on the GMAT Verbal section is to resist the temptation of surface-level similarity. Your goal is not to find the choice that looks right, but the one that makes sense logically. Once you begin to evaluate answer choices through that lens, you will avoid common traps, improve your accuracy, and develop the kind of reasoning skill that the GMAT is designed to measure.

Reach out to me with any questions about your GMAT prep. Happy studying!

Warmest regards,

Scott Woodbury-Stewart
Founder & CEO, Target Test Prep
Source: — GMAT Strategy |