Hi,
Do we need to (or is advised/recommended) to memorize all the idioms given in the idiom chapter of MGMAT. The list seems to be long and daunting.
Will appreciate if you share how you are tackling or tackled the idioms part.
Thanks in advance,
-v-
Manhattan SC - Do I need to memorize all the idioms?!
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I would not. They are a small piece of the pie. There are usually more glaring errors in the sentences and patterns amongst error types. Learn to spot the patterns and you will be in good shape.
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Hi vishal1981,
In SCs, there are 5 major grammar rules (parallelism, verbs, pronouns, modification, comparisons) and a lump category called usage/style/idioms. Most SCs are based on 2-4 grammar rules, and you usually only need to know 2 of the rules to answer the question correctly. Unfortunately, a number of SCs will come down to usage, style and idiom rules. Certain rules are more frequently tested than others, but you won't know exactly which ones are on your GMAT until you see them. Knowledge is a powerful thing - knowing your idioms can help you to pick you up a bunch of points on Test Day, so there's an argument for learning those rules. Think of all of the math rules, formulas, content, number properties and tactics that you know already (you memorized those rules), so it shouldn't be that much trouble to learn your idioms. My advice is to learn idioms in small chunks and build up your knowledge over time.
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
In SCs, there are 5 major grammar rules (parallelism, verbs, pronouns, modification, comparisons) and a lump category called usage/style/idioms. Most SCs are based on 2-4 grammar rules, and you usually only need to know 2 of the rules to answer the question correctly. Unfortunately, a number of SCs will come down to usage, style and idiom rules. Certain rules are more frequently tested than others, but you won't know exactly which ones are on your GMAT until you see them. Knowledge is a powerful thing - knowing your idioms can help you to pick you up a bunch of points on Test Day, so there's an argument for learning those rules. Think of all of the math rules, formulas, content, number properties and tactics that you know already (you memorized those rules), so it shouldn't be that much trouble to learn your idioms. My advice is to learn idioms in small chunks and build up your knowledge over time.
GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich