03-18-2022, 05:28 PM
Magosh Book for Verbal: This book has about 500 questions to prepare for the Verbal section. This resource is also available in the library of this site.
Big Book: This book contains old GRE exams and is almost useless, except for the reading part! It is not available on the market as a book and only PDF files are available. Reading prepares one's mind very well to face the main test readings. This set has 27 tests, each of which has parts A and B. There are 54 episodes. See, guys, this text is very heavy! Do not feel bad when you first see him. Do not be struck. Sit with concentration and analyze the texts. That's all. Verbal Usually if you ask half the questions, it means you are fine. So do not expect too much from yourself. Little by little, you see your progress. The purpose of studying the Big Book is not to see questions similar to the exam, you are going to strengthen your reading skills with the Big Book, which has relatively difficult and complex questions and texts.
19 series of action tests: These are the continuation of the same Big Book tests and in the same order, shape and image. If you have time, add this to your program. The Pdf file in the reader is not compatible with some programs and shows blank pages. Foxit Reader program tested and answered!
Crack Princeton: You can also use this book for reading strategies and techniques.
Volumes 7 of the Manhattan Book: Volumes 7 and 8 of the Manhattan Book are for the verbal part, and Volume 7 deals specifically with reading.
5 5 Manhattan: A very useful resource for training and testing in this area
Baroness: If you work on the ETS book, you will see that the level and format of the Baroness book questions are slightly different from ETS.
Podcasts for news sites and novels: If you have the time and patience, this item will help you understand your content. Of course, this is good for someone whose time is very long. The student, for example, wants to try for another two years, and this method subconsciously raises comprehension in the long run. In time constraints, the bigbook responds better than magazines. There are two main reasons. One is that this source was written by the designers of the original exam question, and by reading this source, we get acquainted with the writing style of the original designer, and then there is a question !!!! Yes, having your own question is the best way to get challenged in a great way and you can evaluate yourself and your reasoning power from the text you read.
In fact, you expect a graduate student to be able to read, write, and analyze like an American graduate.
ECONOMIST site
NEW YORK TIMES site
NEWSWEEK site
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN site
ATLANTIC MONTHLY site
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC site
GUARDIAN site
INDEPENDENT site
WASHINGTON POST site
LOS ANGELES TIMES site
TIME site
Website ALDAILY.COM
Website THEATLANTIC.COM
Website NEWYORKER.COM
It is better to ask yourself these questions while reading these podcasts and articles:
1. What is the main idea of the passage?
2. What is the structure and flow of the passage?
3. What is the author's tone?
4. What is the author's purpose?
Note 1: There is a general reading technique that "usually" extreme answers are wrong, for example, those who say only, surely ...
Tip 2: Sometimes the technique of removing incorrect answers will easily lead you to the correct answer.
Big Book: This book contains old GRE exams and is almost useless, except for the reading part! It is not available on the market as a book and only PDF files are available. Reading prepares one's mind very well to face the main test readings. This set has 27 tests, each of which has parts A and B. There are 54 episodes. See, guys, this text is very heavy! Do not feel bad when you first see him. Do not be struck. Sit with concentration and analyze the texts. That's all. Verbal Usually if you ask half the questions, it means you are fine. So do not expect too much from yourself. Little by little, you see your progress. The purpose of studying the Big Book is not to see questions similar to the exam, you are going to strengthen your reading skills with the Big Book, which has relatively difficult and complex questions and texts.
19 series of action tests: These are the continuation of the same Big Book tests and in the same order, shape and image. If you have time, add this to your program. The Pdf file in the reader is not compatible with some programs and shows blank pages. Foxit Reader program tested and answered!
Crack Princeton: You can also use this book for reading strategies and techniques.
Volumes 7 of the Manhattan Book: Volumes 7 and 8 of the Manhattan Book are for the verbal part, and Volume 7 deals specifically with reading.
5 5 Manhattan: A very useful resource for training and testing in this area
Baroness: If you work on the ETS book, you will see that the level and format of the Baroness book questions are slightly different from ETS.
Podcasts for news sites and novels: If you have the time and patience, this item will help you understand your content. Of course, this is good for someone whose time is very long. The student, for example, wants to try for another two years, and this method subconsciously raises comprehension in the long run. In time constraints, the bigbook responds better than magazines. There are two main reasons. One is that this source was written by the designers of the original exam question, and by reading this source, we get acquainted with the writing style of the original designer, and then there is a question !!!! Yes, having your own question is the best way to get challenged in a great way and you can evaluate yourself and your reasoning power from the text you read.
In fact, you expect a graduate student to be able to read, write, and analyze like an American graduate.
ECONOMIST site
NEW YORK TIMES site
NEWSWEEK site
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN site
ATLANTIC MONTHLY site
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC site
GUARDIAN site
INDEPENDENT site
WASHINGTON POST site
LOS ANGELES TIMES site
TIME site
Website ALDAILY.COM
Website THEATLANTIC.COM
Website NEWYORKER.COM
It is better to ask yourself these questions while reading these podcasts and articles:
1. What is the main idea of the passage?
2. What is the structure and flow of the passage?
3. What is the author's tone?
4. What is the author's purpose?
Note 1: There is a general reading technique that "usually" extreme answers are wrong, for example, those who say only, surely ...
Tip 2: Sometimes the technique of removing incorrect answers will easily lead you to the correct answer.
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