Table of contents | |
Introduction | |
What is an Idiom? | |
How Idioms Are Tested On the GMAT | |
The World’s Most Comprehensive GMAT Idiom List |
The GMAT will test your knowledge of idioms in several ways: from the correct use of a specific preposition to word order to forms of comparison, or a specific grammar rule. In other words, your job will be to identify incorrect usage, then identify the correct idiom in the right answer!
Your mastery of idioms must satisfy two criteria:
1) Recognition - You must be able to notice these idioms on an actual question. To do that, burn the trigger word into your memory. For example, with “regard as”, burn the word “regard” into your memory so that you can spot it on an actual GMAT question.
2) Memorization - You must memorize the matching word in the idiom pair, so that you can either correct it, or recognize that it’s already correct
1. Preposition Usage
2. Correlatives
3. Forms of Comparison
Between the two candidates, she was the better one.
Among the two candidates, she was the better one.
The first sentence is the correct one. When we compare two items (in this case, two candidates), we use the word “between” rather than “among.” So sentence #2 is incorrect because it uses “among” to refer to a comparison of two candidates.
The first sentence correctly uses “between” to compare two candidates, making it the correctly phrased one.
So now that we’ve selected “between” over “among” to compare two candidates, let’s go over another potential idiomatic error that you might encounter in comparison questions.
Between the two candidates, she was the better one.
Between the two candidates, she was the best one.
Superlatives (words like “best” and “worst”) are used when three or more items are compared. When there’s a comparison between only two items, “better” or “worse” would be correct. So sentence #1 is correct in this regard, using “better” to compare the two candidates.
Example:
The financial crash of October 1987 demonstrated that the world’s capital markets are integrated more closely than never before and events in one part of the global village may be transmitted to the rest of the village—almost instantaneously.
A) integrated more closely than never before
B) closely integrated more than ever before so
C) more closely integrated as never before while
D) more closely integrated than ever before and that
E) more than ever before closely integrated as
Solution:
We can tell this sentence might include an idiomatic comparison error because of the clue word “more.” The correct idiom to use in this comparison is “more x than ever,” not “more than never.” So we can eliminate answer choices A and C immediately.
Next, we can eliminate answer choices B and E, which include the correct phrasing (“more than ever”) but in the wrong order. “Closely integrated,” which is what’s happening “more than ever before,” comes before the idiom in answer choice B and after the idiom in answer choice E.
Answer choice C contains the correct idiomatic expression with the words in the correct order; “closely integrated” (x) comes after “more” and before “than ever.”
1. AS
perceive as, regarded as, such as [example], think of as, treat as, used as, view as
2. BY
determined by, fascinated by, hit by
3. FOR
allows for, craving for, except for, mistake A for B, provide for, rates for, responsible for, sacrifice A for B, sympathy for
4. FROM
differ from, differs from, different from, discourage from, distinguish A from B, divergent from, independent from, isolated from, prohibit A from B-ing, prohibit from, results from cause, separating from
5. IN
acquiesce in, consistent in, failed in (attempt), result in, results in effect
6. ON
based on, centers on, depend on, dependent on, lavished on, talk on, decide on (noun)
7. OVER
argument over, debate over, dispute over, quarrel over
8. THAN
better than, less than, more A than, ever more than, contend that, demand that, doubt that, enough A that B, insist that, mandate that, noted that, require that, so A that [noun]
9. TO
failed to (perform), forbid to, A identical to, intended to, linked to, native to, oblivious to, opposition to, permit A to B, persuade A to B, potential to, prefer A to B, preferable to, prior to, range from A to B, resistance to, seem to, indicate similar to, so A as to [verb], subscribe to, superior to, the right to, try to, whether to, A enough to B, a responsibility to, able to, access to, addicted to, agree to (course of action), agreed to, analogous to, appeal to, as a result of, attend to, attribute to, averse to, aversion to, cater to, compare to (if similar), compared to, conform to, contrast to, correspond to (non-human), decide to (verb), enable A to B, encourage A to B, equal to, expect to
10. OF
a consequence of, A instead of B, a sequence of, afraid of, an instance of, approve/disapprove of, capable of, Composed of, consists of, danger of, desirous of, in search of, interaction of, native of, out of, relieved of, result of B
Lets take a look at the comprehensive list of Idioms:
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1. What is an idiom? |
2. How are idioms tested on the GMAT? |
3. What is the gist of idioms for the GMAT? |
4. What are some frequently asked questions (FAQs) about idioms on the GMAT? |
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