by StaceyKoprince Thu Jul 31, 2008 12:54 am
Seriously. :) There are so many idioms and you could literally spend forever trying to learn them all. Make sure you know all of the other error types cold. If you run across a particular idiom you didn't know on an OG (or other official, past test) question, write it down. Keep that list and if you see the same idiom a second time (again, from an official source), star it.
Only study the ones with the stars. Otherwise your list will be way to long. :) Also, don't put idioms on the list that you only see on our (or any other test prep company's) material. We don't have the official list that they work from, and we sometimes use things that they haven't released on an official question. (The previous "we"s refer to all test prep companies. This next one is just about ManhattanGMAT). We (MGMAT) have been making an exhaustive list of idioms tested on official, released test questions and we're going to publish this in a couple of months, when it's done. So we'll really know which ones they do test and which ones they don't. (Well, most of them, anyway - they could still test some idiom for which they haven't released a past test question.)
Stacey Koprince
Instructor
Director, Content & Curriculum
ManhattanPrep