Graduate Management Admission Test Verbal Reasoning Exam Version 2
Practice exam for Graduate Management Admission Test GMAT under College Entry Exams (College Exams). 5 sample questions.
Sample Questions
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Question 1
Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the argument?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The argument assumes total trip time is determined solely by on-track running time at 80 mph. If the new trains need less frequent (or shorter) maintenance stops than the old trains, overall door-to-door trip time could decrease even though moving speed remains capped at 80 mph. This alternative way to reduce total travel time directly weakens the conclusion.
Rationale: The argument assumes total trip time is determined solely by on-track running time at 80 mph. If the new trains need less frequent (or shorter) maintenance stops than the old trains, overall door-to-door trip time could decrease even though moving speed remains capped at 80 mph. This alternative way to reduce total travel time directly weakens the conclusion.
Question 2
A new drug has been developed that, when administered to stroke victims within three hours after the onset of a stroke, increases their chances of making a complete recovery by 50 percent. Yet even though the drug is likely to be approved for widespread use for stroke victims by next year, a dramatic increase in the stroke recovery rate is unlikely for some time, for the simple reason that __________Which of the following most logically completes the argument?
Correct Answer: E
Rationale: The drug is only effective if given within three hours of symptom onset. If most stroke victims and bystanders fail to recognize subtle symptoms quickly enough to seek emergency care in time, few patients will receive the drug within the narrow therapeutic window. Approval alone will therefore not translate into widespread benefit.
Rationale: The drug is only effective if given within three hours of symptom onset. If most stroke victims and bystanders fail to recognize subtle symptoms quickly enough to seek emergency care in time, few patients will receive the drug within the narrow therapeutic window. Approval alone will therefore not translate into widespread benefit.
Question 3
Based on the passage, it is most reasonable to infer that the author would agree with which of the following?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The author presents defaults and delayed payments positively as effective tools but ends with the explicit warning that defaults must be a good choice for customers and that misleading them breeds distrust. This implies that deliberately steering customers into ultimately unsatisfactory options is poor long-term practice.
Rationale: The author presents defaults and delayed payments positively as effective tools but ends with the explicit warning that defaults must be a good choice for customers and that misleading them breeds distrust. This implies that deliberately steering customers into ultimately unsatisfactory options is poor long-term practice.
Question 4
The primary purpose of the passage is to
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The passage explains the psychological principles behind defaults and delayed payments, provides concrete examples of their successful use, and offers guidance on ethical application. The overall tone is instructional toward marketers on how to leverage loss aversion effectively.
Rationale: The passage explains the psychological principles behind defaults and delayed payments, provides concrete examples of their successful use, and offers guidance on ethical application. The overall tone is instructional toward marketers on how to leverage loss aversion effectively.
Question 5
The passage indicates that default options can be attractive to customers because they sometimes
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The passage explicitly states that defaults are especially powerful when consumers are indifferent, confused, or conflicted and that a default eliminates the need to make a decision. This removal of decision burden is presented as a core reason defaults increase choice uptake.
Rationale: The passage explicitly states that defaults are especially powerful when consumers are indifferent, confused, or conflicted and that a default eliminates the need to make a decision. This removal of decision burden is presented as a core reason defaults increase choice uptake.