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How to allocate the three parts of GMAT Chinese time properly?
The GMAT test consists of 30 minutes of analytical writing, 30 minutes of comprehensive reasoning, 75 minutes of oral part, 75 minutes of math part and two 8-minute breaks, totaling 3 hours and 46 minutes. Candidates can estimate their time for each question according to the number of questions in each part.

Taking mathematics as an example, it takes 75 minutes to complete 37 problems, and 75/37=2+ minutes. In other words, if you do each question for two minutes, you will finally get 1 minute wealth.

From the perspective of Chinese, because grammar, logic and reading topics are different. 16 grammar questions average 1.5 minutes,1/logic questions average 2 minutes, and 14 reading questions average 2 minutes. Of course, the time to read the topic includes the time to read the article. You can calculate the overall time,1.5x16+2x11+2x14 = 74 minutes.

The average time taken by China candidates for each question is:

Logic 2.0 points for reading 2.0 points for sentence correction (grammar) 1.5 points for Chinese as a whole 1.8 points for mathematics 2.0 points.

If candidates want to get high marks, they must ensure that they can basically complete their spoken English within 75 minutes. Don't give up any topic easily, and don't skip the question just because they know the fault tolerance rate. Candidates must take the completion of all questions as the basic bottom line for allocating time, otherwise the score punishment for unfinished questions is quite severe.