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I'm Erika from PrepScholar GMAT, back with my number one trick for difficult Sentence Correction questions to help you catch hidden errors in sentence structure, agreement, tense, parallelism, idioms, and even more. Sentence Correction sentences are often very convoluted. Many are multiple lines long, loaded with punctuation, and totally incomprehensible at first glance. This is intentional. Test makers hide sentence errors by throwing in a bunch of extra words that mask those errors and confuse test takers. So how can we simplify these sentences to bring these hidden errors into the light? The trick I recommend to students most frequently is to totally take out any extra, descriptive information from the sentence. I usually do this in two steps. I'll explain each using a real 700 level GMAT problem. Step one is to get rid of pieces of the sentence that are set off by commas. A hard and fast rule to know for the GMAT: anything that is set off from the body of a sentence with commas is...