This sample mirrors the Verbal Reasoning section of the current GMAT™ Focus Edition: 23 questions to be completed in 45 minutes, drawn only from Reading Comprehension and Critical Reasoning (the Focus Edition no longer tests Sentence Correction).
Each question has five answer choices, A through E, and exactly one is correct. Choose the best available answer; on Critical Reasoning, that means the choice that most precisely does what the question asks. Tap a choice to select it — nothing is marked right or wrong until you submit.
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Section
Reading Comprehension
Passages 1–3 · Questions 1–10
Passage 1Social Science
The standard justification for patents holds that, by granting an inventor a temporary monopoly, society induces investment in research that imitation would otherwise discourage. Without some means of excluding copyists, the reasoning runs, firms could not recover the cost of discoveries that are expensive to make but cheap to reproduce. Recent scholarship, however, has questioned how well this rationale fits the historical record.
Studies of nineteenth-century industries find that bursts of innovation often preceded, rather than followed, the extension of patent protection, and that in several fields rapid progress occurred where patents were weak or went unenforced. Some economic historians argue that what mattered was not legal exclusivity but the size of the market and the free circulation of technical knowledge among rival workshops.
Defenders of the system respond that the absence of a visible patent does not mean the absence of its incentive: firms in weakly protected fields may have relied instead on secrecy or on a lead-time advantage, and these substitutes carry costs of their own. Moreover, the industries cited as counterexamples were often ones in which a single discovery yielded many small improvements—a setting in which patents are least necessary and imitation least damaging.
The disagreement is hard to settle because the relevant comparison—innovation with patents versus innovation without them—can rarely be observed directly. What the evidence does suggest is that the value of patent protection varies widely across industries, so that a rule well suited to pharmaceuticals may serve software poorly, and a single uniform policy is unlikely to fit every field equally well.
Questions 1–4 refer to the passage above.
1Reading Comprehension — Main Idea
The primary purpose of the passage is to
Why
The passage lays out the standard rationale for patents, presents recent challenges to it, gives the defenders' reply, and closes by stressing how hard the comparison is to make—choice (C). (A) and (D) are far stronger than the cautious text. (B) names a detail, and (E) a recommendation the passage never makes.
2Reading Comprehension — Inference
The passage suggests that the nineteenth-century cases cited by economic historians matter because they
Why
These cases are offered to show innovation flourishing where patents were weak or unenforced, which is (A). (B) and (D) overstate; the passage draws no such absolute conclusions. (C) reverses the historians' point about freely circulating knowledge, and (E) is unsupported.
3Reading Comprehension — Detail
According to the passage, defenders of the patent system respond to the counterexamples by arguing that firms in weakly protected fields
Why
The third paragraph says such firms 'may have relied instead on secrecy or on a lead-time advantage, and these substitutes carry costs of their own'—choice (E). (A), (B), (D), and (C) state claims the defenders do not make and the passage does not support.
4Reading Comprehension — Function
The author's remark that a rule well suited to pharmaceuticals may serve software poorly chiefly serves to
Why
The contrast illustrates the closing point that 'the value of patent protection varies widely across industries,' so a single uniform policy fits poorly—choice (B). (A) and (D) overreach, (C) inverts the example, and (E) misstates the author's measured stance.
Passage 2Natural Science
Octopuses present a puzzle for theories of intelligence. They solve novel problems, learn by observation, and show what looks like play, yet they are molluscs, separated from the vertebrates by more than half a billion years of evolution. Their nervous system is organized very differently from a mammal's: most of their neurons lie not in a central brain but distributed through the arms, each of which can carry out complex movements with a degree of local autonomy.
This arrangement has tempted some writers to describe the octopus as a creature of 'distributed' cognition, as though each arm thought for itself. The experimental evidence is more guarded. Arms severed from the central brain can perform certain reflexive actions, but coordinated, goal-directed behavior—reaching around a barrier toward food the animal has seen—appears to require the central brain, which can override and direct the periphery.
What the octopus does illustrate is that sophisticated behavior need not arise from a brain built on the vertebrate plan. If problem-solving evolved independently in a lineage so remote from our own, then the features we tend to treat as prerequisites for intelligence may be only one solution among several. The harder question—whether the octopus experiences its world in any sense we would recognize—remains, for now, beyond the reach of the available methods.
Questions 5–7 refer to the passage above.
5Reading Comprehension — Main Idea
The primary purpose of the passage is to
Why
The passage uses the octopus to make a broader point: 'sophisticated behavior need not arise from a brain built on the vertebrate plan'—choice (C). (A) is the loose view the passage tempers, (B) is what it calls unanswerable, and (D) and (E) misstate its emphasis.
6Reading Comprehension — Inference
The passage implies that describing the octopus as a creature of 'distributed' cognition is misleading because
Why
The second paragraph grants that severed arms manage reflexes, but says directed behavior 'appears to require the central brain, which can override and direct the periphery'—so full autonomy is overstated, choice (A). (C), (B), (D), and (E) each contradict the passage.
7Reading Comprehension — Detail
According to the passage, which of the following is described as still lying beyond current methods?
Why
The final sentence calls the question of whether the octopus 'experiences its world in any sense we would recognize' one that 'remains, for now, beyond the reach of the available methods'—choice (D). The other options name things the passage treats as known or observable.
Passage 3Humanities
Histories of the Industrial Revolution once described a sudden break: a cluster of inventions in late-eighteenth-century Britain that, within a generation or two, transformed an agrarian society into an industrial one. The very word 'revolution' encoded this sense of rupture, and for a long time the chief task of historians was to explain why the break happened where and when it did.
More recent work has complicated the picture. Quantitative studies of output and productivity suggest that growth in the decades traditionally singled out was slower and more uneven than the dramatic narrative implied; many sectors changed little, and the gains were concentrated in a few industries. On this gradualist account, the period looks less like an explosion than like the acceleration of changes already long under way.
Defenders of the older view do not deny the numbers, but question what they measure. Aggregate growth rates, they argue, can understate a transformation whose deepest effects were qualitative—new ways of organizing work, new relations between town and country—and were felt unevenly precisely because they were genuinely novel. The debate has thus become less about whether change occurred than about how a transformation should be measured, and whether the tools of economic history can capture what contemporaries plainly experienced as upheaval.
Questions 8–10 refer to the passage above.
8Reading Comprehension — Purpose
The primary purpose of the passage is to
Why
The passage moves from the old 'rupture' view to the gradualist revision and the older view's reply, ending that the debate is now 'about how a transformation should be measured'—choice (E). (A) and (B) overstate, (C) takes one side, and (D) names a level of detail the passage does not provide.
9Reading Comprehension — Inference
The passage suggests that the gradualist account rests largely on the observation that
Why
The second paragraph grounds the gradualist case in quantitative findings that growth 'was slower and more uneven than the dramatic narrative implied'—choice (B). (A), (C), (D), and (E) state claims the passage either contradicts or never makes.
10Reading Comprehension — Function
The author notes that defenders of the older view 'do not deny the numbers' chiefly in order to
Why
The clause sets up the older view's reply that aggregate growth rates 'can understate a transformation whose deepest effects were qualitative,' so the quarrel is over interpretation, not accuracy—choice (C). (A), (B), (D), and (E) overstate or misread the passage's balance.
Section
Critical Reasoning
Questions 11–23
11Critical Reasoning — Weaken
A bookstore began playing classical music in its aisles, and over the next three months its average sales per customer rose by 9 percent. The owner concluded that the music had relaxed shoppers and led them to spend more, and plans to play classical music in a second location.
Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the owner's conclusion?
Why
The conclusion is causal—music raised spending. (A) supplies an alternative cause acting over the same months (a prominent display of popular titles) that could explain the rise. (D) rules out a general trend and so strengthens the case; (B), (C), and (E) bear on cost and preference, not on what drove sales.
12Critical Reasoning — Assumption
A city will replace the sodium streetlights along its main avenue with brighter LED lights, reasoning that because better-lit streets are easier to see along, the change will reduce the number of nighttime traffic accidents on the avenue.
The city's reasoning depends on which of the following assumptions?
Why
Better lighting cuts accidents only if drivers do not offset the gain by, say, speeding up because the road feels safer; (E) is the needed assumption. (B) helps but a milder version is implied rather than required; (A), (D), and (C) concern cost, novelty, and traffic volume, none of which the inference depends on.
13Critical Reasoning — Strengthen
A researcher hypothesizes that adding a short daily recess improves elementary students' focus during afternoon lessons. In a trial, one school added a recess and its teachers reported better afternoon focus than they had reported before the recess was added.
Which of the following, if true, most strengthens the support for the hypothesis?
Why
The worry is that focus might have improved for unrelated reasons. (B) rules that out with a comparable no-recess school showing no change, tying the gain to the recess. (A) and (C) concern enjoyment and prior opinion; (D) raises a measurement doubt; (E) introduces an unrelated change that, if anything, muddies the result.
14Critical Reasoning — Evaluate
After a publisher began offering its magazine in a digital edition, total print sales fell by 7 percent over the next year. An executive argues that the digital edition is cannibalizing print sales and should be discontinued.
The answer to which of the following questions would be most useful in evaluating the executive's argument?
Why
The argument blames the digital edition for the print decline. (D) tests for an industry-wide trend: if comparable print-only magazines fell just as much, the digital edition is not the cause. (A), (C), (B), and (E) supply context but do not isolate whether the digital edition caused the drop.
15Critical Reasoning — Boldface
A manager proposes switching the team to a four-day week to cut overhead costs. An outside consultant predicts that the shorter week will lower the firm's office expenses as intended. Still, internal surveys show that several key clients expect same-day responses that a four-day week could make harder to provide, a loss that might exceed the savings.
In the argument, the two portions in boldface play which of the following roles?
Why
The first boldface (the consultant's prediction of lower costs) supports the proposal; the second (clients' same-day expectations) is a consideration weighing against it—choice (C). (A) and (D) mislabel the first; (B) wrongly calls it an objection; (E) wrongly makes the second the conclusion.
16Critical Reasoning — Explain the Discrepancy
A factory installed new machinery designed to reduce the number of defective units it produces, and the rate of defects per unit did indeed fall. Yet in the months after the new machinery was installed, the total number of defective units the factory shipped each month rose.
Which of the following, if true, best explains the result described above?
Why
A lower defect rate can still yield more defective units if output grows enough; (A) supplies that surge in volume. (B), (C), (D), and (E) concern cost, awareness, competitors, and weight, none of which explains why the total count of defects rose.
17Critical Reasoning — Flaw
Critic: A survey found that people who own pets report feeling less lonely than people who do not. Clearly, then, anyone who is feeling lonely should go out and acquire a pet, since doing so is certain to relieve the loneliness.
The critic's reasoning is most vulnerable to the objection that it
Why
The survey shows only an association; the critic leaps to a causal, guaranteed cure—perhaps less lonely people are likelier to get pets, not the reverse. That is (E). (A), (C), (D), and (B) name weaknesses the argument does not actually turn on.
18Critical Reasoning — Inference
At a certain company, every employee in the research division holds an advanced degree. No employee in the sales division holds an advanced degree.
If the statements above are true, which of the following must also be true?
Why
If all research staff hold advanced degrees and no sales staff do, no one can be in both divisions—choice (D) follows necessarily. (A), (C), and (E) make claims about proportions or other divisions the premises do not fix, and (B) need not be true at all.
19Critical Reasoning — Strengthen
Ecologist: On this island, the lizards that bask on dark rocks warm up faster in the morning than those that bask on pale sand. I propose that the lizards prefer dark rocks because basking there lets them begin hunting earlier in the day.
Which of the following, if true, most strengthens the ecologist's hypothesis?
Why
The hypothesis is that lizards choose dark rocks to start hunting earlier. (B) supports the payoff of doing so—earlier hunters catch more prey—making the proposed motive credible. (A), (C), (D), and (E) concern distribution, size, territory, and predators, none of which bears on whether earlier hunting helps.
20Critical Reasoning — Weaken
A town added a dedicated bike lane to its main road, and in the following year the number of cyclists using that road rose sharply. Officials concluded that the new lane had persuaded residents to take up cycling who had not cycled before.
Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the officials' conclusion?
Why
The conclusion is that the lane created new cyclists. (A) undercuts it: the riders are mostly existing cyclists who shifted over from side streets, not newcomers to cycling. (B), (C), (D), and (E) concern cost, perceived safety, traffic, and other towns, not whether cycling actually grew.
21Critical Reasoning — Assumption
To cut its electricity use, an office plans to install motion sensors that switch off the lights in any room left empty for ten minutes, reasoning that lights will then no longer burn in unoccupied rooms and the building's power use will fall.
The plan depends on which of the following assumptions?
Why
The savings exist only if lights are currently left on in empty rooms; if they never are, the sensors save nothing. So (C) is assumed. (A), (B), (D), and (E) concern cost, comfort, relative usage, and rivals—none of which the inference about power savings requires.
22Critical Reasoning — Explain
A bakery raised the price of its signature loaf by 15 percent. Although it sold fewer loaves in the month after the increase, its total revenue from that loaf went up.
Which of the following, if true, best explains why the bakery's revenue from the loaf rose?
Why
Revenue is price times quantity. If the percentage of loaves lost was smaller than the 15 percent price rise, the gain per loaf outweighs the lost sales and revenue climbs—choice (D). (A), (C), (B), and (E) are plausible details but none directly accounts for revenue rising despite lower volume.
23Critical Reasoning — Principle (Application)
Principle: A reviewer should disclose a personal connection to the maker of a product only when that connection could reasonably be thought to bias the review; a connection too remote to affect the reviewer's judgment need not be disclosed.
Which of the following judgments conforms most closely to the principle stated above?
Why
The principle requires disclosure exactly when a connection could reasonably be thought to bias the review. A spouse employed by the maker is such a connection, and it was disclosed—so (E) conforms. (B) and (D) hide connections that plainly could bias the review, violating the rule; (A) and (C) disclose connections too remote to require it.
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