GRE · Verbal: Sentence Equivalence · India
Verbal: Sentence Equivalence for the GRE Exam — Indian candidates
7% of the GRE test plan. Sentence Equivalence items present a single-blank sentence and require selecting two words — from six options — that both complete the sentence logically and produce sentences similar in meaning. Calibrated for Indian candidates.
For candidates aiming to clear this exam on the first attempt, the difference between Band 6 and Band 7+ — or "passing" and "comfortable margin" — usually comes down to fluency on a small number of high-leverage topics. Verbal: Sentence Equivalence sits at roughly 7% of the Graduate Record Examinations content distribution — Sentence Equivalence is unique to the GRE: you must select exactly two answer choices that (1) each individually make the sentence meaningful and (2) produce roughly equivalent sentences. This requires understanding both the sentence logic and the relationships between the six vocabulary options — identifying synonymic pairs that share the precise nuance the context requires. Neither word alone, nor a near-synonym that shifts meaning, earns credit. In 2024, the published overall rate for GRE candidates globally was 50% (ETS — GRE Snapshot Report (Indian test-takers; V+Q ≥ 310 cohort threshold)). For Indian candidates preparing for GRE, the calibration of study to local context matters: India is the world's largest single-country exam market. Most national exams (JEE, NEET, GATE, CUET) are conducted by NTA in English plus regional language editions.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Selecting two words that are near-synonyms of each other but not of your predicted blank — the words must work in the sentence, not just resemble each other
- !Choosing only one strong word and a weaker match to "complete the pair" — both words must produce sentences that are genuinely similar in meaning
- !Rushing past the "similar meaning" requirement and treating the question as a one-blank Text Completion
- !Not checking whether both selected words produce logically consistent sentence meanings when independently substituted back
Study tips
- 1Always predict what word class and meaning belongs in the blank before reading the six options — this prevents being distracted by plausible but contextually wrong choices.
- 2Look for synonym pairs among the six choices. GRE Sentence Equivalence almost always contains exactly one or two synonym pairs; your job is to identify which pair the context requires.
- 3After selecting your pair, substitute each word individually back into the sentence and confirm both produce equivalent and grammatically natural sentences.
- 4Study vocabulary in synonym clusters (e.g., verbose/prolix/loquacious; taciturn/laconic/reticent) to recognize GRE synonym pairs quickly.
- 5For candidates in India, GRE test windows are typically denser in the spring; book test centres in metro cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Kolkata) early to secure preferred dates.
Sample GRE Verbal: Sentence Equivalence questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real GRE questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
The documentary's tone was surprisingly _______, given the gravity of the subject matter — the director seemed determined to treat a weighty issue with lightness and wit.
- Aelegiac
- Bmordant
- CjocularCorrect
- Dtrenchant
- Efacetious
- Fsolemn
Why this answer?
"Lightness and wit" indicates the blank needs a word meaning playfully humorous or lighthearted. "Jocular" (given to joking) and "facetious" (treating serious matters with inappropriate humor) both fit and produce sentences with equivalent meaning. "Elegiac" (mournful) contradicts "lightness." "Mordant" and "trenchant" mean sharply critical — not simply light. "Solemn" is the opposite of the prediction. The correct pair is jocular / facetious. (Illustrative.)
Frequently asked questions
How is Sentence Equivalence scored — do I get partial credit for one correct word?
How many Sentence Equivalence questions are on the GRE?
What is the GRE Verbal: Sentence Equivalence pass rate for Indian candidates?
How long should Indian candidates study Verbal: Sentence Equivalence for the GRE?
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Related study guides
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- Verbal: Sentence Equivalence for GRE — U.S. candidatesSame Verbal: Sentence Equivalence topic, different locale framing
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Regulatory citation: ETS GRE General Test Preparation — Verbal Reasoning question types and conventions.