DO
· Try to find single links and check with the options. One link might help a lot.
· See what statement hits you ‘first n fastest’. Use that statement as a base.
· Be careful to read ALL the statements, though don’t worry about placing each one.
DON’T
· Worry about getting every line in place. Your goal is to reach the destination.
· Try to necessarily find the opening or closing statement, if you can’t spot it at once.
· Look at the options BEFORE reading the statements.
OTHERS:
· Look out for pronouns. “They/theirs/them” “he/his/him” “She/her” etc, things which invariably have to
have a subject.
· When an abbreviation is used, the expanded form will usually PRECEDE it.
· Try to connect KEYWORDS – or common words/phrases in two statements.
· Try to hit links – pairs of sentences you know must follow each other.
· Once u’ve read the statements, take a look at the options. They just might help – for example, if all 4
begin with A or end with D, you have at least one statement’s position fixed
Finally, DON’T bother about putting every statement in its place. If one link is very obvious, just go for it. Of course, keep the other statements in mind – don’t ignore them. Help them to help you – not to hamper your progress. Only very rarely will you be required to put in a lot of time to get EVERY statement where it belongs – and then that question is best left alone. It’s just a speed breaker.
Para Jumbles