<p>They are all finite, non-gerund, non-participial, in the present tense, and singularly conjugated to the second person. What is nonparallel about “can”?</p>
<p>lol I feel your pain…I signed up at least a month in advance yet have only managed to do two or three measly practice tests…</p>
<p>But yes, the only advice, really, is to do more tests. Practice tests really work. I find them much more useful than the crap study guide stuff…all they really do is tell and not show you about the test questions that are going to be on there. Just familiarize yourself with the style and it’s basically all the same.</p>
<p>And on a happy note, it’s actually sort of better if you cram sometimes lol. I’m saying this on sour grapes since I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t be feeling this way if I didn’t have to cram, but whatever…hey, this way more of the pressure builds up on you, enhancing your concentration and sense of purpose on test day. Not to mention you retain more of your gained knowledge.</p>
<p>…December 5…(dies)</p>
<p>They are all finite, non-gerund, non-participial, in the present tense, and singularly conjugated to the second person. What is nonparallel about “can”? </p>
<p>Well, you’re focusing on the structure of the verb. But it’s more so on the structure of the sentence. “Know, understand, and correct” is balanced as a whole rather than “know, understand, and can correct” even though the latter may have parallel verb structure.</p>
<p>I think you’re granting too special a status to the verb “can.”</p>
<p>So is it possible to go from a 1760 to a 2100 in a week?</p>
<p>Yes. Likely? Depends on the person.</p>
<p>I forgot to mention… i took the test twice… i got like 1600 the 1st time. the 2nd time i took it again and raised it like 100 points without studying or even getting adequate sleep haha…</p>
<p>what type of person would be able to do this?</p>