This is a concept-building practice test and may not have exact structure as you would expect in the actual exam. Please exercise your discretion to attempt it or go to structured Featured Section.
Yet to be Rated
Inequalities (GMAT) tests your ability to analyze and solve linear and compound inequalities, interpret ranges, and apply constraint-based reasoning typical of GMAT Problem Solving and Data Sufficiency. It covers inequality manipulation (including reversing the sign when multiplying/dividing by a negative), absolute value inequalities, interval notation/number-line logic, and translating verbal conditions into algebraic bounds. Emphasis is on spotting hidden restrictions, combining constraints correctly, and avoiding trap moves like treating inequalities as equations or ignoring boundary cases.