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.
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Rate, Work, and Mixture Problems – 1 (GMAT) builds foundational quantitative reasoning skills by focusing on relationships involving speed–time–distance, work rates, and weighted mixtures. The test emphasizes setting up equations from verbal scenarios, identifying constant relationships, and interpreting units correctly. It covers single-entity and combined-rate work problems, uniform and variable rates, and basic mixture formulations involving concentration, averages, and ratios. Special attention is given to common GMAT traps such as inconsistent units, incorrect averaging of rates, and misinterpretation of combined work or weighted mixtures. The test strengthens structured equation-based thinking rather than ad-hoc arithmetic.