5
Using common sense, we know that Mary's presents have no way
of expressing the emotion of eagerness. By rearranging the words,
we can come up with a sentence that makes more sense:
Eagerly awaiting her birthday, Mary picked up and admired her
presents many times throughout the day.
Eliminate distracters.
Most multiple choice questions provide you with four possible
answers to choose from--A, B, C, or D.
Use the process of elimination to whittle down the choices to only
two. If you remove the distracters from the equation, it will be easier
for you to get to the right answer since you'll only be choosing
between two options.
Dealing with only two choices also means you have 50% probability
of getting it right.
Watch out for qualifiers.
A qualifier is a word that enhances or limits the meaning of another
word.
Qualifiers can either be absolute (e.g., all, always, absolutely,
never, certainly, best, every, only, worst, invariably, without
exception) or conditional (e.g., usually, probably, possibly, seldom,
might, much, most, often, generally, frequently).
When you see a qualifier in one of the choices, it can either make
the option correct or incorrect.