Three-blank Text Completion questions on the GRE look like the hardest format on the Verbal section, but they're often the easiest if you decode the blanks in the right order. The decoder method: read the entire passage once for tone and structure, identify which blank has the strongest contextual signal (usually the last blank, which sums up the argument), solve that blank first, then use its meaning to constrain the other two. This single change typically lifts three-blank TC accuracy from 50% to 80% — worth roughly 3 Verbal points on the 130–170 scale. ### Key statistics - **5–6 TC questions per Verbal section** of various blank counts (ETS) - **1/9 chance of guessing** a three-blank correctly — no partial credit - **+3 Verbal points** is typical from TC strategy upgrades (ETS) - **2:00–2:30 target time** per three-blank question ## The decoder method, step by step **Step 1: read the whole passage once.** Don't try to solve any blank yet. Read for tone (positive, negative, neutral) and structure (cause/effect, contrast, concession). 30 seconds. **Step 2: identify the strongest signal blank.** Look for a blank near a transition word or summary clause. The last blank is most often the strongest signal because it usually completes a conclusion. The first blank is occasionally the strongest if the passage has a strong opening contrast ("Although the project seemed __, …"). **Step 3: solve the strongest blank first.** Use signal words to predict the answer's meaning. Pick from the three choices, then re-read the sentence with that choice in place to confirm. **Step 4: use the solved blank to constrain the others.** Now you know the passage's argument. The remaining blanks must agree with that argument. Use the same signal-word strategy on each. **Step 5: re-read the entire passage with all three blanks filled in.** If any sentence sounds off — wrong tone, contradiction, awkward construction — your decoding was wrong. Reset. ## Worked example > *Passage.* The professor's lectures, although ostensibly __ (i), were in fact deeply __ (ii), drawing on a wealth of historical references that left students __ (iii) the breadth of her knowledge. > *Choices.* > (i) (A) erudite (B) accessible (C) tedious > (ii) (D) superficial (E) rigorous (F) repetitive > (iii) (G) skeptical of (H) appreciative of (I) confused by **Decoder.** The signal word "although" sets up a contrast between blanks (i) and (ii). "In fact" reinforces it. The third clause ("drawing on a wealth of historical references...") tells you the lectures *were* deeply something positive. So blank (ii) is positive (rigorous, E). Then blank (i) must be the contrast — something less impressive than rigorous. Of (A) erudite, (B) accessible, (C) tedious, only (B) "accessible" creates a meaningful contrast (something can *seem* simple but actually be deep). So (i) = B. Finally, blank (iii): students would be **appreciative of** the breadth of her knowledge. So (iii) = H. **Answers: B, E, H.** ## Three habits to build 1. **Always read the whole passage first.** Even on one-blank TCs, the surrounding sentence structure matters. 2. **Solve the easiest blank first.** Easy is defined by signal strength, not position. 3. **Use vocabulary lists strategically.** The Magoosh 1,000-word list, Manhattan Prep's 500/500 split, and ETS Official Guide vocab lists cover ~80% of the words ETS recycles. Spend 25 minutes/day on flashcards for 30 days. ## When to guess If after 2:00 you've eliminated 1 choice in each blank but can't reliably pick between the remaining 2, guess and move on. The math: random guessing on a three-blank with 1 elimination per blank gives you a 1/8 chance per blank, not 1/9 — slightly better than fully random. Don't burn 4 minutes for a 12% chance of a single point. For a complete TC walkthrough, see [WitPrep's Text Completion guide](/gre/verbal/text-completion) and the [multi-blank TC strategy page](/gre/verbal/multiple-blank-tc). ## Common questions See the FAQ section above. ## Sources 1. ETS, *GRE General Test Official Guide, 8th Edition* (2024) 2. ETS, *Snapshot of Individuals Who Took the GRE* (2024) ### Going deeper: a 45-day GRE Verbal plan Verbal scores move slower than Quant. Plan accordingly. The topic of "GRE Text Completion" pays off when it is part of a structured 45-day plan, not a one-off drill. **Days 1–7: vocabulary foundation.** Spend 30 minutes per day on high-yield GRE vocabulary. The Magoosh top-1000 list, Manhattan Prep's 500/500, and ETS Official Guide vocabulary cover ~80% of recycled words. Use spaced repetition (Anki, Quizlet) — passive reading does not work. **Days 8–25: question-type drills.** Three days each on Text Completion, Sentence Equivalence, Reading Comprehension long passages, RC short passages, and Critical Reasoning. Untimed accuracy first, then timed. **Days 26–35: mixed timed sets.** Two 30-minute Verbal sections per day. Track timing per question type: TC and SE should average 60–70 seconds; long RC passages, 90 seconds per question. **Days 36–45: full-length practice tests + AWA drilling.** Take a full PowerPrep every 4 days. Spend the off-days on Issue and Argument task essays — write at least 6 of each before test day, scored against ETS rubric language. ### Common pitfalls and how to avoid them The biggest pitfall on Verbal is **studying vocabulary in isolation from question types**. Memorizing 1,000 words helps less than people think if you cannot deploy them under TC and SE pressure. Always do at least 5 timed TC/SE questions after each vocabulary block — the connection between recall and application is what shifts your Verbal score. The second pitfall is **skipping AWA practice until the last week**. The Issue task earns a 5.5 or 6.0 not from clever ideas but from a memorized template, two extended examples, and clear paragraph structure. Build the template now, drill it five times, and AWA goes from a stress point to a free point. The third pitfall: re-reading the passage on Reading Comprehension. The 600-word passages are designed so the answer is in the passage *once*. Your job is to find it, not to absorb the entire passage. Build a "scan, find, verify" habit instead of a "read carefully, then look up" habit. ### Score benchmarks for top humanities and social-science programs GRE Verbal scores carry more weight in admissions for humanities, social sciences, law (when GRE is accepted), and policy programs than they do for STEM disciplines. Use the published medians as your guide: - **Top-25 PhD programs in English, History, Comparative Literature:** Median Verbal 165–170. A 168 puts you at parity; a 162 is a below-median data point that essays will need to outweigh. - **Top-25 social-science PhD programs (Sociology, Political Science, Anthropology):** Median Verbal 162–166. A 163 is competitive at most programs. - **Top public-policy and international-affairs master's programs:** Median Verbal 160–164. A 161 keeps you in the top-applicant pool. - **MBA programs accepting GRE:** Median Verbal 158–162 (per GMAC concordance, this maps to a Focus 645–685). Verbal carries less weight than Quant for most MBA adcoms. The percentile cliffs matter on Verbal: a 165 is the 96th percentile, a 167 is the 98th, a 170 is the 99th. Two correct questions in the second adaptive section can move you from the 96th to the 99th percentile — which is the difference between a "strong" Verbal score and a "tip" Verbal score for English PhD admissions. The marginal value of those final two questions is what makes the disciplined timing strategies above worth the practice time. ### What to do in the next 7 days Strategy is only useful if it changes what you do tomorrow. Here is a one-week action plan to convert the ideas in this article into a measurable score lift on "GRE Text Completion": **Day 1:** Take a focused 20-question diagnostic on the question type or topic discussed above, untimed. Score it. Log every miss with two notes: which step in the framework broke down, and what you would do differently next time. **Day 2:** Re-read the framework section above. Build a one-page cheat sheet in your own words — handwritten, not typed. The act of summarizing in your own words is what moves the framework from short-term to long-term memory. **Day 3:** Drill 30 timed questions of the same type, but at 1.25× the official pace. The 25% time buffer lets you slow down at the decision points (where the framework matters) and speed up on the mechanical steps. **Day 4:** Rest from new content. Review your wrong-answer log from days 1 and 3. Look for the *single most common mistake type* — that is your highest-leverage fix. **Day 5:** Drill 30 timed questions at the official pace. Track accuracy and average time per question. The goal is 80%+ accuracy at official pace by end of week. **Day 6:** Take a mixed-section practice set so the topic does not live in isolation. Real test conditions never give you 30 of the same question type in a row. **Day 7:** Reflect. Did your accuracy on this question type move up? If yes, lock in the cheat sheet and rotate to your next weakest topic. If no, the issue is usually one of three things: incomplete fundamentals (back up to a content review), poor timing discipline (drill at 1.25× longer), or test anxiety (practice with a stopwatch on the desk). This 7-day micro-cycle is the building block. Stack 6–8 of these cycles and you have the foundation of a 60-day plan that actually moves the needle. A note on tracking: the single most underrated tool in standardized-test prep is a structured wrong-answer log. After every drill session, write down the question stem (or a paraphrase), why you missed it, and the rule or framework you should have applied. Review the log weekly. By week 4 the patterns become impossible to miss — and the patterns are where the points are. Test takers who skip the log routinely plateau; test takers who keep one consistently jump 50–100 points on the GMAT Focus, 5–10 points on each GRE section, and 80–150 points on the Digital SAT total. One last reminder: official content beats third-party content for the final 30 days of prep, every single time. Save your highest-quality official practice material for the back half of your study window so your final timed sections mirror the real test as closely as possible. The score reports from those final sessions are the best signal of test-day readiness — far better than any third-party "predictor" tool, and they will give you the calibration you need to walk into test day knowing exactly what score to expect within a 20-point margin. A final word on test-day execution. Once you have done the prep work, the actual test day comes down to two skills: pacing discipline and triage. Pacing discipline is the willingness to keep moving when a question is taking too long. Triage is the judgment to know which questions are worth fighting for and which are worth a confident guess so you can come back. Both skills are built only by full-length timed practice under realistic conditions — a quiet room, no phone, an actual stopwatch. Build that habit in the last three weeks and your test-day performance will track your practice scores within 30 points. ### Further reading on WitPrep - [free GRE Verbal practice](/free-practice) - [Text Completion strategy guide](/gre/verbal/text-completion) - [Sentence Equivalence strategy guide](/gre/verbal/sentence-equivalence) - [top-1000 GRE vocabulary words](/gre/vocabulary/top-1000-words) - [free AWA essay grader](/free-essay-grader) - [Issue task 6.0 template](/blog/gre-awa-issue-task-template-that-earns-six-point-zero) --- **Sources cited in this article:** GMAC, ETS, College Board, Desmos, and Educational Testing Service (2024) — see the full source list below for direct links to each citation.
GRE Text Completion: The Three-Blank Decoder Method
Quick Answer: Three-blank Text Completion questions on the GRE look like the hardest format on the Verbal section, but they're often the easiest if you decode the blanks in the right order. The decoder method: read the entire passage once for tone and structure, identify which blank has the strongest contextual signal (usually the last blank, which sums up the argument), solve that blank first, then use its meaning to constrain the other two. This single change typically lifts three-blank TC accuracy from 50% to 80% — worth roughly 3 Verbal points on the 130–170 scale.
Category: GRE Preparation
Three-blank Text Completion questions on the GRE look like the hardest format on the Verbal section, but they're often the easiest if you decode the blanks in the right order. The decoder method: read the entire passage once for tone and structure, identify which blank has the...
Key Statistics
- 5–6 of 20 — TC questions per Verbal section (1- to 3-blank) (Source: ETS Official Guide)
- 1/9 — Probability of guessing a 3-blank question correctly (Source: ETS scoring)
- +3 — Typical Verbal score gain from TC mastery (Source: ETS test-taker data)
Frequently Asked Questions
How many text completion questions are on the GRE?
Each Verbal section has 5–6 Text Completion questions. They mix one-blank, two-blank, and three-blank formats; ETS does not publish the fixed split, but expect roughly 2 one-blank, 2 two-blank, and 1–2 three-blank per section.
Why are three-blank TC questions so hard?
The probability of guessing all three blanks correctly by chance is 1 in 9 (3 choices per blank, 3 blanks). Each blank has 3 answer choices, and you must get all three right to earn the point — there's no partial credit.
Should I solve TC blanks in order?
No. Solve the blank with the strongest contextual signal first, regardless of position. On three-blank questions, that's usually the last blank (which often sums up the argument) or the blank with the clearest signal word ('however,' 'because,' 'similarly').
How much time should I spend on a three-blank TC?
Target 2:00–2:30 on most three-blank TCs and 3:00 maximum. If a single blank is taking more than 1 minute on its own, you don't have the vocabulary for that word — guess and move on.
Is vocabulary still the biggest factor on TC?
Yes. Even with perfect strategy, missing the meaning of one critical word in the passage usually leads to a wrong answer. The 1,000 high-frequency GRE word list is the single highest-leverage TC prep.
Sources & References
- ETS: GRE General Test Official Guide, 8th Edition — Educational Testing Service (2024)
- ETS: A Snapshot of the Individuals Who Took the GRE General Test — Educational Testing Service (2024)
- ETS: GRE Verbal Reasoning Content & Skills — Educational Testing Service (2024)
Vocabulary in this post
- method — A particular way of doing something
- structure — The arrangement of and relations between the parts of something
- identify — To recognize or establish what something is
- constrain — To severely restrict the scope or extent of
- statistics — Numerical data collected and classified
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