I am surprised no one has fielded this question. To hit a 46+ on Verbal, you may be talking about missing 2-3 questions out of all 36, probably Hard ones at that--a tough task, but one that can be done. If you do not have the Official Guide, then you should get your hands on a copy to practice hundreds of official (retired) questions. For an excellent discussion of the different content areas, you might want to swing by GMAT Club or other dedicated sites and forums.
Any worthwhile tutor would point out that qualitative study is better than quantitative. Going through reams of pages of questions will not help you improve too much if you keep making the same mistakes. It is much more important to sit down and analyze what makes the incorrect answer choices incorrect, not simply peek at what the correct answer may be. (You will tell yourself that you will not make the same mistake again once you know the answer, but trust me, on a similar problem, you probably will, since you never took the time to properly address your incorrect line of reasoning.) With dedicated self-study, perhaps a dedicated guidebook or two, and, if necessary, a dedicated tutor, you can achieve a great Verbal score in two months' time, but it will take a lot of practice and consistent results on practice tests.
Good luck with your studies.