Time management is a major hurdle in the reading section. Practice answering reading questions in under 45 seconds per question to ensure you do not run out of time during the actual exam. 4. Focus on Eliminating Wrong Answers
Military contexts frequently use the passive voice to emphasize the action or the object rather than the actor (e.g., "The perimeter was secured at midnight" ). Form 124 heavily tests your ability to recognize passive structures and transform them mentally into active meanings. 2. Modal Verbs of Obligation and Permission
Test-takers listen to audio recordings of questions, statements, and short dialogues. Duration: Approximately 25–30 minutes.
"We have to abide ______ the rules." Choices: a) by b) with c) for d) to a) abide by
Question 22 was a listening prompt. The proctor pressed play on the scratchy audio. A man’s voice said: “If the quartermaster had consolidated the ordnance prior to the squall, the subsequent calamity might have been averted. What would have prevented the calamity?”
Interpreting common American idioms and phrasal verbs.
This section heavily tests idioms, military terminology, everyday vocabulary, and the ability to infer meaning from vocal tone or context. Part II: Reading Comprehension (34 Questions)
To give you a realistic preview, here are five questions written in the same style and difficulty as Form 124:
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