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Clerical, Combat, General Technical, Operators and Food, Skilled Technical, and Surveillance and Communications U.S. Air Force Administrative, General, and Mechanical U.S. Navy/Coast Guard Administrative, General Technician, Hospital, Nuclear, and Operations U.S. Marine Corps Clerical and General Technician

      Chapter 2 has more information about military line scores. Check out Appendix A for more information on the scores you need to get the job you want.

      The Word Knowledge portion of the ASVAB measures your vocabulary. The questions usually come in one of two types:

       The first type asks for a straight definition.

       The second type gives you an underlined word used in the context of a sentence.

      Example Abate most nearly means

      (A) encourage.

      (B) relax.

      (C) obstruct.

      (D) terminate.

      Abate means to suppress or terminate. In this case, the correct answer is Choice (D).

      When you see an underlined word in a sentence, your goal is to choose the answer closest in meaning to the underlined word. Remember: Closest in meaning doesn’t mean the exact same thing. You’re looking for similar or related words. For example:

      Example The house was derelict.

      (A) solid

      (B) run-down

      (C) clean

      (D) inexpensive

      Here, the answer is Choice (B).

      Tip Keep in mind that although you may know the word in the question, you may not know one or more of the words in the multiple-choice answers. If this is the case, use the process of elimination to help you narrow down your choices. Eliminate the words that you know are wrong and then choose the one that’s most likely correct from what’s left.

      Webster’s Third New International Dictionary lists more than 470,000 word entries. Fortunately, you don’t need to study all of them. It’s possible to decipher English word meanings even if you’ve never heard a particular word before.

      Developing a large vocabulary takes time — often years. However, just because you have a limited amount of time to study doesn’t mean you should give up hope. Instead, focus on the tips throughout this section to help you improve your Word Knowledge score.

      From beginning to end: Knowing prefixes and suffixes

      Prefixes, roots, and suffixes are the main parts that make up words. Not every word has all three, but most have at least one. A word’s prefix — the first syllable — affects its meaning. A suffix is the last syllable in a word, and it, too, affects the word’s meaning. Roots are the parts that lie in the middle of a word. Think of roots as the base of the word and prefixes and suffixes as word parts that are attached to the base to modify its meaning. (Check out the following section for more info on — you guessed it — roots.)

      Suffixes are busy little word segments. They affect the meaning of a word and usually tell you what part of speech a word is (which comes in handy when you’re navigating through Word Knowledge questions that you can’t answer immediately).

Prefix Meaning Sample Word
a- no, not atheist
ab- or abs- away, from absent
anti- against antibody
bi- two bilateral
circum- around circumnavigate
com- or con- with, together conform
contra- or counter- against contradict
de- away from detour
deca- ten decade
extra- outside, beyond extracurricular, extraordinary
fore- in front of foretell
geo- earth geology
hyper- above, over hyperactive
il- not illogical
mal- or male- evil, bad malediction
multi-

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