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Alcpt Form 82 Review

Create flashcards for 50 common American idioms and 50 phrasal verbs. Test yourself daily. Resources:

Narrator: Listen to the short conversation.
Woman: “I can’t believe we have to stand duty again this weekend.”
Man: “Tell me about it. I was hoping to catch up on some sleep.”
Question: What does the man mean?
(A) He wants to hear more about her weekend.
(B) He agrees that the duty is tiring.
(C) He will tell the supervisor about the schedule.

Answer: (B) – “Tell me about it” is an idiom meaning “I strongly agree.”

The ALCPT is always 100 multiple-choice questions, divided into two sections:

| Section | Number of Questions | Time Allowed | Focus Areas | |---------|--------------------|--------------|--------------| | Listening | 50 | ~30 minutes | Short dialogues, announcements, questions, and statements | | Reading | 50 | 45 minutes | Grammar, vocabulary, reading comprehension, sentence order | alcpt form 82

Important: You cannot go back to the listening section once it ends. The audio is played only once. Answers must be marked on a bubble sheet.


Audio: “I was supposed to submit the report on Monday, but my computer crashed, so I didn’t finish until Thursday. Then my supervisor was out sick on Friday.”

Question: When did the speaker finish the report?
a) Monday
b) Thursday
c) Friday
d) Tuesday

Answer: b) Thursday

Sentence: “The commander’s decision was final; there was no room for _____.”
(A) negotiation
(B) negotiating
(C) negotiator
(D) negotiate

Answer: (A) – “Room for negotiation” is the correct noun form.

Simulate ALCPT Form 82 by using any available ALCPT form but reducing your time per section by 5 minutes. This trains mental endurance.

Scrambled sentences require understanding of: Create flashcards for 50 common American idioms and


The American Language Course Placement Test (ALCPT) is a standardized English proficiency exam developed by the Defense Language Institute English Language Center (DLIELC). It is primarily used by the U.S. military and allied forces to assess the English language proficiency of non-native speakers, especially international military students (IMS) preparing for technical or professional training in English.

Among the dozens of forms available (Form 1 through Form 100+), ALCPT Form 82 has gained a reputation as a benchmark test—challenging yet fair, often used as a mid-term or final assessment in many ESL programs linked to the military curriculum.

If you have been told you need to take ALCPT Form 82, you are likely feeling a mix of curiosity and anxiety. This guide will explain everything you need to know: the test structure, content areas, difficulty level, common traps, and proven strategies to score high.