### Q26: What does the phrase "Correction" mean? ^t90q26 - A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is... - B) I have received all of your last transmission - C) Permission for proposed action is granted - D) I understand your message and will comply with it **Correct: A)** > **Explanation:** "Correction" signals that the speaker has made an error in the current transmission and the correct information follows immediately. This prevents the receiving party from acting on faulty data. Option B defines "Roger." Option C defines "Approved." Option D defines "Wilco." ### Q27: What does the phrase "Approved" mean? ^t90q27 - A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is... - B) I have received all of your last transmission - C) I understand your message and will comply with it - D) Permission for proposed action is granted **Correct: D)** > **Explanation:** "Approved" means that ATC has granted permission for the action the pilot proposed or requested. It is used specifically in response to pilot requests. Option A defines "Correction." Option B defines "Roger." Option C defines "Wilco." ### Q28: Which phrase does a pilot use to check the readability of their transmission? ^t90q28 - A) You read me five - B) Request readability - C) How do you read? - D) What is the communication like? **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** "How do you read?" is the standard ICAO phrase requesting a readability check. The expected response uses the 1-to-5 scale (e.g., "I read you five"). Option A is the format of a readability report, not the request. Option B is not standard phraseology. Option D is plain language and not prescribed ICAO terminology. ### Q29: Which phrase does a pilot use when requesting to fly through controlled airspace? ^t90q29 - A) Would like - B) Request - C) Apply - D) Want **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** "Request" is the standard ICAO phraseology for asking ATC for a clearance, service, or permission — for example, "Request transit controlled airspace." Options A, C, and D are colloquial or non-standard terms that should not be used in radiotelephony because they reduce clarity and may not be understood by controllers in multilingual environments. ### Q30: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission is to be answered with "yes"? ^t90q30 - A) Roger - B) Yes - C) Affirm - D) Affirmative **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** "Affirm" is the ICAO-standard word for "yes" in civil aviation radiotelephony. Option A ("Roger") means receipt acknowledged, not agreement. Option B ("Yes") is plain language and not standard phraseology. Option D ("Affirmative") is commonly used in military communications but "Affirm" is the correct civil aviation standard per ICAO. ### Q31: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission is to be answered with "no"? ^t90q31 - A) No - B) Finish - C) Negative - D) Not **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** "Negative" is the standard ICAO phraseology for "no" or "that is not correct," chosen for its unambiguous clarity across languages and radio conditions. Option A ("No") is plain language and not standard, and may be misheard. Option B ("Finish") has no meaning in this context. Option D ("Not") is incomplete and not prescribed ICAO terminology. ### Q32: Which phrase should a pilot use to inform the tower that they are ready for take-off? ^t90q32 - A) Ready - B) Ready for departure - C) Request take-off - D) Ready for start-up **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** "Ready for departure" is the correct standard phrase at the holding point. Importantly, the word "take-off" is reserved exclusively for the actual clearance ("Cleared for take-off") or its cancellation, to prevent premature action on a misheard word. Option A ("Ready") is too vague. Option C uses "take-off" outside the clearance context. Option D indicates readiness for engine start, not runway departure. ### Q33: What phrase does a pilot use to inform the tower about a go-around? ^t90q33 - A) No landing - B) Approach canceled - C) Going around - D) Pulling up **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** "Going around" is the standard ICAO phrase for discontinuing an approach and initiating a missed approach procedure. It must be transmitted immediately upon the decision. Options A, B, and D are all non-standard expressions that are not recognised in ICAO phraseology and could cause confusion, particularly in high-workload situations. ### Q34: What is the call sign suffix of the aerodrome control unit? ^t90q34 - A) Ground - B) Airfield - C) Tower - D) Control **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The aerodrome control unit uses the call sign suffix "Tower" (e.g., "Dusseldorf Tower"), responsible for aircraft on the runway and in the circuit. Option A ("Ground") is for surface movement control. Option B ("Airfield") is not a standard ICAO call sign suffix. Option D ("Control") is used for area control centres, not aerodrome control. ### Q35: What is the call sign suffix of the surface movement control unit? ^t90q35 - A) Ground - B) Earth - C) Control - D) Tower **Correct: A)** > **Explanation:** Surface movement control uses the suffix "Ground" (e.g., "Frankfurt Ground"), handling aircraft and vehicles on taxiways and aprons. Option B ("Earth") is not an aviation call sign suffix. Option C ("Control") designates area control. Option D ("Tower") designates aerodrome runway and circuit control. ### Q36: What is the call sign suffix of the flight information service? ^t90q36 - A) Advice - B) Info - C) Information - D) Flight information **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** FIS units use the suffix "Information" (e.g., "Langen Information" or "Scottish Information"), providing traffic advisories and weather information to VFR pilots. Options A and B are informal abbreviations not used as official call sign suffixes. Option D ("Flight information") is too long — only "Information" is the prescribed suffix. ### Q37: What is the correct abbreviated form of the call sign D-EAZF? ^t90q37 - A) DEF - B) DZF - C) DEA - D) AZF **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** ICAO abbreviation rules for five-character call signs retain the first character (nationality prefix D) plus the last two characters (ZF): D-EAZF becomes D-ZF, spoken "Delta Zulu Foxtrot." Option A omits the middle characters incorrectly. Option C takes the first three letters. Option D omits the nationality prefix entirely. Only option B follows the correct first-plus-last-two rule. ### Q38: Under what condition may a pilot abbreviate the call sign of their aircraft? ^t90q38 - A) After passing the first reporting point - B) Within controlled airspace - C) After the ground station has used the abbreviation - D) If there is little traffic in the traffic circuit **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** A pilot may only use the abbreviated call sign after the ground station has used it first, ensuring positive identification has been established. Options A, B, and D describe situations that do not grant abbreviation rights — the initiative to abbreviate always lies with the ground station regardless of traffic, airspace class, or position. ### Q39: How should the aircraft call sign be used at first contact? ^t90q39 - A) Using the first two characters only - B) Using the last two characters only - C) Using all characters - D) Using the first three characters only **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** At first contact with any ATC unit, the full aircraft call sign must be used (e.g., "Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot") so the controller can positively identify the aircraft. Options A, B, and D all use partial call signs, which risk confusion with other aircraft and are contrary to ICAO standard procedures for initial contact. ### Q40: How should radio communication be correctly established between D-EAZF and Dusseldorf Tower? ^t90q40 - A) Tower from D-EAZF - B) Dusseldorf Tower over - C) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF - D) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The standard format for initial radio contact is: station called first, then own call sign — "Dusseldorf Tower, Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot." Option A uses the non-standard "from" format. Option B omits the calling aircraft's identification entirely. The ground station is addressed first so the controller knows the call is directed at them, then the aircraft identifies itself. ### Q41: What does readability 1 indicate? ^t90q41 - A) The transmission is readable now and then - B) The transmission is unreadable - C) The transmission is readable but with difficulty - D) The transmission is perfectly readable **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** On the ICAO readability scale (1 to 5), readability 1 means the transmission is completely unreadable — no useful information can be extracted. Option A describes readability 2 (readable now and then). Option C describes readability 3 (readable with difficulty). Option D describes readability 5 (perfectly readable). ### Q42: What does readability 2 indicate? ^t90q42 - A) The transmission is readable but with difficulty - B) The transmission is readable now and then - C) The transmission is perfectly readable - D) The transmission is unreadable **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Readability 2 means the transmission is only intermittently intelligible — parts come through but the listener cannot reliably understand the full message. Option A describes readability 3. Option C describes readability 5. Option D describes readability 1. A pilot receiving a readability 2 report should try to improve transmission quality. ### Q43: What does readability 3 indicate? ^t90q43 - A) The transmission is unreadable - B) The transmission is readable but with difficulty - C) The transmission is perfectly readable - D) The transmission is readable now and then **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Readability 3 means the transmission is intelligible but requires effort and concentration from the listener, with some words unclear. Option A describes readability 1. Option C describes readability 5. Option D describes readability 2. Readability 3 is often workable for short operational messages but is inadequate for complex clearances. ### Q44: What does readability 5 indicate? ^t90q44 - A) The transmission is readable now and then - B) The transmission is unreadable - C) The transmission is perfectly readable - D) The transmission is readable but with difficulty **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Readability 5 is the highest quality on the ICAO scale — the transmission is perfectly clear and intelligible with no difficulty. Option A describes readability 2. Option B describes readability 1. Option D describes readability 3. "I read you five" is the standard response indicating ideal communication conditions. ### Q45: Which piece of information from a ground station does not require readback? ^t90q45 - A) Altitude - B) Wind - C) SSR-Code - D) Runway in use **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Wind information is advisory and acknowledged with "Roger" — no readback is required. Items requiring mandatory readback include: ATC clearances, runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR codes, level instructions, and heading and speed instructions. Options A, C, and D are all safety-critical items that must be read back to confirm correct receipt. ### Q46: Which piece of information from a ground station does not require readback? ^t90q46 - A) Heading - B) Traffic information - C) Taxi instructions - D) Altimeter setting **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** Traffic information (e.g., "traffic at your two o'clock, one thousand above") is acknowledged with "Roger" or "Traffic in sight" and does not require formal readback. Options A (heading), C (taxi instructions), and D (altimeter setting) are all safety-critical items subject to mandatory readback under ICAO procedures. ### Q47: How should the instruction "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q47 - A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off - B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off - C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off - D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** The readback must include all safety-critical items: departure instructions (climb straight ahead to 2500 ft, then turn right heading 220), the runway designator (runway 12), and the take-off clearance. Wind information does not require readback and is correctly omitted in option C. Option A incorrectly reads back the wind. Option B misuses "wilco" mid-readback. Option D omits the runway and take-off clearance, which are mandatory readback items. ### Q48: How should the instruction "Next report PAH" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q48 - A) Roger - B) Positive - C) Wilco - D) Report PAH **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** "Wilco" (will comply) is the correct response to an instruction requiring future action — the pilot acknowledges receipt and confirms they will report at waypoint PAH. Option A ("Roger") only confirms receipt without implying compliance with the instruction. Option B ("Positive") is not standard ICAO phraseology in this context. Option D ("Report PAH") is an incomplete acknowledgement. ### Q49: How should the instruction "Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q49 - A) Squawk 4321, wilco - B) Roger - C) Squawk 4321, 131.325 - D) Wilco **Correct: C)** > **Explanation:** Both the transponder code and the frequency change are safety-critical items requiring readback. The correct acknowledgement reads back the squawk code (4321) and the new frequency (131.325) to confirm correct receipt. Options A and D use "wilco" which does not confirm the specific numerical values. Option B ("Roger") is entirely insufficient for safety-critical items. ### Q50: How should "You are now entering airspace Delta" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q50 - A) Entering - B) Roger - C) Airspace Delta - D) Wilco **Correct: B)** > **Explanation:** "You are now entering airspace Delta" is an informational statement from ATC, not an instruction requiring compliance. "Roger" (message received) is the correct and sufficient response. Option A ("Entering") is an incomplete acknowledgement. Option C partially repeats the content without proper acknowledgement format. Option D ("Wilco") is inappropriate because there is no instruction to comply with.