Course Content
English Language Skills
0/2
Mathematics & Numerical Aptitude
0/2
General Knowledge & Current Affairs
0/2
Civic Education & Discipline ! Basic Science
0/2
Logical & Abstract Reasoning ! Basic Fire Service & Safety Awereness
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Fire Service Aptitude Test 2026 Questions and Answers

This module develops candidates’ command of English to ensure effective communication, comprehension, and accurate report writing. In the Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS), officers must write clear incident reports, understand instructions, interpret safety manuals, and communicate efficiently during emergencies. Therefore, mastery of grammar, vocabulary, and comprehension is essential.


UNIT 1: PARTS OF SPEECH

Definition

Parts of speech are categories of words based on their function in a sentence.

The Eight Main Parts of Speech

Part of Speech Definition Examples Example in Sentence
Noun Name of person, place, thing, or idea fire, officer, Accra, courage The officer reported the fire.
Pronoun Replaces a noun he, she, it, they She responded quickly.
Verb Shows action or state of being run, burn, is, were The building is safe.
Adjective Describes a noun big, red, dangerous The dangerous fire spread rapidly.
Adverb Describes verb, adjective, or adverb quickly, very, well He acted quickly.
Preposition Shows relationship in, on, at, under The hose is under the truck.
Conjunction Joins words or clauses and, but, because He arrived early and prepared.
Interjection Expresses emotion Oh!, Wow! Oh! The fire is spreading!

Types of Nouns

Type Explanation Example
Common General name city, officer
Proper Specific name (capitalized) Ghana, GNFS
Concrete Can be seen/touched smoke, ladder
Abstract Cannot be touched bravery, discipline
Collective Group name team, crew

Types of Verbs

  1. Action Verbs – show physical/mental action
    Example: The firefighter rescued the child.

  2. Linking Verbs – connect subject to complement
    Example: The building is stable.

  3. Auxiliary (Helping) Verbs – assist main verb
    Example: They have completed the task.

Common Helping Verbs:
am, is, are, was, were, be, been, being, have, has, had, do, does, did, will, shall, may, might, must, can, could


UNIT 2: SENTENCE STRUCTURE AND TYPES

Definition

A sentence is a group of words that expresses a complete thought.


Basic Sentence Formula

Subject + Verb + Object/Complement

Example:
Firefighters extinguished the fire.

Subject = Firefighters
Verb = extinguished
Object = the fire


Types of Sentences by Structure

Type Formula Example
Simple 1 Independent Clause The officer arrived.
Compound IC + conjunction + IC The alarm rang, and the team responded.
Complex IC + DC The team responded when the alarm rang.
Compound-Complex IC + IC + DC The team responded, and they worked until the fire was out.

IC = Independent Clause
DC = Dependent Clause


Types of Sentences by Function

Type Purpose Example
Declarative Makes statement The fire is under control.
Interrogative Asks question Is the fire contained?
Imperative Gives command Evacuate the building.
Exclamatory Shows emotion What a dangerous situation!

UNIT 3: SUBJECT-VERB AGREEMENT

Rule:

A singular subject takes a singular verb.
A plural subject takes a plural verb.

Formula:

Singular Subject + Singular Verb
Plural Subject + Plural Verb

Example:
The officer runs.
The officers run.


Special Rules

1. With “and”

John and Peter are firefighters.

2. With “or / nor”

The officer or the firefighters are ready.
The firefighters or the officer is ready.

(Verb agrees with nearest subject.)

3. Indefinite Pronouns (Always Singular)

everyone, someone, anybody, nobody, each, either, neither

Example:
Everyone is present.


UNIT 4: TENSES AND CORRECT USAGE

Tense shows time of action.


Tense Formula Table

Tense Formula Example
Present Simple Subject + base verb (s/es) He responds quickly.
Present Continuous am/is/are + verb-ing They are responding.
Past Simple Verb + ed / irregular They responded.
Past Continuous was/were + verb-ing They were responding.
Present Perfect have/has + past participle They have responded.
Future Simple will + base verb They will respond.

Tense Timeline Concept

Past ——– Present ——– Future

Correct tense must match time reference.

Incorrect:
Yesterday, he responds.

Correct:
Yesterday, he responded.


UNIT 5: VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT

Meaning

Vocabulary refers to the words a person knows and uses.


Methods of Building Vocabulary

  1. Context clues

  2. Word formation (prefix, root, suffix)

  3. Reading widely


Word Formation Table

Prefix Meaning Example
un- not unsafe
re- again rebuild
dis- not/opposite disconnect

 

Suffix Meaning Example
-er person firefighter
-tion action prevention
-ment result development

UNIT 6: SYNONYMS AND ANTONYMS

Synonym

A word with similar meaning.

Example:
Brave = courageous
Rapid = quick

Antonym

A word with opposite meaning.

Example:
Safe ≠ dangerous
Increase ≠ decrease


Exam Strategy:

Replace the word in sentence and check if meaning remains correct.


UNIT 7: READING COMPREHENSION TECHNIQUES

Definition

Reading comprehension tests ability to understand and interpret written text.


Steps for Effective Comprehension

  1. Skim passage (get general idea)

  2. Identify main idea

  3. Underline keywords

  4. Read questions carefully

  5. Return to passage for evidence


Types of Questions

Type What It Tests
Main Idea Central theme
Detail Specific facts
Inference Reading between lines
Vocabulary Meaning in context

Main Idea Formula

Main Idea = Topic + What the writer says about the topic

Example:
Topic: Fire safety
Main Idea: Fire safety requires proper equipment and awareness.


UNIT 8: MEANING IN CONTEXT

Words may change meaning depending on sentence.

Example:
The fire spread rapidly. (quickly)
He spread the mat. (laid out)

Strategy:

  1. Read entire sentence.

  2. Replace word with possible meaning.

  3. Choose meaning that fits logically.


UNIT 9: COMMON ERRORS AND CORRECTIONS

1. Tense Errors

Incorrect: He go yesterday.
Correct: He went yesterday.


2. Subject-Verb Errors

Incorrect: The officers responds quickly.
Correct: The officers respond quickly.


3. Double Negatives

Incorrect: I don’t know nothing.
Correct: I don’t know anything.


4. Misuse of Prepositions

Incorrect: He arrived to Accra.
Correct: He arrived in Accra.


5. Confused Words

Incorrect Use Correct Use
Their coming They’re coming
Its raining It’s raining
Your late You’re late

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