- 1. A class of signature for routinary document or made for personal correspondence
A) Informal Signature B) Careless Scribbles C) Complete Signature D) Formal Signature
- 2. A group of extensor muscles push up the pen to form the:
A) Lateral Strokes B) Upward Strokes C) Downward Strokes
- 3. The visible effect of ability of movement which is an almost unconscious expression of fixed muscular habits reacting from fixed mental impression of certain ideas associated with script form.
A) HANDWRITING B) SIGNIFICANT WRITING HABITS C) SYSTEM OF WRITING D) COPY BOOK FORM
- 4. The impulse to form a letter begins in the brain writing center referred to as:
A) cerebellum B) cerebrum C) cortex
- 5. Forged signature which resembles the genuine signature written freehand is referred to as :
A) SIMULATED FORGERY B) TRACED FORGERY C) SIMPLE FORGERY
- 6. Class of signature use in acknowledgement of important document such as will, check, contract and business paper.
A) Formal signature B) Careless Scribbles C) Cursory signature D) Informal signature
- 7. Refers to a person’s name written by him on a document as a sign of acknowledgement.
A) Signature B) Stamp C) Dry Seal
- 8. Simply a signature signed on a particular condition while the signer was at a particular age, in particular physical and mental condition using implement and with a particular reason and purpose for recording his name.
A) Model Signature B) Evidential Signature C) Questioned Signature
- 9. Writing of a person who deliberately tries to alter his usual writing habits in the hope of hiding his identity
A) NATURAL WRITING B) HANDLETTERING C) CURSIVE WRITING D) DISGUISED WRITING
- 10. The result of a very complicated series of acts being as a whole or a combination of certain forms which are the very visible results of mental and muscular habit acquired by long continued painstaking effort.
A) SYSTEM OF WRITING B) WRITING C) COPY BOOK FORM D) SIGNIFICANT WRITING HABITS
- 11. Use for mail carrier, delivery of goods, purchase of equipment, an autograph collector
A) Formal signature B) Cursory signature C) Careless Scribbles
- 12. What is the focus of the writer in the second step of handwriting?
A) form of the letters B) execution of the various design of letters C) subject written to be written
- 13. Forged signature where no attempt has been made to make a copy of the genuine signature of the person purporting to sign the document commonly referred to as
A) SIMPLE FORGERY B) TRACED FORGERY C) SIMULATED FORGERY
- 14. In writing, the __________ functions as extension of the hand.
A) copy book form B) writing instrument C) system of writing
- 15. Allow anyone to make chemical or other test. You can treat or dust the document for latent fingerprints before consulting a document examiner.
A) False B) True
- 16. Is an artificial lamp, with its radiation capable of creating a florescence depending upon the material under consideration. Its wavelength appear just before the blue-violet color of the visible spectrum.
A) table lamps B) shadowgraph C) transmitted light gadget D) ultra-violet lamp E) magnifying lens
- 17. What are the ways of mutilating a document?
A) by repeated refolding B) by creasing or tearing C) by punching or cutting for storage purposes D) all of these
- 18. Improper or careless handling of document is usually because of ignorance of the investigator.
A) True B) False
- 19. Infra red light is very useful in showing the watermarks present in the document
A) True B) False
- 20. The ideal protective container for evidence document is a plastic envelope.
A) True B) False
- 21. Photograph makes clear what is otherwise hidden or indistinct.
A) False B) True
- 22. Considered as one of the powerful instrument used in the laboratory. It is a built box with a bulb place inside and a strong source of light will be transmitted either to the back or bottom of the documents under examination
A) magnifying lens B) measuring test plate C) stereoscopic binocular microscope D) transmitted light gadget
- 23. Keep documents folded in protective envelope.
A) False B) True
- 24. Is one of the more common instrument used by bank personnel of other banks. At least five times magnification, with built in lighting and base are found to be more useful.
A) transmitted light gadget B) measuring test plate C) stereoscopic binocular microscope D) magnifying lens
- 25. Examination of charred or obliterated writing can best be achieved by:
A) transmitted light gadget B) ultra violet lamp C) infra red viewer
- 26. A charred document can no longer be read.
A) False B) True
- 27. By means of photographs, a writing in questions can be accurately be enlarged so that every quality and characteristics of it can be clearly and properly interpreted whether the facts so shown points to genuineness or to forgery.
A) False B) True
- 28. A faded writing can no longer be read.
A) False B) True
- 29. They are ruled or lined transparent glasses which are used in measuring the alignment, slant, spacing or sizing of the letters, words or of the whole writing.
A) transmitted light gadget B) stereoscopic binocular microscope C) measuring test plate D) magnifying lens
- 30. In obtaining collected and dictated standards, the writing instrument and condition must be similar from that of the questioned material.
A) True B) False
- 31. Any property or mark that distinguishes.
A) document B) quality C) Characteristics
- 32. Suggest that there is an argument or controversy over the document and strictly speaking this is its true meaning.
A) EXEMPLARS B) STANDARD DOCUMENT C) DISPUTED DOCUMENT
- 33. Which of the following is not included in the principles involved in the process of identification?
A) document B) all of these C) characteristics D) none of these E) sources of standards
- 34. In obtaining requested standards, dictate all the content of the questioned material.
A) True B) False
- 35. Are those introduced into the handwriting consciously or unconsciously by the writer. They are highly personal or peculiar are unlikely to occur in other instances.
A) Individual Characteristics B) common characteristics C) class characteristics
- 36. One of the point to be considered in obtaining collected standard is the similarity of the subject matter.
A) True B) False
- 37. In obtaining dictated standards, dictation must be atleast 3 times.
A) False B) True
- 38. Which of the following is included in the principles involved in the process of identification?
A) proof of authenticity B) searching for evidential documents C) all if these D) none of these E) points to consider in obtaining standards
- 39. In obtaining typewriting standards if the typewriting ribbon is obviously new removed it to the laboratory and prepare the typewriting exemplars using from another ribbon.
A) False B) True
- 40. The amount of collected writing standards to be obtained must be between:
A) 15 to20 B) within 5 years before and after C) at least 3 times
- 41. Which of the following is an example of individual characteristics?
A) Shape, position, size, and angle of i-dot and t-crosses B) Abbreviations of letters C) all of these D) Presence of and influence of foreign handwriting E) none of these
- 42. Searching for evidential document is primarily the responsibility of:
A) document examiner B) investigator C) suspect
- 43. Which of the following belongs to example of class or common characteristics.
A) usual systematic slant B) conventional spacing C) copy book form D) all of these E) ordinary scale or proportion
- 44. Those which are given and made upon the request of an investigator for purpose of making comparative examination with the request writing
A) PROCURED STANDARDS B) COLLECTED STANDARDS C) REQUESTED STANDARDS
- 45. An instrument which can show three dimensional enlargement of the
documents or writings under examination
A) TABLE LAMPS B) STEREOSCOPIC BINOCULAR MICROSCOPE C) TRANSMITTED LIGHT GADGET D) MEASURING TEST PLATES
- 46. ▪ A lamp light with adjustable shade just like the available goose-neck lamps
for controlled illumination, needed in side light examination
A) TABLE LAMPS B) MAGNIFYING LENS C) TRANSMITTED LIGHT GADGET
- 47. is the combination of the basic design of letters and the
writing movements as taught in school which makes the writing system
A) HANDWRITING B) NATURAL WRITING C) SYSTEM OF WRITING D) COPY BOOK FORM
- 48. – writing in which the letter are for the most part joined
together
A) SIGNIFICANT WRITING HABITS B) HANDLETTERING C) DISGUISED WRITING D) CURSIVE WRITING
- 49. any characteristics of handwriting which is
sufficiently unique and well-fixed to serve as a fundamental point in the identification.
A) SIGNIFICANT WRITING HABITS B) SYSTEM OF WRITING C) HANDWRITING
- 50. any specimen of writing executed normally without any
attempt to conceal or alter the identifying habits and usual quality of execution
A) CURSIVE WRITING B) DISGUISED WRITING C) NATURAL WRITING D) COPY BOOK FORM
- 51. any disconnected forms of writing in which each letter is
written separately.
A) HANDWRITING B) WRITING C) HANDLETTERING
- 52. is a genuine signature which shall been used to prepare an
imitated or traced forgery.
A) Evidential Signature B) Model Signature C) Signature
- 53. – the act of simulating or copying or tracing somebody’s signature
without the permission of the former for profit
A) Simple forgery B) Simulated forgery C) Forgery
- 54. genuine writing, even if showing much tremor will show
some false connecting and terminal strokes made by the momentum of the hand.
A) TREMOR OF FRAUD B) Tremors of illiteracy C) GENUINE TREMORS
- 55. this is characterized by general irregularity that is not due
to weakness but to lack of skill and a mental uncertainty as to the form, a general clumsiness resulting from unfamiliarity with the whole writing process.
A) TREMOR OF FRAUD B) GENUINE TREMORS C) Tremors of illiteracy
- 56. fraudulent writing which is drawn, even though quite
perfect in general form, shows but little, if any, freedom and will often show hesitation in the wrong places and tremors wrongly placed.
A) GENUINE TREMORS B) NATURAL VARIATION C) TREMOR OF FRAUD D) Tremors of illiteracy
- 57. include both the circumstances under which the writing was
prepared and the factor which influence the writer’s ability to write at the time of the execution.
A) NATURAL VARIATION B) Writing condition C) Tremors of illiteracy
- 58. in its fullest meaning, any material that contains marks, symbols,
or signs either visible, partially visible, or invisible that may ultimately convey a meaning or message to someone.
A) Questioned Document B) Document C) Standard Document
- 59. are peculiar to a single person or thing
and one that is common to a group.
A) Characteristics B) Triple Characteristics C) Class Characteristics D) Individual Characteristics
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