When you think of the practice of law, you might picture a courtroom, a judge, and a pair of lawyers arguing on behalf of their clients — but the reality is that there's much more to it than that. Attorneys study laws and regulations, looking for loopholes that help their clients; they also question witnesses before trials, stick to legal rules, and maintain current knowledge of precedents and case law. For the most part, a trial lawyer needs experience in court to claim professional expertise. Would you trust an attorney who'd never been to court? Natural talent is one thing, but experience is what separates good lawyers from great lawyers.According to the passage,

🎲 Try a Random Question  |  Total Questions in Quiz: 249  |  🧠 Study this quiz with Flashcards
This question is part of a full practice quiz:
ASVAB Exam Reading Comprehension Questions — practice the complete quiz, review flashcards, or try a random question.

Paragraph (Reading) Comprehension sections in any exam wants to test whether you can understand what you've read so you can implement it or pass it on to others. To do well on Paragraph Comprehension, you need to have strong reading comprehension skills. You also have to be able to draw your own conclusions from what you've read. In the ASVAB exams, you'll have 22 minutes to answer 11 Paragraph Comprehension questions on the computerized ASVAB or 13 minutes to answer 15 questions on the paper version.  The questions on the Paragraph Comprehension tests ask you to: Find specific... Show more

When you think of the practice of law, you might picture a courtroom, a judge, and a pair of lawyers arguing on behalf of their clients — but the reality is that there's much more to it than that. Attorneys study laws and regulations, looking for loopholes that help their clients; they also question witnesses before trials, stick to legal rules, and maintain current knowledge of precedents and case law. For the most part, a trial lawyer needs experience in court to claim professional expertise. Would you trust an attorney who'd never been to court? Natural talent is one thing, but experience is what separates good lawyers from great lawyers.<br>According to the passage,






ADVERTISEMENT