Driving Combination Vehicles Practice Test — Mississippi
12-question drill on the Driving Combination Vehicles domain of the CDL Combination exam, tailored to Mississippi licensure. Answer explanations included on every item.
This is the practice-1 practice set for the CDL Combination Vehicles exam — focusing on the Driving Combination Vehicles domain. The Mississippi Real Estate Commission administers the exam through FMCSA + state DMVs, and items below mirror the published candidate handbook.
The exam runs 20 questions and requires 80% to pass. Most candidates report needing 60–120 hours of focused review across the entire blueprint; this page contributes roughly five to seven percent of that prep time. Working the Driving Combination Vehicles objectives in isolation is the proven approach used by veteran tutors — CDL Combination questions in this knowledge area mix recognition (definitions, components, classifications) with applied scenarios that require you to weigh competing options under realistic time pressure. If you are pairing this drill with a textbook or LMS, log your incorrect answers in a single-row spreadsheet so the patterns surface after two or three sittings.
What’s tested in Driving Combination Vehicles
The Driving Combination Vehicles domain on the CDL Combination carries one of the heaviest weightings on the published blueprint. Expect to see questions that test (1) terminology and core definitions, (2) procedural sequencing — what to do first, second, and last in a multi-step process — and (3) judgment calls where two answer choices look defensible but only one is the best answer for the role being tested. The FMCSA + state DMVs emphasizes scenario-based items that simulate the day-to-day decisions of a credentialed practitioner; rote memorization will not be enough above the cut score.
Common pitfalls candidates fall into on this section include misreading qualifiers ("always," "never," "first," "primarily"), assuming generic best practice instead of the practice the exam blueprint specifically endorses, and burning time on items they should flag and return to. The questions on this page have been written with those traps embedded so you can see them coming on test day.
How to use this Driving Combination Vehicles practice set
Work each question without looking at the explanation. Mark the items you are unsure of even when you guess correctly — those are the high-leverage ones to study. After submitting, review every explanation, even on the items you got right; the rationale often introduces an exam-relevant nuance that will appear on a future drill in this series. Then move on to the next variant in the Driving Combination Vehicles sequence and repeat with a 24-hour gap so spaced repetition can do its work.
The investment to credential, including the CDL Combination exam fee, is non-trivial. Most candidates spend state varies plus study materials, application fees, fingerprinting, background checks, and the opportunity cost of study time. A retake doubles the financial cost and adds 30–90 days of delay before you can sit again. The honest payoff for thirty extra hours of high-quality drill is a first-attempt pass; this page is a piece of that thirty hours.
Mississippi state-specific notes
The Mississippi Real Estate Commission administers the CDL Combination portion of this exam. State-specific topics include the local statutes, agency rules, license-renewal cycle (every 2 years) and continuing-education requirements (60 hours of pre-licensing instruction). Items on this page that reference statute, fees or timelines reflect the rules in force as of the most recent state handbook update. Always confirm the current handbook from the official board before sitting for an exam — rules change, especially around CE deadlines and fee schedules.
Recommended next steps
After completing this practice variant, move to a different domain on the same exam to build breadth, then return to Driving Combination Vehicles the following day for retention. The full exam outline for the CDL Combination credential is published by FMCSA + state DMVs; you can download the candidate handbook directly from the agency. ExamEdge Prep tracks the published outline and updates these drills whenever the blueprint changes — typically every 36 months for IT certifications and every five to seven years for state licensing exams.