Hi all, my husband took his life in the UK test today and passed. He is originally from Guyana, so he needed to pass to apply for his citizenship.
I was born in England and lived here all my life, he asked me to try a practice test online and I'm a bit embarrassed to say that I could only score 15 out of 24, this makes me wonder how many people who were born here could actually pass a Life in the UK test like this one: https://uktest.net/life-in-the-uk-test-practice.html
21. But I think they got "TV license is required in any household that receives television signals via TV, a digital box, a computer, or a mobile phone" wrong. Surely it's to do with live broadcasts only ?
I scored 21/24. i agree that a couple of the questions are worded very strangely, but I have learnt something by doing this test. That Great Britain and UK are not the same thing. I honestly didnt realise that GB doesn't include NI.
NB: Every time one clicks on that link a DIFFERENT selection of questions are presented to the user. So, while I scored maximum marks on the two dozen questions that I was presented with, I might possibly have fared far worse with the questions that other people here have been seeing.
I wondered if I had missed a question when I saw OG's answer so went back to check. Apparently the questions change each time .This time I got 23/24. We are all answering a different set of questions.
>>> I have learnt something by doing this test. That Great Britain and UK are not the same thing. I honestly didnt realise that GB doesn't include NI
Really, Maydup? I can only assume that you're not aware of the name of the country that you live in, which is 'United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland'. It's on the front of your passport!
Prudie after you take the test if you scroll down then it tells you which ones you got wrong...I failed the language spoken at court in 1400 (!) and the year women were given the vote.
Great Britain is a geographical entity, the United Kingdom is a political one - of the British Isles Great Britain is the largest, hence the "Great"; contrary to common belief it is not a mark of greatness in the other sense.