Q.1.
Pick the best word/s to fill the gap and make a good true English sentence or statement. It is against the law for a motorist in Britain to sound the ... ... on their vehicle, in a built-up area, between the hours of ... ... .
Q.2.
Pick the best word/s to fill the gap and make a good true English sentence or statement. Most British post-boxes are painted ... ... , but there are about a hundred across the UK that have been re-painted in ... ... to celebrate successful local athletes from the 2013 Olympic Games.
Q.3.
Pick the best word/s to fill the gap and make a good true English sentence or statement. The British flag (often called the 'Union Jack'), is recognised all over the world, but it is rather harder to draw or copy than a simpler flag with just two or three plain blocks of colour. In fact it combines ... ... of the flags of the United Kingdom countries; the only country or province not represented is ... ... .
Q.4.
Pick the best word/s to fill the gap and make a good true English sentence or statement. English is (of course!) very widely spoken, but a fairly recent analysis by the CIA in America reckoned that for every one speaker of English, there were about ... ...
Q.5.
Pick the best word/s to fill the gap and make a good true English sentence or statement. You can always tell whether the Queen is at home, at ... ... , because ... ... .
Q.6.
Pick the best word/s to fill the gap and make a good true English sentence or statement. Almost everyone must have heard of the Beatles, who 'shot to fame' about 50 years ago. They came from ... ... on the ... ... .
Q.7.
Pick the best word/s to fill the gap and make a good true English sentence or statement. There are ... ... 'pods' (= cabins) on the London Eye, to represent the number of Boroughs in London. In fact there are 33 boroughs, but they left out the ... ... one because that number is said to bring bad luck.
Q.8.
What do we put on the front of a building where a famous person has lived or worked?
Q.9.
The name of Isambard Kingdom Brunel (1806 - 1859) is best remembered for his contribution to ...
Q.10.
Pick the best word/s to fill the gap and make a good true English sentence or statement. The counties of Cornwall and Devon (and, sometimes, Somerset and Dorset) are collectively known as ' ... ... ', while the group of counties including Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex are called ' ... ... '.