Test your general knowledge with this 5 question quiz. How many can you get right?
Пікірлер: 20
@rosaliaaihuki9755 Жыл бұрын
3/5 Failed No 4 &5
@superspike769Ай бұрын
Same. Said ww2 for 4 and had no idea for the last one
@MaxKorte-ug4kqАй бұрын
These questions go from impossible to this
@justinjoubert72 Жыл бұрын
Guessed 4 & 5
@melodypeters3661Ай бұрын
100% (too easy)
@dianalugo8327Ай бұрын
5 of 5. Give yourself a slap! LOL!
@egerngaming7978Ай бұрын
got all apart from the 4th one. i guessed on the last one and got it right
@Onionking38Ай бұрын
For whatever reason i thought the 4th question was where the battle of the somme took place.
@nixzyfn8503Ай бұрын
4/5 failed the last one
@IDKAWDАй бұрын
2/5 and a sore cheek from slapping myself
@Vortex20000Ай бұрын
The 3 ..... I said latitude ...
@David-qf8fh Жыл бұрын
EZ
@zel3996Ай бұрын
:) :) :) :) :( Am I supposed to know National flowers?
@felicityanne979Ай бұрын
Nope but some are fairly obvious and theres a good chance youve come across the information somewhere at some point even if you havent retained it. Netherlands/turkey - tulip. England/USA - rose. wales - daffodil. Scotland - thistle. Ireland - shamrock. France - iris. India - lotus. China - plum blossom. Japan - cherry blossom. Australia - golden wattle and Germany - cornflower. These are the ones I've come across purely by accident over the years and filled up the storage space for what would otherwise have been useful information.
@FizzyJuiceCoolАй бұрын
I never heard of the battle of the somme bro wtf 💀
@jeremymerrifield219Ай бұрын
have you heard of World War I
@FizzyJuiceCoolАй бұрын
@@jeremymerrifield219 yeah no shit
@jeremymerrifield219Ай бұрын
@@FizzyJuiceCool good. I was worried about you. 💜
@felicityanne979Ай бұрын
I can promise you if you've studied WW1 at any point and any extent past the age of 12 you've heard of the battle of the somme. It's one of the deadliest battle in human history. You've got to have heard of the poppies growing on the somme after fighting had ended? This leading to the poppy becoming a symbol of remembrance?