I tried the sample test from this site that markets guides to the 'Life in the UK' test and got an 83% (I like to think that if I had studied I would have given a correct answer to at least one of the two questions I missed).
It sounds as if the revised version of the test they are doing from this autumn onwards is slightly less full of ridiculous statistical trivia (if I were to fail, if and when I get to take this for real, and had to retake it, I shudder to think the obloquy which would be heaped on me...)
Of course, I was a sucker and bought the study materials for the old test, just for fun, back when it was announced. But I have no sorrow in knowing they will be obsolete.
It sounds as if the revised version of the test they are doing from this autumn onwards is slightly less full of ridiculous statistical trivia (if I were to fail, if and when I get to take this for real, and had to retake it, I shudder to think the obloquy which would be heaped on me...)
Of course, I was a sucker and bought the study materials for the old test, just for fun, back when it was announced. But I have no sorrow in knowing they will be obsolete.
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Date: 2007-07-30 09:33 pm (UTC)The question was roughly, are Northern Irish and Scottish banknotes valid in the rest of the UK, or not? I said not. The test said that was wrong.
In fact these notes are technically not valid anywhere - they're promissory notes (I just looked it up on wikipedia) meaning that they're generally accepted as being equivalent to legal money. But they're not actually valid anywhere. Scottish notes are accepted in Scotland, but the further you get from Scotland, the less accepted they are. I've had them refused several times in Yorkshire, which isn't exactly the deep south in English terms. I wouldn't call that "valid" :-)
Depends what you mean by valid, I suppose. It's certainly possible to spend them in England - if you're lucky enough to find someone who'll accept them. But it's nowhere near guaranteed in England, as it is with Bank of England notes. Similarly here in Scotland people will look at Northern Irish notes very carefully.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banknotes_of_the_pound_sterling#Scotland
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Date: 2007-07-30 10:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-07-31 07:34 am (UTC)I know what you mean about inexperienced clerks, but most of the rejections I've had have been from stone-faced Yorkshire women in their fifties :-)
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Date: 2007-07-30 10:59 pm (UTC)I should have obtained my citizenship prior to the silly test, but I kept putting it off. Now the fees are so high I fear I'd best the take the test and give the government the money before it's entirely out of reach. All of my other visas were free. My indefinite leave to remain was free and didn't require a test; now they want a test and 750 quid!
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Date: 2007-07-31 07:41 am (UTC)Then you'll be able to swap that for the joy of applying for a passport: the price for that seems to double every year :-)
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Date: 2007-07-31 08:11 am (UTC)Yes, I'll apply for a passport asap before that price increases again. :)
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Date: 2007-07-31 08:58 am (UTC)Still haven't heard back about my application, annoyingly.
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Date: 2007-08-01 11:30 am (UTC)How many months are they estimating now for naturalisation?
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Date: 2007-08-01 11:54 am (UTC)I suppose someday I'll hear back from them!
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Date: 2007-08-07 09:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-08 09:05 am (UTC)It's extremely frustrating - we've paid a LOT to the blooming Home Office!
My husband's theory is that since we squeezed in just before the massive price increase of April 1, that they're prioritising applications received after April 1 because those people paid more and we just get to wait until they have some free time.