1. The Queen’s Guard in London are responsible for guarding ___.
1. The red telephone box is emblazoned with ___.
1. To become a black cab driver you must learn a very single street in the capital and pass the test called ___.
1. Big Ben is the name of
1. Six ravens are kept in the Tower of London and remain there at all times due to ___.
1. These days it is illegal ___ in Trafalgar Square.
1. Though 30 St Mary Axe, a famous commercial skyscraper, is informally known as “The Gherkin”, its shape was inspired by ___.
1. The capsules of the London Eye are numbered ___.
1. When the Queen’s royal standard flag flies over Buckingham Place, Elizabeth II is currently ___.
1. The first great event in Buckingham palace’s ballroom was the celebration to the end of ___.
1. Today in the Tower of London you can see sculptures of ___ that once lived there.
Mail in the UK is traditionally deposited in post boxes which are called ___.
Entrance to The National Gallery, which houses one of the greatest collections of paintings in the world, is ___ .
Nelson’s column was built to commemorate Admiral Horacio Nelson who brought Britain naval victories at ____ .
The colour of London’s buses hasn’t changed since 1907, when London General Omnibus Company painted its entire flee ___ to stand out from competitors.
1. Whose epitaph in St. Paul’s Cathedral reads, ‘If you seek his monument, look around’?
1. The name for the river Thames originated from the word which is thought to have meant ___.
The statue of Anteros in Piccadilly Circus is a memorial to Anthony Ashley-Cooper, the 7th Earl of Shaftesbury, who was ___.
Which of the events from the history of London took place in 1666?
Where can you hear this?
"Halt! Who comes there?"
"The keys".
"Whose keys?"
"Queen Elizabeth's keys".
"Pass Queen Elizabeth's Keys. All's well".
Створюйте онлайн-тести
для контролю знань і залучення учнів
до активної роботи у класі та вдома