All Quizzes
1. Canadian Provinces and Capitals
This 12-question quiz tests how well you know Canada's provinces and their capital cities.
You will answer questions like What is the capital of Alberta? and ___ is the capital of Prince Edward Island., along with a few true or false statements.
A point that trips up many people is the difference between provinces and territories, and just how many of each Canada has. The quiz also reminds you that the country's overall capital is not the same as any single province's capital.
Recommended level: beginner to intermediate.
score: 86% (everyone)
12 questions
2. European Capitals
This 17-question quiz is a straightforward matching exercise pairing European countries with their capital cities.
You are given a country like Italy or Norway and name its capital, so it is a clean way to brush up on the map of Europe.
It is worth slowing down on a few, since a country's capital is not always its biggest or most famous city, and one or two on this list catch people out for exactly that reason.
With 17 countries to cover, it doubles as a quick geography review.
Recommended level: beginner to intermediate.
score: 89% (everyone)
17 questions
3. South American Capitals
This is a map quiz where you match each South American country to its capital city, so it is click-and-identify rather than typing.
You work across the whole continent, pairing places like Brazil, Peru, and Argentina with the right capital.
A nice challenge built into it is that a few South American capitals are not the cities people first expect, since the best-known or largest city is not always the seat of government. That trips up plenty of quizzers, so it rewards a careful look rather than a quick guess. Run through it a few times and the map starts to feel familiar instead of intimidating.
Recommended level: beginner to intermediate.
score: 52% (everyone)
13 questions
4. South American Countries
This map quiz asks you to match each country on the South American map to its name, so you are placing nations by location rather than recalling facts about them.
You move around the whole continent, identifying countries from their shape and position.
The part that catches people out is the cluster of smaller countries in the north, which sit close together and are easy to mix up if you only know the big outlines like Brazil. Spending a moment on that corner of the map pays off. Go through it a handful of times and even the trickier neighbours start to fall into place without hesitation.
Recommended level: beginner to intermediate.
score: 75% (everyone)
13 questions