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1. How is British Parlament formed?

2. Who is the head of the church of england? Since when?


3. Who are the members of the House of commons? What do they represent? Who is the president
of the house?
4. How are the members of the house of lords called?
5. Lords spiritual and lords temporal: who are they?
6. Where does the president of the house of lords sit? What does it represent?
7. What are colours associated to the two houses?
8. Who is the prime minister? What is the official residence?
9. What is the difference between a bill and a law?
10. What do you mean by Royal Assent?
11. What is the cabinet?
12. How many times has queen elizabeth spoken to the country? And on what occasions?

1. It is a bicameral parliament, consisting of an upper chamber, the House of Lords, and a lower
chamber, the House of Commons.
2. The monarch is the supreme governor, now is Elizabeth II.
Since 1558 with act of supremacy done by Henry VII.
3. The Commons is an elected body consisting of 650 members known as members of Parliament.
Members are elected to represent constituencies by the first-past-the-post system and hold their
seats until Parliament is dissolved. The Leader of the House of Commons is generally a member of
the Cabinet of the United Kingdom who is responsible for arranging government business in the
House of Commons, now is Jacob Rees-Mogg.
4. They are called peers of the realm or the nobility.
5. The Lords Temporal are secular members of the House of Lords, the upper house of the British
Parliament. The Lords Spiritual of the United Kingdom are the 26 bishops of the established Church
of England who serve in the House of Lords, not counting bishops who sit by right of a peerage.
6. The Leader of the House of Lords is sit on the woolsack.
7. Green for the house of commons and Red for the house of the lords.
8. The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom is the head of government of the United Kingdom, now
is Boris Johnson. The official residence is the residency of 10 Downing Street.
9. A law is the generic term for any legal rule or regulation enforced by the government to regulate
behaviour or activities in that society instaed a Bill is proposed law ,drafted by the government or
by the lawmakers, to be debated and voted upon in the legislature, and if passed by that
legislature, to be enacted into force by a certain constitutional procedure.
10. Royal assent is the method by which a monarch formally approves an act of the legislature.
11. A cabinet is a body of high-ranking state officials, typically consisting of the top leaders of the
executive branch.
12. Five times .
She did so during the First Gulf War back in 1991, and addressed the nation once again following
the death of Princess Diana back in 1997.
Her Majesty also addressed the nation following the death of the Queen Mother aged 101, back in
2002.
While she has spoken to the country in times of grief and crisis, there have also been happier
occasions that have seen the Queen give an address. These included on the occasion of her
Diamond Jubilee in 2012.
And the last time during the covid-19.

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