• The “Jeopardy!” website offers different categories of practice tests to see how well you’d do on the show.
  • The practice adult test consists of 30 questions on a variety of subjects including geography, literature, and science.
  • The real online adult test is offered a twice a year and is followed by auditions.

If you’ve ever played along while watching “Jeopardy!” and wondered how you’d fare on the show, there’s an easy way to find out.

The official “Jeopardy!” website offers practice tests to help aspiring contestants get a feel for the kind of questions that appear on the show. It contains 30 questions on a variety of subjects including geography, literature, science, and even a bit of pop culture.

The real online adult test is offered twice a year. A few lucky people who pass it are randomly selected to audition, and those who show off both their knowledge and personality at auditions get to appear on a taping of the show.

Here are the questions from the adult practice test. How many can you answer correctly?


BOTANY: This green pigment is necessary for plants to carry out photosynthesis.

Foto: Green plants.sourceShutterstock

Answer: What is chlorophyll?


CITIES OF THE WORLD: Mosul and Ramadi can both be found in this Middle East country.

Foto: Mosul.sourceChris McGrath/Getty Images

Answer: What is Iraq?


ANIMALS: Its name is from the Greek for "river horse."

Foto: A river.sourceSergey Uryadnikov/Shutterstock

Answer: What is the hippopotamus?


AMERICAN LITERATURE: "The Naked and the Dead" and "The Executioner's Song" are books by this novelist.

Foto: Cover art for "The Executioner's Song."sourceAmazon

Answer: Who is Norman Mailer?


ART: "Night Watch" is a classic painting from this 17th-century master.

Foto: "The Night Watch."sourceWikimedia Commons

Answer: Who is Rembrandt?


HOBBIES: Not gardening, but this hobby with a nine-letter name is getting to the roots of your ancestors.

Foto: Family photos.sourceYevgen Timashov/Getty Images

Answer: What is genealogy?


CANADA: Canada's three territories are Nunavut, the Northwest Territories, and this one.

Foto: A Canadian flag.sourcemffoto/Shutterstock

Answer: What is Yukon?


BESTSELLING NONFICTION: "The Devil in the White City" tells of this city's 1893 World's Fair.

Foto: "The Devil in the White City."sourceAmazon

Answer: What is Chicago?


WORLD WAR II: The 1944 Battle of the Ardennes is also alliteratively called the "Battle of" this.

Foto: A World War II-era map.sourceThe Times staff writers/Wikimedia Commons

Answer: What is the Bulge?


ASTRONOMY: The seven brightest stars in Ursa Major are collectively known as this.

Foto: A starry night sky.sourceShutterstock

Answer: What is the Big Dipper?


THE ORCHESTRA: Castanets and the tambourine belong to this section of the orchestra.

Foto: An orchestra.sourceHadi Mizban/AP

Answer: What is percussion?


COOKING: A specialty of Naples, this pizza turnover's name means "trouser leg."

Foto: Naples.sourceShutterstock

Answer: What is a calzone?


WEIGHTS AND MEASURES: Like a ship's, an aircraft's speed is typically measured in these units.

Foto: An airplane.sourceJoe Raedle/Getty Images

Answer: What are knots?


POETS AND POETRY: This Scot's beloved poems include "To a Mouse" and "Address to a Haggis."

Foto: A mouse.sourcePixabay

Answer: Who is Robert Burns?


DESERT: Simpson Desert is a 55,000-square-mile region in this country's Northern Territory.

Foto: Simpson Desert.sourceJanelle Lugge/Shutterstock

Answer: What is Australia?


PULITZER PRIZES: This author's dystopian novel "The Road" took the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for fiction.

Foto: Cover art for "The Road."sourceAmazon

Answer: Who is Cormac McCarthy?


THE HUMAN BODY: An enlargement of this gland is called a goiter.

Foto: A human skeleton.sourceAP/Dima Gavrysh

Answer: What is the thyroid (gland)?


FASHION: The French phrase prêt-à-porter literally means this.

Foto: French encyclopedias.sourceDeyan Georgiev/Shutterstock

Answer: What is "ready to wear"?


CLASSICAL MUSIC: This composer's 1868 work "Wiegenlied" is better known to us as "Lullaby."

Foto: A sleeping baby.sourceJaturunThakard/Shutterstock

Answer: Who is Johannes Brahms?


BEGINS AND ENDS WITH THE SAME LETTER: A guess as to the price or weight of something.

Foto: A woman checking a price tag.sourceShutterstock/antoniodiaz

Answer: What is an estimate?


NONFICTION: This three-named economist wrote the influential 1936 work "The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money."

Foto: Money.sourceiStock

Answer: Who is John Maynard Keynes?


GEOGRAPHIC TERMS: A country that has no direct access to the sea is referred to by this 10-letter term.

Foto: Bolivia.sourceVictor Maschek/Shutterstock

Answer: What is landlocked?


MUSICAL THEATER: Lola helps save a failing shoe factory in this high-heeled 2013 Tony winner for best musical.

Foto: A Broadway musical.sourceMichael Loccisano/Getty

Answer: What is "Kinky Boots"?


PARTS OF THE BODY: This vestigial organ is attached to a part of the large intestine called the cecum.

Foto: The human body.sourceilusmedical/Shutterstock

Answer: What is the appendix?


VOCABULARY: A type of humor includes the name of this structure used in hangings.

Foto: Laughing.sourceStrelka Institute for Media, Architecture and Design/Flickr

Answer: What is gallows?


MOUNTAINS: You'll find 5-mile-high Nanga Parbat in this range.

Foto: Nanga Parbat.sourcePatrick Poendl/Shutterstock

Answer: What are the Himalayas?


WOMEN OF HISTORY: Clara Barton was the founder of this group.

Foto: Clara Barton.sourceJames E. Purdy/Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons

Answer: What is the (American) Red Cross?


FICTIONAL DETECTIVES: The 1930 book "Murder at the Vicarage" featured this female sleuth.

Foto: Cover art for "The Murder at the Vicarage."sourceAmazon

Answer: Who is Miss (Jane) Marple?


MYTHOLOGY: Hephaestus, the Greek god of fire and metalworking, was identified with this Roman god.

Foto: A Roman god.sourceMarie-Lan Nguyen/Wikimedia Commons

Answer: Who is Vulcan?


CHEMISTRY: The two main types of chemical bonds are covalent and this type found in salts.

Foto: Salt.sourceShutterstock/taa22

Answer: What is ionic?

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