NHS Literacy Mock Test 42
Mock test 42 — 24 questions.
About this mock
Difficulty: Exam-readyNHS Literacy Mock 42 uses written clarity to test care-focused revision tasks in a practical way. Candidates working on written clarity meet professional tone, healthcare vocabulary and high-confidence detail retrieval applied scenario as separate clues. Any mistake should be traced to written clarity in practice or the wording clue. For NHS Literacy Mock 42, review written clarity as the short revision target.
Topics included
- Written clarity in practice
- Professional tone
- Healthcare vocabulary
- High-confidence detail retrieval applied scenario
- Question wording and answer choice
Common mistakes in this mock
- Misreading the question about written clarity
- Choosing an answer before checking all details
- Confusing professional tone with healthcare vocabulary
- Missing the final clue in NHS Literacy set 42
Who this mock is for
People revising written clarity in practice before moving to mixed NHS Literacy practice.
How to practise
How to use Practice mode
Practice mode shows the correct answer and an explanation after every question, with no timer. Use it the first time you sit a topic, when you want to learn as you go, or when you're targeting a specific weak area.
How to use Exam mode
Exam mode gives timed practice for revision. Official timings vary by exam provider and skill, so always check the official test format before booking.
Frequently asked questions
- Are these official questions?
- No. UK Test Hub is independent and not affiliated with any awarding body or exam provider. Our questions are practice-style and designed to reflect the format and difficulty of the real assessment.
- Is this mock free?
- Yes — every mock on UK Test Hub is completely free, with no signup required to start.
- How many questions are there?
- Most of our mocks contain 24 questions, sat against a typical test-day time limit. The exact count and pass mark are shown in the chips above the Practice/Exam buttons.
- Can I retake it?
- Yes, as many times as you like. Each retake reshuffles the question order so you don't simply memorise positions.
