🚫 Crazy Laws Quiz: 14 Questions You Won't Believe Are Real

▶ Watch next:    • Video   surprising global laws trivia 🚫 ▶ Play this quiz free: https://quizzy.earth/p/_cigeEyow1 Think you know international laws? This quiz challenges you with 14 surprising global regulations and bizarre rules that could land you in serious trouble. Discover the weirdest legal provisions and learn which seemingly innocent acts are actually illegal in countries worldwide, leading to hefty fines. 🧠 Questions in this quiz: • In Singapore, the import and sale of chewing gum has been restricted since 1992. What specific incident is most commonly cited as the trigger for the ban? • Switzerland is known for strict noise ordinances that famously discourage flushing toilets after 10 p.m. in apartment buildings. This rule is generally enforced through which mechanism? • In which country is it illegal to step on, tear, or otherwise deface currency bearing the image of the reigning monarch, on the grounds of lèse-majesté? • Feeding pigeons in public squares was formally banned in 2008 in which European city, following a court case that stripped pigeon-feeders of their traditional right? • In Milan, a 19th-century municipal decree — still technically on the books — obliges citizens to do what at all times in public, on pain of a fine? • Germany's Autobahn is famous for unrestricted speed sections, but running out of fuel on it can actually get you fined. Why? • In Japan, a 2008 law nicknamed the 'Metabo Law' can indirectly penalise citizens through their employers. What does it actually regulate? • Although generally prohibited in Singapore, one category of gum was made legal to sell under specific conditions from 2004 onward. Which was it? • Which Italian tourist destination in 2019 introduced fines of up to €500 for tourists who sit down on the town's iconic staircases and public monuments to eat? • Barcelona city ordinances impose fines of up to €300 for walking on which city streets in only swimwear? • Turkmenistan, under President Berdimuhamedov, in 2018 unofficially banned cars of which single characteristic from the capital Ashgabat? • In the United Arab Emirates, an internationally reported case in 2010 saw a British couple sentenced to jail time for what act performed in public? • Denmark's naming law (Navneloven) restricts parents to choosing from an official government list. Roughly how many first names are currently pre-approved? • At major Greek archaeological sites like the Acropolis, a protection rule can result in fines and even brief detention for visitors who do what? 👍 Like & subscribe for a new quiz every week. #quiz #trivia #surprising