How to Use This Quiz

Select a chapter tab below. Read each question carefully and try to answer it on your own first. If you're stuck, tap Show Hint — it narrows the concept without giving away the answer. Once you click an option, the correct answer and a full explanation are revealed. Your score is tracked per chapter. Good luck!

Chapter 1

Measurements

Score: 0 / 0
Chapter 2

Vectors and Equilibrium

Score: 0 / 0
Chapter 3

Motion and Force

Score: 0 / 0
Chapter 4

Work and Energy

Score: 0 / 0
Chapter 5

Circular Motion

Score: 0 / 0
Chapter 6

Fluid Dynamics

Score: 0 / 0
Chapter 7

Oscillations

Score: 0 / 0
Chapter 8

Waves

Score: 0 / 0
Chapter 9

Physical Optics

Score: 0 / 0
Chapter 10

Thermodynamics

Score: 0 / 0

Frequently Asked Questions

FSC Physics Part 1 has 10 chapters: Measurements, Vectors and Equilibrium, Motion and Force, Work and Energy, Circular Motion, Fluid Dynamics, Oscillations, Waves, Physical Optics, and Thermodynamics. These 10 chapters form the complete Punjab Curriculum and Textbook Board (PCTB) syllabus for First Year Physics.

Yes. MDCAT Physics questions are based on the FSC Part 1 and Part 2 syllabus. Chapters like Measurements (units, errors), Vectors, Motion and Force, Circular Motion, Waves, and Thermodynamics appear directly in MDCAT. Practising these MCQs builds both your board exam and MDCAT readiness simultaneously.

Punjab board FSC exams typically have 60 short MCQs (1 mark each) plus long questions. Chapters with higher weightage include Motion and Force, Work and Energy, Circular Motion, and Waves. Measurements, Vectors, and Oscillations usually carry moderate weightage. Fluid Dynamics and Physical Optics are often lighter but frequently tested as MCQs.

Only use the hint after you have thought about the question for at least 30–60 seconds. The hint is designed to point you to the right concept (e.g., "Think about Newton's Second Law") without telling you the answer. This maintains the active recall benefit that makes practice effective. If you jump to the hint immediately, you reduce the learning effect.