Meghan Markle has revealed she found studying for the British citizenship exam "so hard" and claimed even Prince Harry had "no idea" of some of the answers.
In the latest episode of her podcast Archetypes, Meghan recalls studying for the test ahead of her royal wedding back in 2018, but admitted she found the questions extremely difficult.
Speaking to Canada's first lady Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, the wife of Justin Trudeau, actress Pamela Adlon and comedian Sam Jay, Meghan discusses the "pressures of what it means to be a partner and a parent in this modern age".
Pamela, best known for being the voice of Bobby Hill on the animated series King of the Hill, brings up their shared "English connection" and says she recently became a citizen.
When American Meghan became engaged to Harry, a statement from Kensington Palace confirmed was planning on becoming a dual UK and US citizen - and would be applying for British citizenship, which includes taking a test.
And in the podcast, Pamela asks Meghan: "Oh that's another thing we have in common, the English people thing, I'm English.
And Meghan replies: "Yes, I heard you just got your citizenship, was it last year, a couple of years ago?
Pamela tells her: "I did a couple of years ago."
And Meghan reveals: "That citizenship exam is so hard. I was studying for it and I remember going 'oh my goodness'.
"I would ask my husband. 'Did you know this? Did you know this?' And he would be like 'I had no idea'.
Pamela teases: "I think they made it harder for you.
To which Meghan says: "You think?"
And Pamela jokes: "Yeah, they were like, we're gonna really throw up walls on this one."
Since she and Harry quit their royal roles in 2020, they have moved to America and the Telegraph reported last year that Meghan had "abandoned" her plans to push forward with British citizenship.
Elsewhere in the episode, Meghan also reveals her morning routine with her children Archie and Lilibet and how she makes them and husband Harry breakfast before putting together Archie's packed lunch and taking him to school.
Meanwhile, she also pays tribute to her own mother Doria and how she "juggled so much" bringing her up at the same time as working.
Meghan says: "With this episode on my brain, it got me thinking about all the ways my mom supported me.
"How she took care of me and the house and herself and how she just juggled so much.
"The amount that women carry, that they navigate, it's immense and it's often the most thankless unpaid labour there is.
"There's no union, there's no lunch break, there's nothing like that. At home, women just work really, really hard.
"A lot of that work is born out of necessity, but so much of it is also born out of expectations."
Meghan and husband Prince Harry signed a lucrative deal with the audio streaming giant Spotify to host and produce podcasts, estimated to be worth around £18 million, in late 2020.
Archetypes was launched with the aim of investigating "labels that try to hold women back" through conversations between Meghan and historians, experts and women who have experienced being typecast.
Other guests on her podcast have included Paris Hilton, Serena Williams, Mariah Carey and Mindy Kaling.