Can I understand correctly?To speakers of American English, for whom to prepare an exam is to make an exam, the question presupposes that the referent of "you" created the IELTS exam.
I'm really not sure if you've understood or not.CanHave Iunderstandunderstood correctly?
For example:just for example,
Did I create the exam and prepare the exam and test myself?
Let mesaidsay it correctly.
I create the exam and prepare the exam and make an exam and test myself. This entire sentence makes no sense.
Put more simply, "prepare an exam" means "make/write an exam" (creating the questions ready for someone else to actually take/sit the exam). The "you" in your question must be the person who did that, not a student who answered the questions on the exam.It's quitedifficultiesdifficult to understand @Lycidas statements. Ican't catchdon't understand their point.
If you created the exam, wouldn't you test it (the exam) to check that you hadn't made any mistakes? If you created it, it wouldn't be a way of testing yourself.Can I understand correctly?
For example, just for example,
Did I create exam and prepare exam and test myself? Let me said it correctly. I create the exam and prepare the exam and make a exam and test myself.