Free Commercial General Liability Practice Questions

Tennessee Property & Casualty exam — 34 practice questions.

Subtopics: Purpose, Coverage A, Coverage B, Occurrence basis, Products-completed operations, Aggregate limit, Occurrence vs claims-made, Limits of liability, Claims-made features, Coverage C, Premises and operations, Damage to premises rented, Supplementary payments, Additional insured, Personal and advertising injury, Insured contract, Occurrence definition, Each occurrence limit, General aggregate limit, Retroactive date, Extended reporting period, Pollution exclusion, Employers liability exclusion, Your product exclusion, Medical payments Coverage C, Named insured status, Defense costs, Property damage definition

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Sample questions & answers

1. A Commercial General Liability (CGL) policy primarily covers a business's:

Liability for bodily injury and property damage to third parties

The CGL covers a business's liability for bodily injury and property damage to third parties, not its own property or employee injuries.

2. Coverage A of the CGL applies to:

Bodily injury and property damage liability

Coverage A of the CGL provides bodily injury and property damage liability coverage.

3. Coverage B of the CGL applies to:

Personal and advertising injury, such as libel or slander

Coverage B provides personal and advertising injury liability, including offenses such as libel, slander, and false arrest.

4. A CGL written on an occurrence basis covers claims for injury that:

Occur during the policy period regardless of when the claim is filed

An occurrence-based CGL covers injury or damage that occurs during the policy period, even if the claim is made later.

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Practice: Commercial General Liability

Take a randomized, timed-style practice test. Answer choices are shuffled and your results are scored instantly with an explanation for every question.

Practice questions are study aids generated for exam preparation and are not actual exam questions. Content is provided for educational purposes and is not legal advice. Verify current statutes, rules, and exam specifications with the Pennsylvania Insurance Department and the exam administrator before relying on it.