You are abusively wrong. It is enough to write the expression for the equilibrium constant to see that increasing pressure moves the equilibrium in this particular case to the right. But it requires KNOWLEDGE which you don't have. No wonder you have failed.
Ofcourse I don't have knowledge. I didn't have chemistry in the last 5 years. And I only had about 2 year of chemistry before that. In that year of chemistry they told me to memorize about 50 acids and bases (that's all they teached me). It's only normal that I don't have knowledge.
This guy had 5 hours a week to teach me. In the end I had to look up the "le chatelier" principle myself. And I thought I understood it, seems I didn't but now I do. What just frustrates me is that my prof had 5 hours a week to teach me (during 10 weeks), he could have told me. But he kept it secret till the exam to tell me "HA! see you don't understand".
Maybe he expected that I would have done more research during studying. And that's where the problem is! ==> my whole point is, to me as a non-chemistry guy it seemed only natural that you can't make 2 gasses react by lowering pressure (In physics when you lower pressure in a room, that lowers the Force on the surfaces of everything inside it. It pulls everything away from eachother making them fill the room. That's what I meant earlier in my first comment. To me it seemed that by seperating the H's and N's you couldn't make them connect to eachother.) How should I have known that this wasn't the case in chemistry?! For an outsider it looks perfectly normal.
I learned a lot today ==> To me chemistry is unpredictable. Everything I THINK I know is based on personal interpretations. Well, it's only natural to make personal interpretations when studying something isn't it? But in a science like mathematics I would have been confronted with my mistakes right away. In chemistry it's more "definitions and concepts", ==> more based on feeling and experience than mathematics if you ask me.
Well, hehe :-) sorry for the frustration in my first post. I had to get this off my chest. For me it's really frustrating as I have spend a lot of time studying this topic. I really had the feeling I was prepared for it. But l have to take over my schoolyear because of this, or quit. Chances are that if I take my year over that this prof will just come up with a new creative smart question.