Well done, too many people try and approach lighting in a "painting by numbers" manner.
A switch works by interrupting the live feed to a light. If you were wiring with single wires, you would take the permanent live to the switches, the neutrals to the lights and then take a switched live wire from each switch to the corresponding light.
But while single wires in conduit or double insulated single wires are legitimate installation methods, most of the time in the UK (other countries may vary) we don't use single wires, we use cables. There are a few common arrangements for wiring lights with cables:
1. The "loop at light" method, "circuit cables" carrying permanent live and neutral are routed to the lights, then a "switch cable" takes permanent live down to the switch and brings switched live back.
2. the "loop at switch" method, "circuit cables" carrying permanent live and neutral are routed to the switches, then a "cable to lighting point", takes switched live and neutral to the light.
3. the "junction box" method, "circuit cables" carrying permanent live and neutral are routed to junction boxes, then a "switch cable" takes permanent live down to the switch and brings switched live back and finally a "cable to lighting point", takes switched live and neutral to the light.
With the loop at light method the permanent live conductor is joined at the light fitting location, but does not actually connect to the light. Similarly with the loop at switch method, the neutral is joined at the switch location but does not actually connect to the switch.
"twin brown and earth" ("twin red an earth" on older installations) cable does exist, but most installers don't want to carry an extra roll of cable if they don't have to, and it's sometimes useful to be able to distinguish permanent live from switched live. So most of the time regular twin and earth is used for switch drops. The switched-live should be marked with brown (red on older installations) sleeving but often isn't.
Traditional UK ceiling roses and batten holders usually have a built-in "loop" terminal, which is used to join the permanent live conductors together. With other types of fitting sometimes the manufacturer provides a loop terminal, but often they don't. So you often have to provide a suitable terminal yourself, or in extreme cases even convert the setup to a junction box setup.
Finally it's important to remember those that these methods are not the be-all and end-all of lighting wiring, there are countless possible combinations and variants of the basic methods. This is why we *always* advise people to carefully record the existing wiring before dismantling.