Quiz #42

Quiz #42

Round 1

Question 1

First released in 1974, what tabletop game allows players to create their own characters that then collaborate with other players on games and campaigns overseen by a Dungeon Master?

Dungeons and Dragons

1 point

Question 2

Primary cells and secondary cells are two categories of battery. Which of the two is rechargeable?

Secondary cells

1 point

Question 3

Blutwurst, weisswurst, leberwurst, and Thüringer Rostbratwurst are all types of what food?

Sausage

1 point

Question 4

What animal’s name in Chinese literally translates as ‘big bear cat’?

Panda (giant panda)

1 point

Question 5

International versions of what UK comedy series are known as Os Aspones in Brazil, Stromberg in Germany, HaMisrad in Israel, Konttori in Finland, and La Job in Canada?

The Office

1 point

Question 6

Excluding humans, what animal builds the tallest structures in the world? The official tallest example of such a structure was 8.7m, found in Somaliland, although there are unconfirmed reports of examples over 12m in the Republic of Congo.

Termites

*Considering its body size, the human equivalent of a termite mound would be four Burj Khalifa skyscrapers tall. In 2018, deforestation in Brazil revealed an estimated 200 million termite mounds covering roughly the size of the UK, with the oldest structure aged at 3820 years old.

1 point

Question 7

Of the nine European countries in which medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières currently has programmes, what are the only two utilising the equivalent of over 100 full-time staff, with 414 in one country helping victims of war, and 212 in another aiding migrants arriving across the Mediterranean?

Ukraine
Greece

*France (95), Italy (30), Belgium (25), Serbia (17), Poland (16), Belarus (1), and UK(1) all also have a MSF presence at the moment.

2 points

Question 8

In English grammar, the simplest sentence structure is generally known as S.V.O. For what do the letters S, V, and O stand? 

Subject
Verb
Object

3 points

Question 9

The geographic area known as the Levant includes territories in which three continents?

Asia
Africa
Europe

*The Levant covers land from Egypt, into the Middle East, and round into Turkey and Cyprus.

3 points

Question 10

Make the longest word possible from the following letters: AAGIMNPRT

Ptarmigan

Up to 9 points
(*length of word equates to points awarded)

Round 1 points
(Maximum: 23)

Round 2

Question 1

What alcoholic drink lost its Protected Geographical Indication in 2007 when it moved its brewery to nearby Gateshead?

Newcastle Brown Ale

*‘Newkie Brown’ has since relocated twice more, to Yorkshire and now the Netherlands.

1 point

Question 2

On what type of building would one find features called glacis, garderobe, bartizan, machicolation, and meurtrière?

Castle

1 point

Question 3

Butterfly, eccentric, catheter, and enteral are all forms of what type of medical equipment?

Needle / syringe

1 point

Question 4

Although others have claimed to be the inventor, what road safety invention is credited to Edward Hines, who said he got the idea after seeing a leaking milk truck?

Central road markings (white lines)

1 point

Question 5

One of the world’s most famous prisons thanks to it being the location in which Edmond Dantès is held in the novel The Count of Monte Cristo, Château d’If sits off the coast of which French city?

Marseille

1 point

Question 6

Feral pigeons are descendants of domesticated populations of what type of bird, which has the scientific name Columba livia and whose common name refers to the location it roosts and breeds?

Rock dove (rock pigeon)

1 point

Question 7

Through which two oceans does the Oyashio current run?

Arctic
Pacific

*The Oyashio Current moves Arctic water through the Bering Strait, past Kamchatka, and to the coast of Japan.

2 points

Question 8

What are the only three cities in the Southern Hemisphere to have been awarded an Olympic games – either summer or winter?

Melbourne (1956)
Sydney (2000)
Rio de Janeiro (2016)

*Brisbane will host the 2032 Summer Olympics.

3 points

Question 9

Different from the original Arabian tale, what are Aladdin’s three wishes that the genie grants in the 1992 Disney animation Aladdin?

To be a prince
To be saved from death
To give the genie its freedom

*Aladdin tricks the genie into getting him out of a cave without using a wish. Technically, he doesn’t ‘wish’ the second wish either, as he is unconscious after Jafar has him thrown into the sea and the genie proactively assumes he would want saved.

3 points

Question 10

What are the four core ingredients of the French dish tartiflette?

Potato
Cheese
Bacon
Onion

4 points

Round 2 points
(Maximum: 18)

Total points
(Maximum: 41)

Round 3

Question 1

What word, the Spanish equivalent for esplanade, is the name of both a famous pedestrian street in Barcelona and the 22km road and pedestrian path along the coast of Montevideo which was submitted for consideration as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2010?

Rambla

1 point

Question 2

The traditional Orkney and Shetland folk song ‘The Great Silkie of Sule Skerry’ sees a woman have a child with a selkie capable of turning into what marine mammal, before she marries a hunter who unknowingly kills her son and the boy’s father?

Seal

1 point

Question 3

In September 1825, the first public railway to use steam locomotives opened between Stockton and Darlington in England. Which engineer, nicknamed ‘The Father of Railways’, designed the line and, with his son, owned the company that built the Locomotive No. 1 train that travelled on it?

George Stephenson

1 point

Question 4

What kingdom was overseen in the early 19th century by Shaka kaSenzangakhona?

Zulu

1 point

Question 5

In which city is the Scala Sancta, a 28-step staircase believed to have been climbed by Jesus on his way to trial and now only permitted to be climbed on one’s knees?

Rome

*The Scala Sancta was believed to have been moved to Rome from Jerusalem in the 4th century, with two adjacent staircases built for those wishing to climb normally to the chapel above. Charles Dickens derided the sight of 100 pilgrims climbing on their knees – including a group of laughing schoolboys – while visitors were asked for donations by writing in Pictures from Italy ‘I never, in my life, saw anything at once so ridiculous and so unpleasant as this sight.’

1 point

Question 6

Since 2017, businessman Gérard López has bought the French football clubs Lille and Bordeaux, the Belgian football club Royal Excelsior Mouscron, and the Portuguese football club Boavista. What connects all four clubs since López took over?

All have gone bankrupt

*All top tier teams when bought, Mouscron is now defunct, Bordeaux an amateur side in the French fourth tier, and Boavista were demoted to Portugal’s fifth tier this summer – the same time police raided the club due to suspicions of tax fraud and money laundering. Only Lille remain in the top league, having been taken over by the US lenders from which López borrowed money for the purchase after he couldn’t repay the loan.

1 point

Question 7

Portrayed by Tom Hanks in a 1995 film, NASA astronaut Jim Lovell passed away on August 7. As well as the Gemini 7 and 12 missions, on what two Apollo missions did Lovell fly?

Apollo 8
Apollo 13

2 points

Question 8

What are the names of the three companion television miniseries set during World War II for which Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks have served as executive producers?

Band of Brothers
The Pacific
Masters of the Air

3 points

Question 9

Three being in Asia and one in Africa, what four countries produce the most tea in the world?

China
India
Kenya
Sri Lanka

4 points

Question 10

According to Swedish tax agency Skatteverket, which has taken over maintaining the country’s statistics on names, what are the six most common surnames in Sweden (discounting spelling variations)?

Anderson / Andersson
Johanson / Johansson
Karlson / Carlson
Nilson / Nilsson
Erikson / Eriksson
Larson / Larsson

*Olsson, Persson, Svensson, and Gustafson complete the top ten most common Swedish names.

6 points

Round 3 points
(Maximum: 21)

Total points
(Maximum: 62)

Round 4

Question 1

What shape is the faeces of the common wombat – the only animal that is known to produce this shape?

Cube

*Studies have shown portions of wombat intestines have varied elasticity and thickness which shape as well as push faeces through the final 8 per cent of the intestine system. The animal uses faeces to mark territory, leading to theory that the cube shape evolved due to it being more likely to remain in place.

1 point

Question 2

A sushi dish developed in the US, the California roll uses what type of meat?

Crab (imitation crab)

1 point

Question 3

The Nightglow event, in which dozens of participants illuminate their entries in time to music, is part of an annual festival held in Bristol celebrating what type of transport, held this year August 8-10?

Hot air balloon

1 point

Question 4

What nickname was given to the summer of 1858 in London due to the terrible smell caused by sewage and industrial waste being poured into the River Thames?

The Great Stink

1 point

Question 5

Nicknamed ‘The Big Four’, and seen as examples of robber barons, American tycoons Leland Stanford, Collis Potter Huntington, Mark Hopkins Jr., and Chares Crocker – who referred to themselves as ‘The Associates’ – enriched themselves during the building of the CPRR. What type of structure is the CPRR?

Railroad (Central Pacific Railroad)

*Using taxpayer money and land grants, and paying low wages to Irish and Chinese workers, the four became wealthy and then claimed the company ledger had been lost when a congressional committee investigated. Stanford then became governor of California and founded Stanford University, and Huntington co-founded the city of Huntington, Virginia. The four built mansions on what became known as Nob Hill in San Francisco.

1 point

Question 6

In 1997, Jason Pierce, the frontman and songwriter of English rock group Spiritualized, broke off his romantic relationship with the band’s keyboard player Kate Radley after finding out that for the previous two years she had been secretly married to the lead singer of which other 1990s English band?

The Verve (Richard Ashcroft)

*Spiritualized’s most acclaimed album, ‘Ladies and Gentlemen We are Floating in Space’, was released the same year as the breakup. Pierce says most songs were written before the split, explaining why Radley is not only credited on the album but speaks the opening words on the first track. Pierce, who was living at Radley’s parents’ house at this time, fired the entire band and restarted it with new members.

1 point

Question 7

For which two musicals has Lin-Manuel Miranda been nominated for – and won – a ‘Best Original Score’ Tony award?

In the Heights
Hamilton

2 points

Question 8

What three nouns complete this quote by 19th century art critic John Ruskin: “Great nations write their autobiographies in three manuscripts, the book of their ____, the book of their ____ and the book of their ____.”

Deeds
Words
Art

*Ruskin’s quote continues to say: “Not one of these books can be understood unless we read the two others, but of the three the only trustworthy one is the last.”

3 points

Question 9

In the play by William Shakespeare, what are the names of the three daughters of King Lear?

Goneril
Regan
Cordelia

3 points

Question 10

As well as a selection of fruit-flavoured pastries and cakes, the menu for high tea at the Savoy in London currently includes what seven types of sandwich?

Cucumber
Egg
Salmon
Coronation chicken
Cheese
Tomato pesto
Rose harissa

7 points

Round 4 points
(Maximum: 21)

Total points
(Maximum: 83)

Round 5

In Round 5, there is only one answer. The less clues you need to get it, the more points you receive. If you need only one clue, you receive 10 points; if you require two clues, you will receive 9 points, and so on.

However, you may only answer once. If you answer incorrectly, you receive zero points for the round.

With variations for spelling, what name is shared by all the following people, either as a first or last name?

Clue 1

James, astronomer who was part of team that discovered rings around Uranus

10 points

Clue 2

Handler, co-founder of toy company Mattel with wife Ruth, whose children inspired the names of the Barbie and Ken dolls

9 points

Clue 3

Peter, English runner who won a silver medal at the 1988 Olympic Games

8 points

Clue 4

Barry and Paul, British comedic children’s entertainers known as The Chuckle Brothers

7 points

Clue 5

Page, transgender actor known for his role as a pregnant teenager in the 2007 film Juno

6 points

Clue 6

George, pseudonym used by writer Mary Ann Evans

5 points

Clue 7

Cass, singer with The Mamas and The Papas who was known as ‘Mama Cass’

4 points

Clue 8

Gould, American actor known for playing Cpt. McIntyre in the 1970 film M*A*S*H

3 points

Clue 9

Thomas Stearns, American poet who wrote The Wasteland

2 points

Clue 10

Billy, fictional character in a 2000 film about a boy who wants to learn ballet

1 point

Elliot / Elliott

Round 5 points
(Maximum: 10)

Total points
(Maximum: 93)