Quiz #16

Quiz #16

Round 1

Question 1

How many stripes feature on the logo of sportswear company Adidas?

Three

1 point

Question 2

What animal completes this quote from the Indiana Jones film Raiders of the Lost Ark: “Why did it have to be…?”?

Snakes

1 point

Question 3

What now common theatre practice did Joseph II of Austria reportedly order to be stopped at performances of Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro because enthusiastic audiences were doubling the opera’s run time – only for audiences to ignore the order?

Encore

1 point

Question 4

In which city is the Federal Palace of Switzerland located?

Bern

1 point

Question 5

The 1991 album Unforgettable…with Love sees singer Natalie Cole cover tracks recorded by which artist?

Nat King Cole

1 point

Question 6

The year 2000 holds the record for the most different number one singles in a year in the UK charts. How many songs were number one that year?

43

1 point

Question 7

A pluot is a hybrid fruit derived from what two other fruits?

Plum
Apricot

2 points

Question 8

Iceland’s World Heritage site Vatnajökull National Park has the tagline ‘dynamic nature of fire and ice’ based on it containing what two geological features – one being Europe’s largest outside the Arctic circle, and the other comprising of Askja, Kverkfjöll and Snæfell?

Glacier
Volcano

2 points

Question 9

Which three modes of transport feature in the title of a 1987 film starring Steve Martin and John Candy?

Trains
Planes
Automobiles

3 points

Question 10

Make the longest word possible from the following letters: AEIMNNOPU

Pneumonia

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

Round 1 points
(Maximum: 22)

Round 2

Question 1

In May 1960, the strongest earthquake in recorded history struck the coast of what country?

Chile

1 point

Question 2

John Dedicoat, who invented the bicycle bell and pencil sharpening machine, was an apprentice of which 18th century Scottish engineer renowned for his work with steam engines and for whom the SI unit of power is named?

James Watt

1 point

Question 3

In a change from the original novel, the film Jurassic Park sees its characters attend to a sick triceratops. What type of dinosaur, which does not feature in the original film, was sick in the book?

Stegosaurus

1 point

Question 4

The app Coblis attempts to allow people to experience living with what genetic condition?

Colour blindness

*The app’s name stands for Colour Blindness Simulator.

1 point

Question 5

In chemistry, what colour does universal indicator turn when in the presence of a strong alkali?

Purple / indigo

1 point

Question 6

Although technically a different symbol, the solidus resembles what punctuation mark?

Slash

1 point

Question 7

On the coat of arms of Australia, what two animals sit in a wattle tree holding up the escutcheon, or central shield?

Kangaroo
Emu

2 points

Question 8

Which three players from Switzerland – male or female – have won a tennis grand slam singles title, with all three having three or more titles?

Roger Federer (20)
Martina Hingis (5)
Stan Wawrinka (3)

3 points

Question 9

Per data from the US Department of Energy, what three countries are the largest producers of natural gas in the world?

US
Russia
Iran

3 points

Question 10

What seven modern day countries were once part of Yugoslavia?

Bosnia and Herzegovina
Croatia
Kosovo
North Macedonia
Montenegro
Serbia
Slovenia

7 points

Round 2 points
(Maximum: 21)

Total points
(Maximum: 43)

Round 3

Question 1

In arguably the longest winning streak in sports history, aided by the holder retaining home advantage until defeated by a challenger, the America’s Cup was defended for 132 years by the yacht club of which American city?

New York

1 point

Question 2

Where on the human body might one develop ‘Venus rings’?

Neck

1 point

Question 3

What Pacific island nation has released the ‘2030 No Home’ football shirt, nicknamed ‘the vanishing shirt’ because each publicity photo has seen increasing amounts of fabric removed from it, symbolising the nation disappearing due to climate change?

Marshall Islands

1 point

Question 4

The Montgolfier brothers are most associated with what form of transport, having experimented with developing a new form of it in France in the 1780s?

Hot air balloon

1 point

Question 5

In 1959, a study of sickle cell, malaria, and G6PDD patients in the Congo took the blood of 1860 individuals. Studied retroactively in the 1990s, one sample, labelled LEO70, is currently the earliest known case of what virus being present in humans?

HIV

1 point

Question 6

Whose weather-predicting reputation was damaged by a recent study by America’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which found that of the ten predictions he made from 2015 to 2024, only three were correct?

Punxsutawney Phil (The Groundhog)

1 point

Question 7

What are the two television series devised by Vince Gilligan to feature the character Jimmy McGill, also known as Saul Goodman?

Breaking Bad
Better Call Saul

2 points

Question 8

The three countries in north-east South America known collectively as the Guyanas all used to be – and in one case still is – named after the European colonial powers that ran them. Which three European powers put their name to a Guyana?

France
UK
Netherlands

*French Guiana remains an overseas French department. British Guiana is now called Guyana. Dutch Guiana us now called Suriname.

3 points

Question 9

Which five actors played the five leads, as featured on the film’s promotional poster, in the movie Trainspotting – namely Begbie, Diane, Sick Boy, Spud, and Renton?

Robert Carlyle
Kelly Macdonald
Jonny Lee Miller
Ewen Bremner
Ewan McGregor

5 points

Question 10

Which eight plays by William Shakespeare contain the word ‘the’?

The Tempest
The Merchant of Venice
The Winter’s Tale
The Taming of the Shrew
The Comedy of Errors
The Two Gentlemen of Verona
The Merry Wives of Windsor
The Two Noble Kinsmen

*The Two Nobles Kinsmen is attributed to John Fletcher and William Shakespeare, and was published posthumously.

8 points

Round 3 points
(Maximum: 24)

Total points
(Maximum: 67)

Round 4

Question 1

Which English city has hosted an international piano competition every three years since 1963, except in 2024 when refurbishment works at the city’s town hall meant the competition was relocated to Bradford?

Leeds

*The Leeds International Piano Competition is commonly referred to as simply ‘The Leeds’.

1 point

Question 2

Also called allumette, what is the culinary term for cutting food into long thin strips and is most often applied to fruit and vegetables such as carrots, potatoes, and cucumbers?

Julienne

1 point

Question 3

Ajay Banga, who has held prominent business positions including executive chairman of Mastercard, currently serves as the president of what organisation headquartered on H Street in Washington, D.C., less than half a mile from The White House?

World Bank Group

1 point

Question 4

American comedian Dave Chappelle has claimed he was sold weed by which British actor when this actor worked as a bouncer at a New York comedy club?

Idris Elba

1 point

Question 5

A breakfast staple in East Africa and parts of Arabia, what type of food is laxoox (lahoh)?

Bread

*Laxoox (or lahoh, as the letter x in Somali is pronounced like a guttural English h) is a pancake-style bread.

1 point

Question 6

The flag of which country is literally translated from Chinese as ‘rice character flag’ due to its design resembling the Chinese character for rice?

UK

*The Union Jack is known as 米字旗 (mi zi qi) because the design is similar to 米, the character for rice.

1 point

Question 7

In the Shinto religion, the ‘2-2-1’ prayer routine asks that people conduct what two actions at a shrine – the first act twice, the second act twice, and finally repeating the first act once?

Bow
Clap

2 points

Question 8

Since the dictatorship of Francisco Franco came to an end in 1975, leading to the replacement of the ‘caudillo’ head of state with a parliamentary monarchy, who have been the two monarchs of the Kingdom of Spain?

Juan Carlos I
Felipe VI

2 points

Question 9

What categorising names are given to the five different types of bone found in the human skeleton, with the names describing the bones’ various shapes?

Long
Short
Flat
Irregular
Sesamoid

*Sesamoid bones get their name from the Greek word for sesame seed.

5 points

Question 10

Which six Norse gods give their names to days of the week in the English language?

Sól / Sunna (the sun)
Máni (the moon)
Tyr
Wodan / Odin
Thor
Frey / Freyr

*Saturday is the exception, as it is named for the Roman god Saturn.

6 points

Round 4 points
(Maximum: 21)

Total points
(Maximum: 88)

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.

In which film does the following cast list appear?

Clue 1

Victor Jory as Jonas Wilkerson

10 points

Clue 2

George Reeves as Stuart Tarleton

9 points

Clue 3

Everett Brown as Big Sam

8 points

Clue 4

Barbara O’Neil as Ellen Robillard

7 points

Clue 5

Butterfly McQueen as Prissy

6 points

Clue 6

Hattie McDaniel as Mammy

5 points

Clue 7

Olivia de Havilland as Melanie Hamilton

4 points

Clue 8

Leslie Howard as Ashley Wilkes

3 points

Clue 9

Clark Gable as Rhett Butler

2 points

Clue 10

Vivien Leigh as Scarlett O’Hara

1 point

Gone with the Wind

Round 5 points
(Maximum: 10)

Total points
(Maximum: 98)