Quiz #18

Quiz #18

Round 1

Question 1

Created in 1940, which nemesis of Batman was supposed to be killed in his second comic book appearance, having accidentally stabbed himself in the heart, only for an editor to reverse the decision and have a final panel added to the story within which a doctor says the villain is still alive?

Joker

1 point

Question 2

Which American guitar maker is the only person to be inducted into both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the National Inventors Hall of Fame?

Les Paul

1 point

Question 3

At three letters, what book of the Bible has the shortest name?

Job

1 point

Question 4

Which American dessert may have its origins in Key West in Florida, although it has also been suggested it was created by food company Borden in a campaign to sell more condensed milk?

Key lime pie

1 point

Question 5

Nando’s, Galito’s, Chicken Licken, and Hungry Lion are all international fast food chains from which African country?

South Africa

1 point

Question 6

What word completes this Turkish proverb: ‘When a clown moves into a palace, he doesn’t become a king. The palace becomes a ___’?

Circus

1 point

Question 7

The UK’s Prime Minister is Keir Starmer. What are the two anagrams of the word ‘Starmer’?

Smarter
Armrest

2 points

Question 8

The UK’s king, Charles III, has two birthdays: his real birthday, in winter, and an official one in a warmer month. In what two months are his birthdays?

November
June

2 points

Question 9

What are the three diseases against which the MMR vaccine immunizes?

Measles
Mumps
Rubella

*Rubella is also known as German measles.

3 points

Question 10

Make the longest word possible from the following letters: AEIMMNNRS

Mannerism

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

Round 1 points
(Maximum: 22)

Round 2

Question 1

Derby, Oxford, Wellington, and Ho Chi Minh are all styles of what wearable item?

Shoes

1 point

Question 2

In which Scottish castle is the 15th century cannon called Mons Meg located?

Edinburgh Castle

1 point

Question 3

In DVD region codes, what number is used for discs that can be played worldwide?

0

1 point

Question 4

From what are the ‘bubbles’ in bubble tea most commonly made?

Tapioca

1 point

Question 5

If a chess move is counted as containing one play by white and one play by black, what is the lowest amount of moves required to achieve checkmate in a game of chess?

Two

*The shortest way to lose a chess game is called ‘fool’s mate’.

1 point

Question 6

Which cricketer holds both the record for the highest score in a first class cricket match and the highest score in a test match, having scored 501 not out for Warwickshire against Durham in 1994 and 400 not out for the West Indies against England in 2004 – having also scored 375 against England in 1994?

Brian Lara

1 point

Question 7

In Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, by Lewis Carroll, what two animals are used by the Queen of Hearts as the equipment for a croquet game?

Flamingo
Hedgehog

*The flamingos were used as mallets, and the hedgehogs were the balls.

2 points

Question 8

What have been the two mobile phone product lines released by Google?

Nexus
Pixel

2 points

Question 9

In revolutions per minute, what are the three standard vinyl record playback speeds – although one has rarely been used since the 1970s and generally no longer appears on record players?

33 ⅓
45
78

3 points

Question 10

What are the four types of human teeth?

Molar
Premolar
Canine
Incisor

4 points

Round 2 points
(Maximum: 17)

Total points
(Maximum: 39)

Round 3

Question 1

Who is the only British Prime Minister to have been assassinated?

Spencer Perceval

1 point

Question 2

What hip hop group was comprised of members Andre 3000 and Big Boi?

Outkast

1 point

Question 3

What is the name given to the literary plot device in which an unlikely outside event, character, or reveal appears to suddenly solve a problem? Examples include the sudden appearance of Artemis at the end of Hippolytus by Euripides, eagles suddenly saving Frodo and Sam in The Lord of the Rings, and Dorothy being told all she has to do is click her heals to go home in The Wizard of Oz.

Deus ex machina

1 point

Question 4

With a history dating back to the mid-13th century, but re-established after the French Revolution, what Parisian university gives its name to the district of the city that sits on bank of the Seine opposite Notre-Dame cathedral?

Sorbonne

1 point

Question 5

In the 21st century Kamilo Beach on Hawaii’s Big Island has become famous for its covering of what material, which has been found to be 3m in depth at some points?  

Plastic

*Kamilo Beach is the landing spot for some of the plastic floating in the Pacific Ocean.

1 point

Question 6

The world’s population is estimated to be around 8 billion. To the nearest billion, what was the global population in 1925, as estimated by the Population Reference Bureau?  

2 billion

1 point

Question 7

Described by The New York Times as ‘The Brilliant Inventor Who Made Two of History’s Biggest Mistakes’, chemical engineer Thomas Midgley Jr invented what two environmentally damaging products – both now banned – in which chemicals were added to improve the performance of commonly used items?

Leaded petrol
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)

*CFCs, once used in refrigerators and aerosols, are sometimes known by the brand name Freon.

2 points

Question 8

Who were the two primary lawyers in the Scopes Monkey Trial?

William Jennings Bryan
Clarence Darrow

2 points

Question 9

According to Aristotle’s Rhetoric, what are the three modes of persuasion?

Ethos
Logos
Pathos

*Ethos is appealing to a person’s ethics, and includes the use of expert authority. Logos is the appealing to a person’s logic, and pathos is the appealing to a person’s emotions.

3 points

Question 10

Four nations came to be known as the ‘Four Powers’ or ‘Four Policemen’ during World War II. Who were the six people who served as the leaders of these countries during the war?

Franklin D. Roosevelt
Harry Truman
Neville Chamberlain
Winston Churchill
Joseph  Stalin
Chiang Kai-Shek

*The four powers were the US, UK, Soviet Union, and Republic of China. The term ‘four policemen’ arose in the 1940s, by which time Chamberlain had already left office.

6 points

Round 3 points
(Maximum: 19)

Total points
(Maximum: 58)

Round 4

Question 1

In the tales of Beatrix Potter, what type of animal is Timmy Tiptoes?

Squirrel

1 point

Question 2

According to the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Ukraine contains four deposit sites with a total of 500 000 tonnes of what chemical element important for net zero technologies – with two of the deposit sites currently in conflict zones?

Lithium

*Shevchenkivske in Donetsk and Kruta Balka in Zaporiyia are currently located in conflict areas.

1 point

Question 3

With an estimated wealth of $1.5 billion, Rasmus Lerdorf is the inventor of what computer programming language, which he initially created in his 20s to run his personal webpage and is now used on an estimated 75% of global websites?

PHP

1 point

Question 4

Which moon of Jupiter is named for a lover of Zeus who was turned into a heifer and subsequently punished by Zeus’s wife Hera, who sent a gadfly to continuously sting her?

Io

1 point

Question 5

Raku is a Japanese technique used in which art form?

Pottery

1 point

Question 6

What name is given to the economic ideology that argues people should keep wealth produced by themselves, and that  wealth earned from land should belong to all members of society, theoretically replacing income and trade taxes and removing inequality based on land ownership?

Georgism (or geoism)

*Georgism is named for the economist Henry George.

1 point

Question 7

What were the names of the two brothers who started the Walmart retail company in 1962? The surname is referred to in the company name, and one brother’s first name is used for Walmart’s wholesale retail arm.

Sam Walton
James ‘Bud’ Walton

*Sam’s Club, Walmart’s wholesale chain, was established in the 1980s.)

2 points

Question 8

What were the three pen names used by the sisters Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Brontë?

Curer Bell
Ellis Bell
Acton Bell

3 points

Question 9

What are the five principal organs of the United Nations currently in operation?

General Assembly
Security Council
Secretariat
International Court of Justice
Economic and Social Council

5 points

Question 10

In the US’s major four sports leagues – those being the NFL, NBA, NHL, and MLB – what six names are used by multiple teams?

Jets
Cardinals
Rangers
Panthers
Kings
Giants

*The teams are: New York Jets (NFL) and Winnipeg Jets (NHL); Arizona Cardinals (NFL) and St Louis Cardinals (MLB); New York Rangers (NHL) and Texas Rangers (MLB); Carolina Panthers (NFL) and Florida Panthers (NHL); Sacramento Kings (NBA) and Los Angeles Kings (NHL); New York Giants (NFL) and San Francisco Giants (MLB)

8 points

Round 4 points
(Maximum: 22)

Total points
(Maximum: 80)

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.

The following dishes all use the same foodstuff. What is it?

Clue 1

Darsaan

10 points

Clue 2

Kem chuối

9 points

Clue 3

Sorvetão

8 points

Clue 4

Hokey pokey

7 points

Clue 5

Bastani sonnati

6 points

Clue 6

Spaghettieis

5 points

Clue 7

Tartufo

4 points

Clue 8

Bombe glacée

3 points

Clue 9

Arctic roll

2 points

Clue 10

Banana split

1 point

Ice cream

Round 5 points
(Maximum: 10)

Total points
(Maximum: 90)