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Quiz No. 2
Recumbentman Started conversation Jul 26, 2016
Some old chestnuts, some maybe not so.
1. Which country is named after a chemical element?
2. Which country gives its name to an article of clothing?
3. Which of these is not a kingdom: Madagascar, Morocco, Netherlands, Swaziland?
4. What 20th century composer's name means (in English) two contradictory things that can be expressed by two words identical apart from their first letter?
5. Which of these has an eponymous hero: The Three Musketeers, The Man in the Iron Mask, Watership Down, Dances With Wolves?
6. When was the first ostensibly featureless monochrome canvas exhibited in an influential art gallery: in the 1920s, 1950s, or 1980s?
Quiz No. 2
Icy North Posted Jul 26, 2016
Off the top of my head:
1. Argentina
2. Knickeragua, Tieland? (still thinking)
3. Madagascar sounds most likely
4. (still thinking)
5. Dances With Wolves, I think.
6. I'd guess the 1920s, but I really don't know.
Quiz No. 2
You can call me TC Posted Jul 27, 2016
5 can only be the Man in the Iron Mask, surely.
Am still trying to get my early morning mind round the composer thing, and for countries named after elements - there was me trying to remember which countries ended in 'ium'.
Quiz No. 2
You can call me TC Posted Jul 27, 2016
Yeah, clothing. So many named after places, jodhpur, balaclava, cardigan, homburg, but a whole country!!!??? Although, based on the 'Argent - Argentinia' principle, I suppose French knickers would fit.
Quiz No. 2
You can call me TC Posted Jul 27, 2016
I started perusing this list:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_20th-century_classical_composers
but I baulked at finding a translation for Rimsky-Korsakov.
Quiz No. 2
Icy North Posted Jul 27, 2016
On Q6, the old Libyan flag was monochrome, so it was presumably flying above exhibitions in Tripoli and elsewhere for many years.
Quiz No. 2
Baron Grim Posted Jul 27, 2016
Bermuda shorts
And Dances With Wolves. Remember, "Dances With Wolves" was the name given to the protagonist during by the Lakota.
Quiz No. 2
You can call me TC Posted Jul 27, 2016
Ah. I never saw the film. (Must be the last person on the planet....)
Quiz No. 2
You can call me TC Posted Jul 27, 2016
Hmm. I don't think a flag is actually an "exhibit", Icy. I would guess the 1920s for that one, too. Was it dadaism?
Quiz No. 2
Recumbentman Posted Jul 27, 2016
Hmm, no. 4 is abstruse enough. Let's say The name is not English, but reading it as though it were, it could with the addition of a T or a G before it go for a drive.
Quiz No. 2
Recumbentman Posted Jul 27, 2016
About no. 6, I don't count a flag as a canvas. I'm talking about a primed and mounted canvas painted with a single colour with no variety of shade, and exhibited as an art work.
Quiz No. 2
Baron Grim Posted Jul 27, 2016
Rabo Karabekian's _The Temptation of Saint Anthony_ nearly fits the description.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabo_Karabekian
Quiz No. 2
Recumbentman Posted Jul 27, 2016
Nearly... except I am not thinking of a fictional artist.
Icy was right about Argentina, Madagascar, and Dances with Wolves. I rule out The Three Musketeers and The Man in the Iron Mask as it is not their names that give the story its name, and Watership Down is a location rather than a hero.
I was annoyed and disgusted at the scene in which the hero was told that he had been named "Dances with wolves". It was the look of slow realisation that came over Kevin Costner's face: "Ah, so that's why they called the movie that". What I hate about Hollywood. No other country (well perhaps Bollywood) would take such pains to prod the audience reaction in such an insultingly redundant way.
Quiz No. 2
Baron Grim Posted Jul 27, 2016
Heh... I know how you feel. Stephen King famously dislikes the Stanley Kubrick version of _The Shining_ and prefers the 1997 made for TV miniseries. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118460/
This version doesn't ever go longer than the next commercial break to remind you that Jack has a drinking problem.
Quiz No. 2
Icy North Posted Jul 27, 2016
After your last clue, is 4 Ravel? I'm not sure that gravel and travel are particularly contradictory, but maybe in the context of 'drive'.
Quiz No. 2
Recumbentman Posted Jul 27, 2016
That's the one. The contradictory meanings of 'ravel' are entangle and untangle. Gravel and travel were bonuses.
Quiz No. 2
Icy North Posted Jul 27, 2016
Ah, all becomes clear! We rarely use 'ravel' these days.
So are we still waiting for Q2? It wasn't Panama, then?
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Quiz No. 2
- 1: Recumbentman (Jul 26, 2016)
- 2: Icy North (Jul 26, 2016)
- 3: Recumbentman (Jul 26, 2016)
- 4: You can call me TC (Jul 27, 2016)
- 5: You can call me TC (Jul 27, 2016)
- 6: Icy North (Jul 27, 2016)
- 7: Icy North (Jul 27, 2016)
- 8: You can call me TC (Jul 27, 2016)
- 9: Icy North (Jul 27, 2016)
- 10: Baron Grim (Jul 27, 2016)
- 11: You can call me TC (Jul 27, 2016)
- 12: You can call me TC (Jul 27, 2016)
- 13: Recumbentman (Jul 27, 2016)
- 14: Recumbentman (Jul 27, 2016)
- 15: Baron Grim (Jul 27, 2016)
- 16: Recumbentman (Jul 27, 2016)
- 17: Baron Grim (Jul 27, 2016)
- 18: Icy North (Jul 27, 2016)
- 19: Recumbentman (Jul 27, 2016)
- 20: Icy North (Jul 27, 2016)
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