WITHQUIZ The Withington Pub Quiz League QUESTION PAPER October 25th 2006 |
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WQ Archive | Comments | Question papers |
WithQuiz League paper 25/10/06 |
Set by: 2 FCEKs |
QotW: R5-8/Q1 |
Average Aggregate Score: 69.3(Season's Ave. Agg.: 67.2) |
"Top marks for the variety and interest of the questions and there were only 4 zero point questions in the whole game." "As ever a superb effort from 2FCEKs." |
ROUND 1 - 'A Day out in England' |
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1. |
Which city would you be visiting if you saw a large sign across Stonegate enticing you into Ye Olde Starre Inn? |
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2. |
What is the name of Manchester City Council’s outdoor education centre located on the side of Lake Windermere? |
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3. |
Stoke-on-Trent is actually an amalgamation of six towns. Doing what Arnold Bennett did and ignoring Fenton, name four of the other five. |
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4. |
What is the name of the scenic limestone escarpment that runs from the Ironbridge gorge to Craven Arms in Shropshire? |
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5. |
In which English city would you find The Mathmatical Bridge and The Bridge of Sighs? |
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6. |
Who designed the purpose built Natural History Museum in South Kensington? |
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7. |
Where can Chesters, Housesteads, Vindolanda and Birdoswald all be found? |
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8. |
How long in feet is the phallus of the Cerne Abbas Giant in Dorset? (we’ll allow you a generous two feet either way). |
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ROUND 2 - Hidden theme |
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1. |
Who wrote A Tale of a Tub amongst other satirical works? |
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2. |
The 2006 Nobel prize-winner for literature, Orhan Pamuk, comes from which country? |
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3. |
Name the current MP for Wallasey. |
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4. |
Who succeeded Malcolm Fraser as Prime Minister of Australia in 1983? |
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5. |
By what name do the golfing fraternity know a score of 3 below par? |
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6. |
What was the name of Sir Francis Drake’s flagship when he set sail from Plymouth in 1577 for his circumnavigation of the globe? |
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7. |
Where was the first major British land victory in the Falklands in 1982 during which Colonel H Jones was killed and subsequently awarded a Victoria Cross? |
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8. |
Who wanted “to have some fun on Santa Monica boulevard” in 1994? |
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ROUND 3 - Name the DecadeGive the decade in which the following events took place |
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1. |
The secret ballot is introduced into British politics. |
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2. |
John Constable paints The Haywain. |
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3. |
Englishman Nicholas Breakespeare becomes Pope Adrian IV. |
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4. |
Rhymes known as Limericks first gain popularity with the publication of Edward Lear’s Book of Nonsense. |
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5. |
Carl Orff composes his best known piece Carmina Burana. |
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6. |
The registration of births, marriages and deaths becomes compulsory in England and Wales. |
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7. |
St Augustine travels from Rome to Kent to convert the heathen English to Christianity. |
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8. |
King Alfred the Great dies and is buried in Winchester. |
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ROUND 4 - Hidden theme |
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1. |
Which character in the 1939 film of The Wizard of Oz was played by actor, Jack Haley? |
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2. |
Which actor played a pair of identical twin gynaecologists in the 1988 film Dead Ringers? |
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3. |
Name the set of keyboard variations composed by Johann Sebastian Bach in 1741 and called after the harpsichordist who first performed them. |
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4. |
What name connects a deceased British pop star and the main character in the 1960s animated puppet series Supercar? |
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5. |
Link the surname of a well known American blues and folk singer with that of a character played by Penelope Keith in the 1970s sitcom The Good Life. |
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6. |
Which Charles Dickens character was married to Dora Spenlow? |
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7. |
Combine a prefix meaning together or with, and a general term for an inhabitant of Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia. |
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8. |
Combine a prefix meaning opposition with a word that denotes something you can exchange for a commodity or a service. |
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ROUNDS 5-8 - Bingo Quiz |
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Which successful play of the 1960s by an English playwright contains the following stage direction: 'They climb the Andes'? |
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2. |
In 1948, the first Stoke Mandeville games were held. What did they become better known as 12 years later? |
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3. |
Michelle Bachelet was elected earlier this year as the President of which country? |
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4. |
What did Dylan Thomas do in Ireland on July 2 2006? |
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5. |
Recreationally speaking, what in England has a value of 10 but in Poland has a value of 1? |
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6. |
In terms of population, Cordoba and Rosario are the second and third largest cities in which country? |
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7. |
Who is known in Arabic as ‘Al Baba’? |
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8. |
From which Joni Mitchell song is this line taken: “and I dreamed I saw the bomber death planes riding shotgun in the sky”? |
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9. |
Who was the young barrister who defended Penguin books during the Lady Chatterley trial of 1960? |
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10. |
What was invented in Germany at the start of the 18th century and is a concoction of rosemary, orange flowers and oils of bergamot distilled in a grape spirit? |
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11. |
The construction of what began in Belfast on March 31 1909? |
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12. |
Whose sporting autobiography was published in 2005 and was cruelly dismissed by one critic who wrote:
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13. |
Who or what is Great Smoo? |
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14. |
In the quarter-finals of the FIFA World Cup 2006, and, with the exception of penalty shootouts, four of the eight teams failed to score a goal. Name the four teams. |
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15. |
In mathematics, what has two parts called the characteristic and the mantissa? |
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16. |
Recently voted the best action scene ever, the opening 23 minutes of which 1997 film was shot on a small beach in Co. Wexford? |
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17. |
How often does a hebdomadal event take place? |
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18. |
How are you affected if you suffer from lethologica? |
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19. |
What is expected to happen to Ban Ki-Moon on 1 January 2007? |
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20. |
Why has the 14th century Byzantine Emperor, Manuel IV Palaeologus, been in the news lately? |
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21. |
Headed by lawyer, Dick Pound, what is the full name of the organization known by the acronym WADA? |
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22. |
Recently adapted for television, what is the name of the prequel to Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre, written in 1966 by novelist, Jean Rhys? |
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23. |
In which European capital city is the Amalienborg Palace the main royal residence? |
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24. |
Actress, Dame Helen Mirren, recently did something on screen which no previous actress has done. What did she do? |
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25. |
What is the commonly used term for the mainly childhood complaint of enuresis? |
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26. |
What recently happened to Shinzo Abe? |
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27. |
How were the opening lines of this famous song, first sung in German in 1929, translated into English:
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28. |
As what were Alecto, Megaera and Tisiphone collectively known in Graeco-Roman mythology? |
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29. |
What was the name of the horse recently ridden to gold-winning victory in the World Equestrian event in Aachen, Germany by Zara Phillips? |
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30. |
Which British monarch once famously declared that he “hated all poets and painters”? |
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31. |
Name the Italian footballer who was famously given a nasty chest pain by Zinedine Zidane in the World Cup Final between France and Italy played in Berlin on July 9 this year. |
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32. |
Name the Birmingham Labour MP for Erdington who recently got into trouble for making a spoof video of Tory leader, David Cameron, inviting viewers to sleep with his wife. |
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33. |
Which church in Paris is the setting for much of the action in Dan Brown’s bestselling book The Da Vinci Code? |
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34. |
Which philosopher published a book entitled Meditations on First Philosophy (or just Meditations for short)? |
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35. |
What is the name of the new West-End musical produced by former Monty Python member Eric Idle which is based on Monty Python and the Holy Grail? |
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36. |
What was Amelie Mauresmo the first Frenchwoman to achieve this year since 1925? |
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37. |
What position does Ugandan-born John Sentamu currently hold in the Church of England? |
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38. |
Who is Aishah Asmi and why has she been in the news lately? |
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39. |
Name the young snooker champion (winner of one Welsh Open, one British Open and 3 Benson & Hedges titles) who died earlier this month. |
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40. |
Carcharadon Carcharias is the Latin name for what species of large, predatory fish? |
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41. |
What famous political entity was replaced by The Confederation of the Rhine on July 12 1806? |
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42. |
Britain’s first sitting female MP, Lady Nancy Astor, apparently once retorted to Winston Churchill that, “if you were my husband, I would offer you poison!” How was Churchill said to have replied? |
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Go to Rounds 5-8 questions with answers
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ROUND 1 - 'A Day out in England' |
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1. |
Which city would you be visiting if you saw a large sign across Stonegate enticing you into Ye Olde Starre Inn? |
York |
2. |
What is the name of Manchester City Council’s outdoor education centre located on the side of Lake Windermere? |
Ghyll Head |
3. |
Stoke-on-Trent is actually an amalgamation of six towns. Doing what Arnold Bennett did and ignoring Fenton, name four of the other five. |
(four from) Stoke, Hanley, Burslem, Tunstall and Longton |
4. |
What is the name of the scenic limestone escarpment that runs from the Ironbridge gorge to Craven Arms in Shropshire? |
Wenlock Edge |
5. |
In which English city would you find The Mathmatical Bridge and The Bridge of Sighs? |
Cambridge |
6. |
Who designed the purpose built Natural History Museum in South Kensington? |
Alfred Waterhouse |
7. |
Where can Chesters, Housesteads, Vindolanda and Birdoswald all be found? |
Hadrian's Wall (they are all forts) |
8. |
How long in feet is the phallus of the Cerne Abbas Giant in Dorset? (we’ll allow you a generous two feet either way). |
27 feet (accept 25 to 29 feet) |
Go back to Round 1 questions without answers
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ROUND 2 - Hidden theme |
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1. |
Who wrote A Tale of a Tub amongst other satirical works? |
Jonathan Swift |
2. |
The 2006 Nobel prize-winner for literature, Orhan Pamuk, comes from which country? |
Turkey |
3. |
Name the current MP for Wallasey. |
Angela Eagle |
4. |
Who succeeded Malcolm Fraser as Prime Minister of Australia in 1983? |
Bob Hawke |
5. |
By what name do the golfing fraternity know a score of 3 below par? |
An albatross |
6. |
What was the name of Sir Francis Drake’s flagship when he set sail from Plymouth in 1577 for his circumnavigation of the globe? |
The Pelican (renamed during the voyage to The Golden Hind) |
7. |
Where was the first major British land victory in the Falklands in 1982 during which Colonel H Jones was killed and subsequently awarded a Victoria Cross? |
Goose Green |
8. |
Who wanted “to have some fun on Santa Monica boulevard” in 1994? |
Sheryl Crow |
Theme: Each answer contains the name of a bird |
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Go back to Round 2 questions without answers
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ROUND 3 - Name the Decade Give the decade in which the following events took place |
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1. |
The secret ballot is introduced into British politics. |
1870s |
2. |
John Constable paints The Haywain. |
1820s |
3. |
Englishman Nicholas Breakespeare becomes Pope Adrian IV. |
1150s |
4. |
Rhymes known as Limericks first gain popularity with the publication of Edward Lear’s Book of Nonsense. |
1840s |
5. |
Carl Orff composes his best known piece Carmina Burana. |
1930s |
6. |
The registration of births, marriages and deaths becomes compulsory in England and Wales. |
1830s |
7. |
St Augustine travels from Rome to Kent to convert the heathen English to Christianity. |
590s |
8. |
King Alfred the Great dies and is buried in Winchester. |
890s |
Go back to Round 3 questions without answers
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ROUND 4 - Hidden theme |
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1. |
Which character in the 1939 film of The Wizard of Oz was played by actor, Jack Haley? |
The Tin man |
2. |
Which actor played a pair of identical twin gynaecologists in the 1988 film Dead Ringers? |
Jeremy Irons |
3. |
Name the set of keyboard variations composed by Johann Sebastian Bach in 1741 and called after the harpsichordist who first performed them. |
The Goldberg Variations (the harpsichordist was Johann Gottlieb Goldberg) |
4. |
What name connects a deceased British pop star and the main character in the 1960s animated puppet series Supercar? |
Mercury (Freddie Mercury and Mike Mercury) |
5. |
Link the surname of a well known American blues and folk singer with that of a character played by Penelope Keith in the 1970s sitcom The Good Life. |
Leadbetter (singer Huddy and character Margo) |
6. |
Which Charles Dickens character was married to Dora Spenlow? |
David Copperfield |
7. |
Combine a prefix meaning together or with, and a general term for an inhabitant of Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia. |
Cobalt (co and Balt) |
8. |
Combine a prefix meaning opposition with a word that denotes something you can exchange for a commodity or a service. |
Antimony (anti and money) |
Theme: Each answer contains the name of a metal |
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Go back to Round 4 questions without answers
S
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ROUNDS 5-8 - Bingo Quiz |
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1 |
Which successful play of the 1960s by an English playwright contains the following stage direction: 'They climb the Andes'? |
The Royal Hunt of the Sun |
2. |
In 1948, the first Stoke Mandeville games were held. What did they become better known as 12 years later? |
The Paralympic Games (for disabled athletes) |
3. |
Michelle Bachelet was elected earlier this year as the President of which country? |
Chile |
4. |
What did Dylan Thomas do in Ireland on July 2 2006? |
He won the Irish Derby |
5. |
Recreationally speaking, what in England has a value of 10 but in Poland has a value of 1? |
The letter 'Z' in scrabble |
6. |
In terms of population, Cordoba and Rosario are the second and third largest cities in which country? |
Argentina |
7 |
Who is known in Arabic as ‘Al Baba’? |
The Pope |
8 |
From which Joni Mitchell song is this line taken: “and I dreamed I saw the bomber death planes riding shotgun in the sky”? |
Woodstock |
9. |
Who was the young barrister who defended Penguin books during the Lady Chatterley trial of 1960? |
John Mortimer |
10. |
What was invented in Germany at the start of the 18th century and is a concoction of rosemary, orange flowers and oils of bergamot distilled in a grape spirit? |
Eau de Cologne |
11. |
The construction of what began in Belfast on March 31 1909? |
The Titanic |
12. |
Whose sporting autobiography was published in 2005 and was cruelly dismissed by one critic who wrote:
|
Paula Radcliffe |
13 |
Who or what is Great Smoo? |
Scotland’s largest cave |
14. |
In the quarter-finals of the FIFA World Cup 2006, and, with the exception of penalty shootouts, four of the eight teams failed to score a goal. Name the four teams. |
England, Portugal, Brazil, Ukraine |
15. |
In mathematics, what has two parts called the characteristic and the mantissa? |
A logarithm |
16. |
Recently voted the best action scene ever, the opening 23 minutes of which 1997 film was shot on a small beach in Co. Wexford? |
Saving Private Ryan |
17. |
How often does a hebdomadal event take place? |
Weekly |
18. |
How are you affected if you suffer from lethologica? |
It is the momentary inability to recall a well-known word or name - the dreaded tip of the tongue syndrome |
19 |
What is expected to happen to Ban Ki-Moon on 1 January 2007? |
He is expected to succeed Kofi Annan as United Nations Secretary-General |
20. |
Why has the 14th century Byzantine Emperor, Manuel IV Palaeologus, been in the news lately? |
His were the harsh words about Islam that were controversially quoted by Pope Benedict XVI in a recent lecture in Munich, Germany |
21. |
Headed by lawyer, Dick Pound, what is the full name of the organization known by the acronym WADA? |
World Anti-Doping Agency |
22. |
Recently adapted for television, what is the name of the prequel to Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre, written in 1966 by novelist, Jean Rhys? |
Wide Sargasso Sea |
23. |
In which European capital city is the Amalienborg Palace the main royal residence? |
Copenhagen |
24. |
Actress, Dame Helen Mirren, recently did something on screen which no previous actress has done. What did she do? |
She created critically acclaimed screen portrayals of both Queen Elizabeth I and Queen Elizabeth II |
25 |
What is the commonly used term for the mainly childhood complaint of enuresis? |
Bed-wetting |
26. |
What recently happened to Shinzo Abe? |
He succeeded Junichiro Koizumi as Prime Minister of Japan |
27. |
How were the opening lines of this famous song, first sung in German in 1929, translated into English:
|
“Falling in love again” (made famous, of course, by Marlene Dietrich) |
28. |
As what were Alecto, Megaera and Tisiphone collectively known in Graeco-Roman mythology? |
The Furies, or Eumenides, or Erinyes (any one of these will do) |
29. |
What was the name of the horse recently ridden to gold-winning victory in the World Equestrian event in Aachen, Germany by Zara Phillips? |
Toytown |
30. |
Which British monarch once famously declared that he “hated all poets and painters”? |
King George II (which, of course, immediately inspired many poems of a critical and or satirical nature) |
31 |
Name the Italian footballer who was famously given a nasty chest pain by Zinedine Zidane in the World Cup Final between France and Italy played in Berlin on July 9 this year. |
Marco Materazzi |
32. |
Name the Birmingham Labour MP for Erdington who recently got into trouble for making a spoof video of Tory leader, David Cameron, inviting viewers to sleep with his wife. |
Sion Simon |
33. |
Which church in Paris is the setting for much of the action in Dan Brown’s bestselling book The Da Vinci Code? |
Saint Sulpice |
34. |
Which philosopher published a book entitled Meditations on First Philosophy (or just Meditations for short)? |
Rene Descartes |
35. |
What is the name of the new West-End musical produced by former Monty Python member Eric Idle which is based on Monty Python and the Holy Grail? |
Spamalot |
36. |
What was Amelie Mauresmo the first Frenchwoman to achieve this year since 1925? |
She won the Wimbledon Women’s Singles Championship (Suzanne Lenglen was the last Frenchwoman to do so previously) |
37. |
What position does Ugandan-born John Sentamu currently hold in the Church of England? |
He is the Archbishop of York (the second most senior Anglican clergyman after the Archbishop of Canterbury) |
38. |
Who is Aishah Asmi and why has she been in the news lately? |
She is the Muslim teacher who was suspended for wearing a veil in the classroom |
39. |
Name the young snooker champion (winner of one Welsh Open, one British Open and 3 Benson & Hedges titles) who died earlier this month. |
Paul Hunter |
40 |
Carcharadon Carcharias is the Latin name for what species of large, predatory fish? |
The great white shark |
41. |
What famous political entity was replaced by The Confederation of the Rhine on July 12 1806? |
The Holy Roman Empire |
42. |
Britain’s first sitting female MP, Lady Nancy Astor, apparently once retorted to Winston Churchill that, “if you were my husband, I would offer you poison!” How was Churchill said to have replied? |
“Madam, if I were your husband, I would take it!” (any variation on these words will suffice) |