WITHQUIZ The Withington Pub Quiz League QUESTION PAPER April 11th 2007 |
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WQ Archive | Comments | Question papers |
WithQuiz League paper 11/04/07 |
Set by: Opsimaths |
QotW: R3/Q1 |
Average Aggregate Score: 67.2 (Season's Ave. Agg.: 67.2) |
Aggregate scores were middling but good signs in that there were a number of different nominations for QotW. The Pigs thought the Picture Round too one-track whilst the culture vultures from Ms Rodin loved it; Ethel and co. thought the 'First lady to...' pair were not much fun, whereas the Girls and FCEKs voted 'em top notch. |
1. |
Ellen Church (1904-1965) was a nurse and, because of this experience, she was hired to become the world’s first what? |
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2. |
Which Assam-born actress made her film debut in Billy Liar? |
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3. |
Which famous 20th century thriller book starts with the words:
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4. |
Where would you find people wearing dirndls? |
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5. |
Who wrote the songs: The Way You Look Tonight and Long Ago and Far Away? |
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6. |
The site of Castle Montacute, built in 1068, is on top of St Michael’s Hill in which English county? |
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7. |
What word links the 1960s pop song Well I Ask You, Carlisle and Elia Kazan? |
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8. |
In which month is Candlemas? |
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ROUND 2 - Hidden theme - 'Home and Away' |
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1. |
Which city lies just north of Hastings and is renowned for the sunburst, chevron and ziggurat motifs on and inside its most prominent buildings? |
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2. |
Which well-known TV character was played by Frank Oz from 1976 until 2001? |
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3. |
What were Courteney Cox Arquette, Lisa Kudrow and David Schwimmer? |
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4. |
In which recent film does Stephen Webb play the part of Posner, based on the author as a teenager? |
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5. |
Stanley Holloway recorded a famous monologue about Blackpool Zoo. What was it called? |
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6. |
What was the name of Blur’s third album and the first to top the UK album charts? |
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7. |
Who were the American husband and wife pair executed for treason in 1953? |
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8. |
Which rock group features Stefan Cush, Paul Simmonds, Philip Odgers, Jon Odgers, and Shanne Bradley? |
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ROUND 3 - 'It’s a quiet country'Each answer leads somehow onto the next question |
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The American-born composer, John Cage wrote a piece of music entitled 4 minutes 33 seconds which consists of total silence. Why did he pick that number of seconds? |
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2. |
Minus 273 degrees Celsius is the equivalent to zero degrees according to the absolute temperature scale named after which physicist? |
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3. |
Which Greater Manchester-born physicist worked with Kelvin on temperature changes in gases, and has a unit of work named after him? |
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4. |
Earlier in Manchester, in 1793, which chemist was appointed teacher of mathematics and science at New College? |
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5. |
Based on his own case, Dalton described the form of colour blindness now known as Daltonism. Daltonism is an inability to distinguish between which two colours? |
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6. |
Colour-blindness is far more common in men than women. Which other disease, also far more common in men than women, afflicted Leopold, Duke of Albany 1853-84? |
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7. |
Ruling from 1831 to 1865, Leopold I, Victoria’s uncle, was the first king of which country? |
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8. |
Which Belgian-born actress won an Oscar in 1953 and was nominated for one in 1967? |
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1. |
If you walked in a straight line from Ireland’s most northerly mainland point (Malin Head) to its most southerly (Brow Head) you would pass through 10 counties. Name 4 of them. |
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2. |
“If an integer n is greater than 2, then an + bn = cn has no solutions in non-zero integers a, b, and c.” What is this? |
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3. |
Why are the corner flags at Bury’s Football ground triangular but not at Rochdale’s? |
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4. |
What single word does Orson Welles utter in the death scene at the start of the film Citizen Kane? |
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5. |
Which late BBC Panorama reporter gained notoriety for attacking Harold Wilson live on air for his support of President Lyndon Johnson over the Vietnam War? |
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6. |
What London building has the address 60 Cleveland Street, Fitzrovia? |
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7. |
Which comedian referred to fictional friends Everard, Apricot Lil and Slack Alice as part of his routine? |
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8. |
Lincolnshire is traditionally divided into 3 Parts. Name them. |
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1. |
Working for a company whose name is a tribute to the founder’s liking for a certain English playwright, in 1886 Mrs P F Albee became the first what? |
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2. |
Which Hull-born actor made his film debut in The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner? |
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3. |
Which famous 20th century novel starts with the words:
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4. |
Who would wear a calotte? |
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5. |
Whose best known musical works included Samson and Delilah and Danse Macabre? |
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6. |
Corfe Castle is in which English county? |
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7. |
What name links Ronnie Corbett, a Robert Louis Stevenson hero and the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire after World War I? |
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8. |
In which month is Martinmas? |
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ROUND 6 - 'Naughty Opsimaths’ Silly Themes'Each answer consists of 2 words, which start with consecutive ascending letters of the alphabet (e.g. Duncan Edwards or Torquay United) – no pair is repeated and they are in alphabetical sequence from Answer 1 to Answer 8 |
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1. |
Arnold Bax was Master of the Queen’s Musick until 1953 when he was succeeded by whom? |
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2. |
Which film, based on a 1985 book by Winston Groom, won the 1994 Oscar for Best Film with its Director, Robert Zemeckis, also picking up an award? |
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3. |
What was the setting for both of Clint Eastwood’s most recent films? |
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4. |
Who was appointed by Franklin Roosevelt as US Ambassador to Britain in 1938? |
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5. |
Who came between Vic Feather and Norman Willis? |
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6. |
Which Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland was hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn in 1681 – the last Catholic martyr to die in England? |
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7. |
There are currently 3 Australian umpires on the Test panel: Darrell Hair, Daryl Harper and which other? |
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8. |
Which designer and Dame of the British Empire was born in Tintwistle, Glossop? |
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ROUND 7 - Picture Round Who produced these famous works of art? |
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8. |
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1. |
If you walked in a straight line from Ireland’s most easterly mainland point (Burr Point, Ards Peninsula) to its most westerly (Garraun Point, Dingle Peninsula) you would pass through 8 counties. Name 4 of them. |
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2. |
What is the smallest Pythagorean Triple? |
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3. |
FA Cup Final crowds have exceeded 100,000 a number of times. Mostly this has been at Wembley, but on two occasions at another ground. Which? |
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4. |
According to Orson Welles in The Third Man, what did “brotherly love and 500 years of democracy and peace produce”? |
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5. |
What was the name of the bearded BBC Tonight Scottish reporter from the 1950s/1960s who often wore a deerstalker hat? |
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6. |
What London building has the address 30 St Mary Axe? |
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7. |
What was the name of the character played by Peter Cook in Beyond the Fringe who says:
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8. |
After Lincoln which are the next 2 largest centres of population in Lincolnshire? |
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1. |
Orion has his shield and club raised against which neighbouring constellation? |
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2. |
The Haber process combines nitrogen with hydrogen to produce which gas? |
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3. |
In 2003 a new species of mankind was discovered called scientifically ‘Homo Floresiensis’. By what name is the species more popularly known? |
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4. |
In what type of business are Wire and Plastic Products plc primarily involved? |
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5. |
What is the meaning of the name of the Belgian town Bruges? |
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6. |
Who was Queen Anne’s husband? |
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7. |
Brass is an alloy of which two metals? |
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8. |
What is the birthstone for April? |
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Go to Spare questions with answers
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1. |
Ellen Church (1904-1965) was a nurse and, because of this experience, she was hired to become the world’s first what? |
Air Hostess |
2. |
Which Assam-born actress made her film debut in Billy Liar? |
Julie Christie |
3. |
Which famous 20th century thriller book starts with the words:
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The 39 Steps (by John Buchan) |
4. |
Where would you find people wearing dirndls? |
Southern Germany or Austria (accept either Germany or Austria) |
5. |
Who wrote the songs: The Way You Look Tonight and Long Ago and Far Away? |
Jerome Kern |
6. |
The site of Castle Montacute, built in 1068, is on top of St Michael’s Hill in which English county? |
Somerset |
7. |
What word links the 1960s pop song Well I Ask You, Carlisle and Elia Kazan? |
Eden (Eden Kane, pop singer; River Eden; East of Eden, the film directed by Elia Kazan) |
8. |
In which month is Candlemas? |
February |
Go back to Round 1 questions without answers
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ROUND 2 - Hidden theme - 'Home and Away' |
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1. |
Which city lies just north of Hastings and is renowned for the sunburst, chevron and ziggurat motifs on and inside its most prominent buildings? |
Napier (New Zealand) |
2. |
Which well-known TV character was played by Frank Oz from 1976 until 2001? |
Miss Piggy (from The Muppets) |
3. |
What were Courteney Cox Arquette, Lisa Kudrow and David Schwimmer? |
Friends |
4. |
In which recent film does Stephen Webb play the part of Posner, based on the author as a teenager? |
The History Boys |
5. |
Stanley Holloway recorded a famous monologue about Blackpool Zoo. What was it called? |
Albert & the Lion |
6. |
What was the name of Blur’s third album and the first to top the UK album charts? |
Parklife |
7. |
Who were the American husband and wife pair executed for treason in 1953? |
Julius & Ethel Rosenberg |
8. |
Which rock group features Stefan Cush, Paul Simmonds, Philip Odgers, Jon Odgers, and Shanne Bradley? |
The Men They Couldn’t Hang |
Theme: Each answer refers to one of the WithQuiz team names |
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Go back to Round 2 questions without answers
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ROUND 3 - 'It’s a quiet country' Each answer leads somehow onto the next question |
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1. |
The American-born composer, John Cage wrote a piece of music entitled 4 minutes 33 seconds which consists of total silence. Why did he pick that number of seconds? |
Minus 273 degrees Celsius (or Centigrade) is absolute zero, the lowest temperature attainable when all liquids turn to solids |
2. |
Minus 273 degrees Celsius is the equivalent to zero degrees according to the absolute temperature scale named after which physicist? |
Earl Kelvin |
3. |
Which Greater Manchester-born physicist worked with Kelvin on temperature changes in gases, and has a unit of work named after him? |
James Prescott Joule |
4. |
Earlier in Manchester, in 1793, which chemist was appointed teacher of mathematics and science at New College? |
John Dalton |
5. |
Based on his own case, Dalton described the form of colour blindness now known as Daltonism. Daltonism is an inability to distinguish between which two colours? |
Red and Green |
6. |
Colour-blindness is far more common in men than women. Which other disease, also far more common in men than women, afflicted Leopold, Duke of Albany 1853-84? |
Haemophilia (Leopold was the youngest son of Queen Victoria - her other sons escaped the disease) |
7. |
Ruling from 1831 to 1865, Leopold I, Victoria’s uncle, was the first king of which country? |
Belgium |
8. |
Which Belgian-born actress won an Oscar in 1953 and was nominated for one in 1967? |
Audrey Hepburn (won for Roman Holiday, and nominated for Wait Until Dark) |
Go back to Round 3 questions without answers
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1. |
If you walked in a straight line from Ireland’s most northerly mainland point (Malin Head) to its most southerly (Brow Head) you would pass through 10 counties. Name 4 of them. |
(4 from) Donegal, Tyrone, Fermanagh, Leitrim, Roscommon, Galway, Clare, Limerick, Kerry and Cork |
2. |
“If an integer n is greater than 2, then an + bn = cn has no solutions in non-zero integers a, b, and c.” What is this? |
Fermat’s Last Theorem |
3. |
Why are the corner flags at Bury’s Football ground triangular but not at Rochdale’s? |
Only FA Cup Final winners are allowed to use triangular corner flags (Bury won the FA Cup in 1900 and 1903, but Rochdale have never won it) |
4. |
What single word does Orson Welles utter in the death scene at the start of the film Citizen Kane? |
“Rosebud” |
5. |
Which late BBC Panorama reporter gained notoriety for attacking Harold Wilson live on air for his support of President Lyndon Johnson over the Vietnam War? |
James Mossman |
6. |
What London building has the address 60 Cleveland Street, Fitzrovia? |
The Post Office Tower |
7. |
Which comedian referred to fictional friends Everard, Apricot Lil and Slack Alice as part of his routine? |
Larry Grayson |
8. |
Lincolnshire is traditionally divided into 3 Parts. Name them. |
Lindsey, Kesteven and Holland |
Go back to Round 4 questions without answers
S
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1 |
Working for a company whose name is a tribute to the founder’s liking for a certain English playwright, in 1886 Mrs P F Albee became the first what? |
Avon Sales Representative |
2. |
Which Hull-born actor made his film debut in The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner? |
Tom Courtenay |
3. |
Which famous 20th century novel starts with the words:
|
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold |
4. |
Who would wear a calotte? |
A clergyman (especially a Roman Catholic clergyman – it’s a skullcap) |
5. |
Whose best known musical works included Samson and Delilah and Danse Macabre? |
Camille Saint-Saens |
6. |
Corfe Castle is in which English county? |
Dorset |
7. |
What name links Ronnie Corbett, a Robert Louis Stevenson hero and the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire after World War I? |
Balfour (Ronnie Corbett’s middle name; David Balfour in Kidnapped; The Balfour Delaration) |
8. |
In which month is Martinmas? |
November |
Go back to Round 5 questions without answers
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ROUND 6 - 'Naughty Opsimaths’ Silly Themes'Each answer consists of 2 words, which start with consecutive ascending letters of the alphabet (e.g. Duncan Edwards or Torquay United) – no pair is repeated and they are in alphabetical sequence from Answer 1 to Answer 8 |
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1 |
Arnold Bax was Master of the Queen’s Musick until 1953 when he was succeeded by whom? |
Arthur Bliss |
2. |
Which film, based on a 1985 book by Winston Groom, won the 1994 Oscar for Best Film with its Director, Robert Zemeckis, also picking up an award? |
Forrest Gump |
3. |
What was the setting for both of Clint Eastwood’s most recent films? |
Iwo Jima |
4. |
Who was appointed by Franklin Roosevelt as US Ambassador to Britain in 1938? |
Joseph Kennedy |
5. |
Who came between Vic Feather and Norman Willis? |
Len Murray (General Secretary of the TUC) |
6. |
Which Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland was hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn in 1681 – the last Catholic martyr to die in England? |
(St) Oliver Plunkett |
7. |
There are currently 3 Australian umpires on the Test panel: Darrell Hair, Daryl Harper and which other? |
Simon Taufel |
8. |
Which designer and Dame of the British Empire was born in Tintwistle, Glossop? |
Vivienne Westwood |
Go back to Round 6 questions without answers
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ROUND 7 - Picture Round Who produced these famous works of art? |
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1. |
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Jacques-Louis David |
2. |
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L S Lowry |
3. |
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Donald McGill |
4. |
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Peter Blake |
5. |
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William Hogarth |
6. |
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Caravaggio |
7. |
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Roy Liechtenstein |
8. |
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Piet Mondriaan |
Go back to Round 7 questions without answers
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1. |
If you walked in a straight line from Ireland’s most easterly mainland point (Burr Point, Ards Peninsula) to its most westerly (Garraun Point, Dingle Peninsula) you would pass through 8 counties. Name 4 of them. |
(4 from) Down, Louth, Monaghan, West Meath, Offaly, Galway, Clare and Kerry |
2. |
What is the smallest Pythagorean Triple? |
3, 4, 5 (lowest whole numbers where the sum of the squares of two of them equals the square of the third – i.e. 9 + 16 = 25) |
3. |
FA Cup Final crowds have exceeded 100,000 a number of times. Mostly this has been at Wembley, but on two occasions at another ground. Which? |
Crystal Palace |
4. |
According to Orson Welles in The Third Man, what did “brotherly love and 500 years of democracy and peace produce”? |
“The Cuckoo Clock” (in reference to Switzerland) |
5. |
What was the name of the bearded BBC Tonight Scottish reporter from the 1950s/1960s who often wore a deerstalker hat? |
Fyfe Robertson |
6. |
What London building has the address 30 St Mary Axe? |
The Gherkin (The Swiss Re Tower) |
7. |
What was the name of the character played by Peter Cook in Beyond the Fringe who says:
|
E L Wisty |
8. |
After Lincoln which are the next 2 largest centres of population in Lincolnshire? |
Boston and Grantham |
1. |
Orion has his shield and club raised against which neighbouring constellation? |
Taurus (accept The Bull) |
2. |
The Haber process combines nitrogen with hydrogen to produce which gas? |
Ammonia |
3. |
In 2003 a new species of mankind was discovered called scientifically ‘Homo Floresiensis’. By what name is the species more popularly known? |
The Hobbit |
4. |
In what type of business are Wire and Plastic Products plc primarily involved? |
Media (specifically advertising) |
5. |
What is the meaning of the name of the Belgian town Bruges? |
Bridge |
6. |
Who was Queen Anne’s husband? |
George of Denmark |
7. |
Brass is an alloy of which two metals? |
Copper and Zinc |
8. |
What is the birthstone for April? |
Diamond |
ns without answers |