quizballs 142 - general knowledge quiz - questions & answers
free general knowledge quiz questions and answers - for pub quizzes, pub games, team games, learning and fun
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This is a Businessballs Quizballs free quiz. Quizballs provides free quiz questions and answers for trivia quizzes, team games, pub quizzes, general knowledge, learning and amusement. Use the quiz and questions and answers to suit your purposes, either as a stand-alone quiz, or to cut and paste to make your own quizzes. Quizballs accepts no liability for any arguments, lost bets, or otherwise unfortunate consequences arising from any errors contained in these quizzes although quite a lot of effort is made to ensure that questions are clear and answers are correct. Please notify us of any errors, or questions or answers requiring clarification. These quizzes are free to use in pub quizzes, trivia quizzes, organisational events and team-building, but are not to be sold or published, which includes not posting them on other websites, thank you. Below are the quiz answers. Here are the quiz questions without answers. Spelling note: Some UK-English and US-English spellings may vary, notably words ending in our/or, and ise/ize. Where appropriate please change the spellings to suit your local situation. Corrections to quizzes are shown on the Quizballs index page - see Quizballs corrections. |
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quizballs 142 - free general knowledge quiz - questions and answers for trivia quizzes and pub quizzes
- Butterfly, saucer pass and waffle are terms used in which sport? Ice hockey
- US traitor Iva Toguri d'Aquino was better known by what name? Tokyo Rose
- What is the subtitle of Shakespeare's play 'Twelfth Night': Now Or Never; What You Will; As You Were; or Whatever? What You Will
- In the financial world, what does GNP stand for? Gross National Product
- The Hubbard Medal, whose past winners include Sir Ernest Shackleton, Charles Lindbergh, and the Apollo 11 crew, is awarded by which society? National Geographic Society (awarded for distinction in exploration, discovery, and research, named after Gardiner Greene Hubbard, first National Geographic Society president)
- According to the Bible, how old was Methuselah when he fathered Lamech? 187
- What do the following abbreviations stand for on a British Ordnance Survey map (clues in brackets): BS (queue); Cvt (pray); SB (rail); TG (pay)? Bus Stop, Convent, Signal Box, Toll Gate
- The World Heritage city of Kandy is on which Asian island, whose name means in Sanskrit 'venerable island', and whose previous colonial name is strongly associated with tea? Sri Lanka (was Ceylon)
- What is Ananas Comosus, defined as as 'multiple fruit consisting of coalesced berries'? Pineapple
- The D H Lawrence novel The Plumed Serpent is set in which country, bordered on the south-east by Guatemala, Belize and the Caribbean Sea? Mexico (fully, United Mexican States)
- Which publishing firm did Carmen Callil found in 1973, whose name means a domineering woman? Virago
- The Sager House (previously The Sager Palace, and called locally Sagerska Huset) is the official residence of the Prime Minister of which European country? Sweden
- Roman Emperor Claudius was said to have been poisoned by a dish of what: Oysters; Mushrooms; Sheeps' eyes; or Bananas? Mushrooms
- What colour/color is Mr Bump in Hargreaves' Mr Men series of children's cartoon books? Blue (with white bandages)
- What was the very Greek middle name of Greek shipping tycoon Aristotle Onassis? Socrates (Sokratis)
- What Russian word meaning 'restructuring' was a political movement in the 1980s? Perestroika
- Benesh Notation is the written language of which activity? Dance
- Which toy company produced a monkey called Jocko, and put elephant-design buttons in its toys' ears as a measure against counterfeits? Steiff (fully, Margarete Steiff GmbH, after its German founder)
- Who, as the first chairman of the British Rail Board, infamously directed the huge reduction in railway lines across the UK in the 1960s? Richard Beeching
- What is an early sacrificial move in chess, usually of a pawn, to gain advantage, which has entered language with similar wider meaning? Gambit (or opening gambit - the word dates from 1561, from an Italian expression 'dare il gambetto' - meaning putting a leg forward to trip someone)
- In 1901 the artists Wassily Kandinsky, Rolf Niczky, Waldemar Hecker, and Wilhelm Hüsgen founded the progressive Phalanx art group in which country? Germany (Munich)
- Gambrius, legendary King of Flanders, is the unofficial patron and mythical inventor of which drink: Wine; Cider; Beer; or Cola? Beer
- Which strait, named after a famous Portuguese-Spanish explorer, separates Chile and Tierra del Fuego? Strait of Magellan
- 2 inches x 1.5 inches (52x37mm) are the dimensions of which paper size: A1; A6; A7; or A9? A9
- Cinnabar, having the symbol HgS, and being highly toxic, is the common ore of which metal? Mercury
- Which vegetable, of the species Brassica Oleracea, has the varieties Nevada and Canberra? Cauliflower
- Southern Distilleries Ltd, the world's most southern distillery, produces Hokonui Moonshine, named after the mountains where the illicit version of the drink first appeared, in which country? New Zealand
- Founded in the 1930s, what iconic cigarette-lighter brand diversified into other products (notably cologne and clothes) for the first time over 70 years later? Zippo
- The game 'Spillikins' is commonly known by which other name? Jackstraws
- Question 17 of the English version of the UK 2011 National Census is blank because it's a: Design error; Welsh language question only on the Welsh census; Social experiment; Device to gain off-guard feedback? Welsh language question only on the Welsh census (The official explanantion is: "We aim to keep the England and Wales questionnaires as consistent as possible. Question 17 is about the Welsh language and is only included on the questionnaire in Wales. This question is not required in both countries, so a space has been left." The explanation continues: "On the England questionnaire this question is left blank. On the Wales questionnaire question 17 asks: Can you understand, speak, read or write Welsh? In Wales this information helps public bodies to understand the extent to which the Welsh language is used and, therefore, to meet their statutory duties under the Welsh Language Act 1993. It is also used for policy development and monitoring, and provides data for the allocation of grants to support the Welsh language. This question was first asked in 1891.")
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