home bbs files messages ]

Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"

   rec.games.trivia      Discussion about trivia games      32,813 messages   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]

   Message 31,961 of 32,813   
   Dan Blum to Mark Brader   
   Re: QFTCIMM24 Game 3, Rounds 4,6: eponym   
   14 Mar 24 21:31:47   
   
   From: tool@panix.com   
      
   Mark Brader  wrote:   
      
   > * Game 3, Round 4 - Geography - Eponymous Products   
      
   > 1. In order to receive its exclusive designation, this coarse,   
   >    thick luxury fabric must, by a British Act of Parliament of   
   >    1909, be hand-woven in crofters' cottages in the Outer Hebrides.   
   >    Name the fabric.   
      
   Shetland wool   
      
   > 2. One of many British imperial borrowings, this style of house is   
   >    modeled on the lodgings built for early European settlers   
   >    in Bengal.  Name the house style.   
      
   bungalow   
      
   > 3. This fortified wine, long popular in Britain, is most famously   
   >    produced in the Andalusian city of Jerez ["Hey-reth"] de la   
   >    Frontera.  Name it.   
      
   sherry   
      
   > 4. This fortified dessert wine derives its name from the Atlantic   
   >    island where it is produced.  Its flavor comes from a distinctive   
   >    process of heat and aging, developed after the discovery that   
   >    long, turbulent ocean transport in the overheated hold of a   
   >    ship actually improved the flavor.  Name the liquor.   
      
   Madeira   
      
   > 5. This bulky carrying bag, associated with soldiers, is probably   
   >    named for the Belgian town where the thick cloth used to make   
   >    it was produced from the 17th century.  Name the bag.   
      
   duffel   
      
   > 6. When two European immigrants began to manufacture work pants in   
   >    19th-century America, they used the soft yet durable cotton   
   >    cloth named for the city of its original manufacture in southern   
   >    France.  Name the textile.   
      
   denim   
      
   > 7. This traditional dessert, a dense pastry shell holding a layer   
   >    of fruit preserves and sliced nuts topped with a lattice design,   
   >    is reputed to be the oldest confection named for a city.   
   >    The first known reference to it by name was in 1673; the city   
   >    is in Austria.  Name the dessert.   
      
   Linzer torte   
      
   > 8. Though this seasonal fruit originally grew in southeast Asia,   
   >    it takes its name from the North African port from which it   
   >    was traditionally shipped to Europe.  Name the fruit.   
      
   tangerine   
      
   > 9. This delicate fabric, usually made from silk, is named for   
   >    the French town where it was produced from the 17th century.   
   >    The fabric was so strongly associated with aristocratic   
   >    decadence that its makers were guillotined during the French   
   >    Revolution, effectively ending the industry.  Napoleon later   
   >    revived production, though no longer in its eponymous town.   
   >    Name the luxury fabric.   
      
   satin; velvet   
      
   > 10. This ornamental textile design featuring a stylized Persian   
   >    teardrop motif first appeared in Britain on Kashmir shawls   
   >    imported from India.  It takes its English name from a Scottish   
   >    textile town famed for its production.  The design was all the   
   >    rage during the psychedelic '60s and remains popular today.   
   >    Name the design.   
      
   paisley   
      
   > * Game 3, Round 6 - Science - Grammar   
      
   > 1. What do we call a noun derived from a verb and ending in -ing?   
   >    e.g., "Eating is a pleasure".   
      
   gerund   
      
   > 2. Nominative ("he") and accusative ("him") are instances of what?   
      
   case   
      
   > 3. What word describes an object related in form and meaning to   
   >    the verb that governs it? e.g., "Sing a song", "Dream a dream",   
   >    "See a sight."   
      
   cognate   
      
   > 4. What is the "if" clause in a conditional sentence called?   
      
   predicate   
      
   > 5. Active ("I shoot") and passive ("I am shot") are instances   
   >    of what?   
      
   voice   
      
   > 6. Indicative and subjunctive are instances of what?   
      
   mood   
      
   > 7. What fault is exemplified by this sentence from "Forbes"?   
   >    "Following the death of their grandmother, the passenger used   
   >    Air Canada's chatbot on the website to research flights which   
   >    suggested the passenger could apply for bereavement fares   
   >    retroactively."   
      
   misplaced modifier   
      
   > 8. What fault is exemplified by the phrase "free gift"?   
      
   pleonasm   
      
   > 9.  What do we call the noun for which a pronoun stands?   
   >    For instance, "Ralph" in the sentence, "Ask Ralph; he'll know."   
      
   antecedent   
      
   > 10. A quotation attributed to Winston Churchill has him referring   
   >    to *what kind of word* and saying that objections to ending a   
   >    sentence with one were something up with which he would not put?   
      
   preposition   
      
   --   
   _______________________________________________________________________   
   Dan Blum					         tool@panix.com	   
   "I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]


(c) 1994,  bbs@darkrealms.ca