About This Quiz
Hey, trivia buffs! Maybe you've taken the "Jeopardy!" online test several times already. Maybe you've waited by the phone (or email inbox), but the producers have just never called (or emailed). You're losing faith that you'll ever get your chance to tell Alex Trebek a funny, charming personal anecdote right after the first commercial break.Â
Take heart! We've got a Jeopardy-style quiz for you, one that you can play from the comfort of your home (or the office ... you know who you are). We've incorporated categories from sports to science to notable people. And, of course, all the answers are phrased in the form of a question.Â
Do you know which planet was downgraded to a "dwarf" in 2006? (Hint: It was discovered by Clyde Tombaugh). Or which Olympian has won the most medals -- gold and otherwise -- in the history of the Games? (Another hint: This athlete competed in the Summer, not Winter, Games). These questions aren't as hard as you'd usually see on a quiz show, but you may be surprised ... some of them might stump you! (If not, you can move up to some of our other zoo.com "pub trivia" or "Jeopardy-style" quizzes.Â
Good luck, and may the odds be ever in your favor! (Oh, wait, that's something else ...)
OK, it's possible you have a "portrait" of Lincoln, too, as he's on the five-dollar bill. But Washington, who's on the $1 note, was the leader of the Continental Army during the American Revolution.
France was once a major military and world power. Now its greatest influence on the world is probably cultural -- that of its fashion and arts.
Austen wrote the first draft at 21 years old. She was wise to start working early, as she died at age 41.
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The Nazi Party was better known as the National Socialist German Workers Party. Don't mistake it for a Communist-leaning party; Hitler feared the spread of communism.
Cumberbatch has been everywhere in the past ten years, in movies like "The Imitation Game" and "12 Years a Slave," as well as a stage production of "Hamlet."
"Silicon Valley" got its name because the element is essential to integrated circuits. These, in turn, are what make up the guts of computers and smartphones.
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Fun fact: There's a popular myth that Key West's stray cats are descendants of Hemingway's many cats. Though a cat lover, the author didn't have a large number of cats until he lived in Cuba, where their numbers grew rapidly because of his refusal to neuter the toms.
Phelps not only has the most Olympic medals, he has the most golds as well. Phelps is from Baltimore, giving him his nickname, "the Baltimore Bullet."
To be specific, dinosaurs weren't wiped out altogether -- just non-avian dinosaurs. Birds are modern-day, feathered dinosaurs. But most people associate the name with the reptilian giants of prehistory.
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"Jupiter" was the Roman name for Zeus, king of the Olympian gods. Apollo is the only god listed above who had the same name in both the Greek and Roman traditions.
Wozniak was the nuts-and-bolts half of the partnership. He doesn't take himself as seriously as Jobs did, as evidenced by his turn on "Dancing With the Stars."
Whether Scientology really qualifies as a church, or is a radical self-improvement program, is up for debate. Whichever the case, of its most famous practitioners, like Cruise, John Travolta and Giovanni Ribisi, are Hollywood celebrities.
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During the years that Clarkson hosted the show alongside James May and Richard Hammond, "Top Gear" was both wildly popular and controversial for its ethnic humor. After Clarkson got into a physical scuffle with a junior producer, the BBC was forced to replace the popular trio with a new cast.
The Palme d'Or, or Golden Palm, is the top prize at this festival. It was first awarded in 1939.
Like New York, Chicago is served by two major airports. Expect delays: winters in Illinois can wreak havoc with flight times.
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Alfred Nobel patented dynamite, among other inventions. He was moved to create the Nobel prizes after reading a premature obituary of himself, which called him "the merchant of death."
Sullenberger became known as "the hero of the Hudson" after ditching a US Airways plane into the river, saving everyone on board. Tom Hanks played him in the movie version of his life.
The catchily-named scandal occurred when underinflated balls were in play in an AFC championship game. Brady reportedly preferred an underinflated ball, and the suspicion was that the Patriots had tampered with the game balls. Brady was suspended for several games, but can console himself with his five Super Bowl championships.
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"Great Caesar's ghost!" was editor Perry White's trademark expression. Props to Frank Langella for pulling it off, without irony, in "Superman Returns."
The spelling comes from a crude sign in front of the pet cemetery in this chilling novel. The pets that are buried there come back "wrong," and things only get worse when a newcomer to town decides to bury a human there.
Child actress Linda Blair gave a great performance as Regan, the possessed girl who vomits green slime (it was pea soup, actually). Her career arc didn't exactly live up to that of peers like Jodie Foster; she later appeared in a number of low-budget horror movies of the '70s and '80s.
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The name "Korean Conflict" comes from the fact that it was, officially, a "UN police action," not a war. Hostilities between the North and South never actually ended -- they're just in a very long cease fire.
Atlanta is the unofficial capital of the American South. It gained a significant economic boost in the 1990s from the 1996 Summer Olympics.
Linnaeus created the naming system that identifies organisms by genus and species. His great work is "Systema Naturae."
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Both Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia broke up after the fall of the USSR. Without the uniting factor of Communism, smaller countries based on ethnic identities re-emerged. Sometimes this was a painful process, as the civil war in Kosovo makes clear.
Katniss Everdeen is the heroine of the "Hunger Games" novels, which turned YA fiction upside down after several years of supernatural romances. Jennifer Lawrence played her in the movies.
Rhode Island was one of the original 13 colonies. It is only 1,544 square miles, compared to western states like Texas and Montana, whose area is measured in hundreds of thousands of square miles.
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Pluto had only been discovered in 1930, by astronomer Clyde Tombaugh. It enjoyed more than 70 years of planethood before being downgraded.
Dead from all of America's wars are buried in Arlington National Cemetery, which is across the Potomac from Washington D.C. In addition, the victims of both US space shuttle disasters are interred there.
JonBenet Ramsey died at six years old in Boulder, Colorado. The case remains unsolved, but fascinates America because of her family's wealth and her beauty-pageant career, engineered by her mother, a former beauty queen herself.
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The theory is that Wall Street was named for a wooden barrier against native Americans and the British. In the days of "Occupy Wall Street," bankers probably wished they had that barrier back!
The Cindy Campbell role was not for the faint of heart. Cindy was subjected to countless indignities and made a number of pratfalls, even as she survived four horror-movie parodies.
Guinness played Obi-Wan Kenobi in the original "Star Wars." He had already been knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 1959.
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Argentina attempted to reclaim this British holding from England, as the Falklands are just off the coast of Argentina. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher wasn't having any of that and sent forces to protect British sovereignty.They were successful, but at the cost of nearly 1,000 lives, Argentinian and British.
Though we think of assassination as a loner with a gun in a crowd, Smith was killed when a mob stormed a jail where he was being held pending a trial for starting a riot. It was somewhat incidental that he'd announced himself an independent candidate for president months earlier.