• QFTCI23 Game 8, Rounds 9-10: Shakespeare, challenge round

    From Mark Brader@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 12 05:29:39 2024
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2023-11-13,
    and should be interpreted accordingly.

    On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
    both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
    Please post all your answers in a single followup to the newsgroup,
    based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
    the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
    the correct answers in about 3 days.

    All questions were written by members of the Usual Suspects and
    are used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may have
    been retyped and/or edited by me. The posting and tabulation of
    current-events questions is independent of the concurrent posting
    of other rounds. For further information please see my 2023-05-24
    companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition
    (QFTCI*)".


    I wrote one of these rounds and most of the other.


    ** Game 8, Round 9 - Literature - Shakespeare

    1. William Shakespeare was the author or co-author of about
    38 plays. 36 of them were published in a single book in 1623,
    the first time this had been done. That's twice as many as had
    been individually published before, and the book also shows
    many variations from those earlier versions, so it's very
    important to literary historians. By what description is the
    book generally known?

    2. In <answer 1>, the plays are classified into three categories:
    comedies, tragedies, and what else?

    3. In which tragedy would you find the characters Benvolio,
    Mercutio, and Friar Laurence?

    4. In which tragedy would you find the characters Goneril, Cordelia,
    and Regan?

    5. In which comedy would you find the characters Rosalind, Orlando,
    Celia, and Touchstone?

    6. In which comedy would you find the characters Antipholus of
    Ephesus, Antipholus of Syracuse, Dromio of Ephesus, and Dromio
    of Syracuse?

    7. Which character has the most lines in *any one* of Shakespeare's
    plays?

    8. Which character has the most lines if *all* of Shakespeare's
    plays are counted together?

    9. In which of Shakespeare's plays are the remains of two of the
    characters served to another character in the form of pie?

    10. In which of Shakespeare's plays does one of the characters
    magically transform another character's head into the head of
    an ass, which is to say, a donkey?


    ** Game 8, Round 10 - Challenge Round

    * A. Geography: Passes

    A1. The original route of the Trans-Canada Highway and the
    first railway across the Canadian Rockies both cross the
    Rockies using the same pass. Name it.

    A2. Name the pass on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border that
    has formed a vital part of trade routes since the days of
    the ancient Silk Road.


    * B. History: Failures

    B1. In 1911, while Roald Amundsen's expedition was forging across
    Antarctica to be first to reach the South Pole, a rival
    British expedition began the same journey, with determination
    that in their case exceeded their competence. They too
    reached the pole, about a month after Amundsen, but on the
    way back they all died. Who was the, uh, heroic(?) leader
    of this ill-fated expedition?

    B2. The British do seem to love to commemorate their heroic
    failures. Alfred Lord Tennyson's poem "The Charge of
    the Light Brigade" celebrates a disastrous attack against
    Russian troops, initiated accidentally by an unclear order,
    during *what battle* of the Crimean War?


    * C. Science: Batteries

    C1. According to its nominal rating, a standard alkaline battery,
    such as size AAA, generates how many volts of eletricity?

    C2. In etymologically correct technical language that size AAA
    alkaline battery isn't a "battery" at all, as that word
    refers to a combination of two or more of them. Before the
    word "battery" got established as common usage, what were
    we supposed to call just one of the things?


    * D. Miscellaneous: Political Terms

    D1. What is it called when a party chooses a candidate from
    elsewhere to run in what they think is a safe district?

    D2. What is it called when one party gets to adjust the
    electoral-district boundaries and uses this power to improve
    their own future chances?


    * E. Leisure: Game Masters

    E1. The following people have been known for their mastery
    of what game? Alexander Alekhine, Mikhail Botvinnik,
    José Capablanca, Magnus Carlsen, Anatoly Karpov, Mikhail Tal.

    E2. The following people have been known for their mastery of
    what game? Easley Blackwood, Ely Culbertson, Charles Goren,
    Oswald Jacoby, Alan Truscott, Zia Mahmood.


    * F. Literature: Complete the Title

    F1. Complete the title of this 1974 book by Robert Pirsig.
    The main title will do; you don't need to give the subtitle.
    "Zen and..."

    F2. The main title of this 2007 book by Stephen Colbert
    ["coal-BEAR"] is "I am America". Give the 4-word subtitle --
    punctuation marks not required.

    --
    Mark Brader | "Some societies define themselves by being open to new
    Toronto | influences, others define their identity by resisting. msb@vex.net | In either case, they take the consequences."
    --Donna Richoux
    My text in this article is in the public domain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dan Tilque@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Fri Jan 12 06:34:12 2024
    On 1/11/24 21:29, Mark Brader wrote:


    ** Game 8, Round 9 - Literature - Shakespeare

    1. William Shakespeare was the author or co-author of about
    38 plays. 36 of them were published in a single book in 1623,
    the first time this had been done. That's twice as many as had
    been individually published before, and the book also shows
    many variations from those earlier versions, so it's very
    important to literary historians. By what description is the
    book generally known?

    First Folio


    2. In <answer 1>, the plays are classified into three categories:
    comedies, tragedies, and what else?

    histories


    3. In which tragedy would you find the characters Benvolio,
    Mercutio, and Friar Laurence?

    Romeo and Juliet


    4. In which tragedy would you find the characters Goneril, Cordelia,
    and Regan?

    King Lear


    5. In which comedy would you find the characters Rosalind, Orlando,
    Celia, and Touchstone?

    The Merchant of Venice


    6. In which comedy would you find the characters Antipholus of
    Ephesus, Antipholus of Syracuse, Dromio of Ephesus, and Dromio
    of Syracuse?
    Love's Labor's Lost


    7. Which character has the most lines in *any one* of Shakespeare's
    plays?

    Hamlet


    8. Which character has the most lines if *all* of Shakespeare's
    plays are counted together?

    Henry V


    9. In which of Shakespeare's plays are the remains of two of the
    characters served to another character in the form of pie?

    10. In which of Shakespeare's plays does one of the characters
    magically transform another character's head into the head of
    an ass, which is to say, a donkey?

    A Midsummer Night's Dream



    ** Game 8, Round 10 - Challenge Round

    * A. Geography: Passes

    A1. The original route of the Trans-Canada Highway and the
    first railway across the Canadian Rockies both cross the
    Rockies using the same pass. Name it.

    Kicking Horse


    A2. Name the pass on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border that
    has formed a vital part of trade routes since the days of
    the ancient Silk Road.

    Khyber



    * B. History: Failures

    B1. In 1911, while Roald Amundsen's expedition was forging across
    Antarctica to be first to reach the South Pole, a rival
    British expedition began the same journey, with determination
    that in their case exceeded their competence. They too
    reached the pole, about a month after Amundsen, but on the
    way back they all died. Who was the, uh, heroic(?) leader
    of this ill-fated expedition?

    Scott


    B2. The British do seem to love to commemorate their heroic
    failures. Alfred Lord Tennyson's poem "The Charge of
    the Light Brigade" celebrates a disastrous attack against
    Russian troops, initiated accidentally by an unclear order,
    during *what battle* of the Crimean War?

    Balaclava



    * C. Science: Batteries

    C1. According to its nominal rating, a standard alkaline battery,
    such as size AAA, generates how many volts of eletricity?

    1.5 volts


    C2. In etymologically correct technical language that size AAA
    alkaline battery isn't a "battery" at all, as that word
    refers to a combination of two or more of them. Before the
    word "battery" got established as common usage, what were
    we supposed to call just one of the things?

    cell



    * D. Miscellaneous: Political Terms

    D1. What is it called when a party chooses a candidate from
    elsewhere to run in what they think is a safe district?

    parachute candidate


    D2. What is it called when one party gets to adjust the
    electoral-district boundaries and uses this power to improve
    their own future chances?

    gerrymander



    * E. Leisure: Game Masters

    E1. The following people have been known for their mastery
    of what game? Alexander Alekhine, Mikhail Botvinnik,
    José Capablanca, Magnus Carlsen, Anatoly Karpov, Mikhail Tal.

    chess


    E2. The following people have been known for their mastery of
    what game? Easley Blackwood, Ely Culbertson, Charles Goren,
    Oswald Jacoby, Alan Truscott, Zia Mahmood.

    bridge



    * F. Literature: Complete the Title

    F1. Complete the title of this 1974 book by Robert Pirsig.
    The main title will do; you don't need to give the subtitle.
    "Zen and..."

    " ... the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance"


    F2. The main title of this 2007 book by Stephen Colbert
    ["coal-BEAR"] is "I am America". Give the 4-word subtitle --
    punctuation marks not required.


    --
    Dan Tilque

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Erland Sommarskog@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Fri Jan 12 21:16:03 2024
    Mark Brader (msb@vex.net) writes:
    ** Game 8, Round 10 - Challenge Round

    * A. Geography: Passes

    A2. Name the pass on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border that
    has formed a vital part of trade routes since the days of
    the ancient Silk Road.

    Khyber

    * B. History: Failures

    B1. In 1911, while Roald Amundsen's expedition was forging across
    Antarctica to be first to reach the South Pole, a rival
    British expedition began the same journey, with determination
    that in their case exceeded their competence. They too
    reached the pole, about a month after Amundsen, but on the
    way back they all died. Who was the, uh, heroic(?) leader
    of this ill-fated expedition?

    Scott

    * C. Science: Batteries

    C1. According to its nominal rating, a standard alkaline battery,
    such as size AAA, generates how many volts of eletricity?

    1.5 V

    C2. In etymologically correct technical language that size AAA
    alkaline battery isn't a "battery" at all, as that word
    refers to a combination of two or more of them. Before the
    word "battery" got established as common usage, what were
    we supposed to call just one of the things?

    Battery cell

    * D. Miscellaneous: Political Terms
    D2. What is it called when one party gets to adjust the
    electoral-district boundaries and uses this power to improve
    their own future chances?

    Gerrymandering. Well, that is in the US. Don't know what you call it
    when it happens in Toronto.

    * E. Leisure: Game Masters

    E1. The following people have been known for their mastery
    of what game? Alexander Alekhine, Mikhail Botvinnik,
    José Capablanca, Magnus Carlsen, Anatoly Karpov, Mikhail Tal.

    Chess

    E2. The following people have been known for their mastery of
    what game? Easley Blackwood, Ely Culbertson, Charles Goren,
    Oswald Jacoby, Alan Truscott, Zia Mahmood.

    Contract bridge

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dan Blum@21:1/5 to Mark Brader on Fri Jan 12 22:43:13 2024
    Mark Brader <msb@vex.net> wrote:

    ** Game 8, Round 9 - Literature - Shakespeare

    1. William Shakespeare was the author or co-author of about
    38 plays. 36 of them were published in a single book in 1623,
    the first time this had been done. That's twice as many as had
    been individually published before, and the book also shows
    many variations from those earlier versions, so it's very
    important to literary historians. By what description is the
    book generally known?

    First Folio

    2. In <answer 1>, the plays are classified into three categories:
    comedies, tragedies, and what else?

    histories

    3. In which tragedy would you find the characters Benvolio,
    Mercutio, and Friar Laurence?

    Romeo and Juliet

    4. In which tragedy would you find the characters Goneril, Cordelia,
    and Regan?

    King Lear

    5. In which comedy would you find the characters Rosalind, Orlando,
    Celia, and Touchstone?

    As You Like It

    6. In which comedy would you find the characters Antipholus of
    Ephesus, Antipholus of Syracuse, Dromio of Ephesus, and Dromio
    of Syracuse?

    All's Well That Ends Well

    7. Which character has the most lines in *any one* of Shakespeare's
    plays?

    Hamlet

    8. Which character has the most lines if *all* of Shakespeare's
    plays are counted together?

    Falstaff

    9. In which of Shakespeare's plays are the remains of two of the
    characters served to another character in the form of pie?

    Titus Andronicus

    10. In which of Shakespeare's plays does one of the characters
    magically transform another character's head into the head of
    an ass, which is to say, a donkey?

    A Midsummer Night's Dream

    ** Game 8, Round 10 - Challenge Round

    * A. Geography: Passes

    A1. The original route of the Trans-Canada Highway and the
    first railway across the Canadian Rockies both cross the
    Rockies using the same pass. Name it.

    Crows Nest Pass

    A2. Name the pass on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border that
    has formed a vital part of trade routes since the days of
    the ancient Silk Road.

    Khyber Pass

    * B. History: Failures

    B1. In 1911, while Roald Amundsen's expedition was forging across
    Antarctica to be first to reach the South Pole, a rival
    British expedition began the same journey, with determination
    that in their case exceeded their competence. They too
    reached the pole, about a month after Amundsen, but on the
    way back they all died. Who was the, uh, heroic(?) leader
    of this ill-fated expedition?

    Scott

    B2. The British do seem to love to commemorate their heroic
    failures. Alfred Lord Tennyson's poem "The Charge of
    the Light Brigade" celebrates a disastrous attack against
    Russian troops, initiated accidentally by an unclear order,
    during *what battle* of the Crimean War?

    Balaclava

    * C. Science: Batteries

    C1. According to its nominal rating, a standard alkaline battery,
    such as size AAA, generates how many volts of eletricity?

    1.5

    C2. In etymologically correct technical language that size AAA
    alkaline battery isn't a "battery" at all, as that word
    refers to a combination of two or more of them. Before the
    word "battery" got established as common usage, what were
    we supposed to call just one of the things?

    power cell

    * E. Leisure: Game Masters

    E1. The following people have been known for their mastery
    of what game? Alexander Alekhine, Mikhail Botvinnik,
    Jos? Capablanca, Magnus Carlsen, Anatoly Karpov, Mikhail Tal.

    chess

    E2. The following people have been known for their mastery of
    what game? Easley Blackwood, Ely Culbertson, Charles Goren,
    Oswald Jacoby, Alan Truscott, Zia Mahmood.

    contract bridge

    * F. Literature: Complete the Title

    F1. Complete the title of this 1974 book by Robert Pirsig.
    The main title will do; you don't need to give the subtitle.
    "Zen and..."

    the Art of Motorcyle Maintenance

    F2. The main title of this 2007 book by Stephen Colbert
    ["coal-BEAR"] is "I am America". Give the 4-word subtitle --
    punctuation marks not required.

    And So Can You

    --
    _______________________________________________________________________
    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: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Brader@21:1/5 to I did not on Mon Jan 15 05:26:42 2024
    Mark Brader:
    These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2023-11-13,
    and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information
    please see my 2023-05-24 companion posting on "Questions from the
    Canadian Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


    Game 8 is over and the winner is STEPHEN PERRY. Hearty
    congratulations, eh?


    I wrote one of these rounds and most of the other.

    In the challenge round, I did not write pair D.


    ** Game 8, Round 9 - Literature - Shakespeare

    1. William Shakespeare was the author or co-author of about
    38 plays. 36 of them were published in a single book in 1623,
    the first time this had been done. That's twice as many as had
    been individually published before, and the book also shows
    many variations from those earlier versions, so it's very
    important to literary historians. By what description is the
    book generally known?

    The First Folio. 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, and Stephen.

    2. In <answer 1>, the plays are classified into three categories:
    comedies, tragedies, and what else?

    Histories. 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, Pete, and Stephen.

    3. In which tragedy would you find the characters Benvolio,
    Mercutio, and Friar Laurence?

    "Romeo and Juliet". 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, Pete, and Stephenne.

    4. In which tragedy would you find the characters Goneril, Cordelia,
    and Regan?

    "King Lear". 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, and Stephen.

    5. In which comedy would you find the characters Rosalind, Orlando,
    Celia, and Touchstone?

    "As You Like It". 4 for Dan Blum and Stephen.

    6. In which comedy would you find the characters Antipholus of
    Ephesus, Antipholus of Syracuse, Dromio of Ephesus, and Dromio
    of Syracuse?

    "The Comedy of Errors". 4 for Stephen.

    7. Which character has the most lines in *any one* of Shakespeare's
    plays?

    Hamlet. 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, and Stephen.

    8. Which character has the most lines if *all* of Shakespeare's
    plays are counted together?

    Sir John Falstaff. 4 for Dan Blum.

    ("The Merry Wives of Windsor" and both parts of "Henry IV".)

    9. In which of Shakespeare's plays are the remains of two of the
    characters served to another character in the form of pie?

    "Titus Andronicus". 4 for Dan Blum, Pete, and Stephen.

    10. In which of Shakespeare's plays does one of the characters
    magically transform another character's head into the head of
    an ass, which is to say, a donkey?

    "A Midsummer Night's Dream". 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, Pete,
    and Stephen.


    ** Game 8, Round 10 - Challenge Round

    * A. Geography: Passes

    A1. The original route of the Trans-Canada Highway and the
    first railway across the Canadian Rockies both cross the
    Rockies using the same pass. Name it.

    Kicking Horse. 4 for Dan Tilque and Stephen.

    (Alberta and BC Highway 1, CPR.)

    A2. Name the pass on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border that
    has formed a vital part of trade routes since the days of
    the ancient Silk Road.

    Khyber. 4 for everyone -- Dan Tilque, Erland, Dan Blum, Pete,
    and Stephen.


    * B. History: Failures

    B1. In 1911, while Roald Amundsen's expedition was forging across
    Antarctica to be first to reach the South Pole, a rival
    British expedition began the same journey, with determination
    that in their case exceeded their competence. They too
    reached the pole, about a month after Amundsen, but on the
    way back they all died. Who was the, uh, heroic(?) leader
    of this ill-fated expedition?

    Robert Falcon Scott -- celebrated as "Scott of the Antarctic".
    4 for Dan Tilque, Erland, Dan Blum, and Stephen.

    B2. The British do seem to love to commemorate their heroic
    failures. Alfred Lord Tennyson's poem "The Charge of
    the Light Brigade" celebrates a disastrous attack against
    Russian troops, initiated accidentally by an unclear order,
    during *what battle* of the Crimean War?

    Balaclava. 4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, and Stephen.


    * C. Science: Batteries

    C1. According to its nominal rating, a standard alkaline battery,
    such as size AAA, generates how many volts of eletricity?

    1.5. 4 for everyone.

    C2. In etymologically correct technical language that size AAA
    alkaline battery isn't a "battery" at all, as that word
    refers to a combination of two or more of them. Before the
    word "battery" got established as common usage, what were
    we supposed to call just one of the things?

    (Dry) cell. 4 for Dan Tilque and Stephen.


    * D. Miscellaneous: Political Terms

    D1. What is it called when a party chooses a candidate from
    elsewhere to run in what they think is a safe district?

    Parachuting or carpetbagging. 4 for Dan Tilque and Stephen.

    D2. What is it called when one party gets to adjust the
    electoral-district boundaries and uses this power to improve
    their own future chances?

    Gerrymandering. 4 for Dan Tilque, Erland, Pete, and Stephen.


    * E. Leisure: Game Masters

    E1. The following people have been known for their mastery
    of what game? Alexander Alekhine, Mikhail Botvinnik,
    José Capablanca, Magnus Carlsen, Anatoly Karpov, Mikhail Tal.

    Chess. 4 for everyone.

    E2. The following people have been known for their mastery of
    what game? Easley Blackwood, Ely Culbertson, Charles Goren,
    Oswald Jacoby, Alan Truscott, Zia Mahmood.

    Bridge. 4 for everyone.


    * F. Literature: Complete the Title

    F1. Complete the title of this 1974 book by Robert Pirsig.
    The main title will do; you don't need to give the subtitle.
    "Zen and..."

    "...The Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry into Values".
    4 for Dan Tilque, Dan Blum, and Stephen.

    F2. The main title of this 2007 book by Stephen Colbert
    ["coal-BEAR"] is "I am America". Give the 4-word subtitle --
    punctuation marks not required.

    "(And So Can You!)". 4 for Dan Blum and Stephen.


    Scores, if there are no errors:

    GAME 8 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 7 8 9 10 BEST
    TOPICS-> Ent Spo Sci Can His Geo Lit Cha SIX
    Stephen Perry 0 36 40 11 32 36 36 48 228
    Dan Blum 8 12 12 21 28 28 36 32 157
    Dan Tilque 0 20 4 0 20 36 24 44 148
    Joshua Kreitzer 8 23 12 4 23 37 -- -- 107
    Pete Gayde 0 30 0 17 -- -- 16 20 83
    Erland Sommarskog -- -- 0 0 20 36 0 24 80

    --
    Mark Brader | I rise to speak ... well, actually, I don't rise,
    Toronto | nor do I speak, but I lounge to type in his defense. msb@vex.net | -- Bob Lipton

    My text in this article is in the public domain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Brader@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 16 03:56:29 2024
    Joshua Kreitzer:
    My answers for Rounds 9-10 were not scored. See my post at: https://groups.google.com/g/rec.games.trivia/c/S8hP5urVECI/m/HvRco1gqBwAJ

    That's because somehow that one didn't reach giganews. Okay, Joshua
    scores a perfect 40 points on Round 9, and 32 points on Round 10 --
    4 each on questions A2, B1, C2, D1, D2, E1, E2, and F1 -- to move
    into second place.

    Scores, if there are now no errors:

    GAME 8 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 7 8 9 10 BEST
    TOPICS-> Ent Spo Sci Can His Geo Lit Cha SIX
    Stephen Perry 0 36 40 11 32 36 36 48 228
    Joshua Kreitzer 8 23 12 4 23 37 40 32 167
    Dan Blum 8 12 12 21 28 28 36 32 157
    Dan Tilque 0 20 4 0 20 36 24 44 148
    Pete Gayde 0 30 0 17 -- -- 16 20 83
    Erland Sommarskog -- -- 0 0 20 36 0 24 80
    --
    Mark Brader, Toronto | "It's a massive 'Get out of Euclid free' card." msb@vex.net | --Matt Parker

    My text in this article is in the public domain.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)