Twenty Quiz Questions. Go On, Have A Go!

“Fight Against Stupidity And Bureaucracy”

.

Hello and welcome to another start of the week quiz.

Another very random selection of questions, but don’t let that discourage you, have a go!

As usual the answers are given waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay down below – but please, NO cheating.

Enjoy, and good luck.

.

Quiz 6

.

Q.  1:  How many Dalmatians starred in the 1961 Disney movie?

.

.

Q.  2:  Where do they make California license plates?

.

.

Q.  3:  What is the collective term for a group of eggs, such as those found in a bird’s nest?

.

.

Q.  4:  Which famous lady edited Michael Jackson’s 1988 autobiography “Moonwalk”?

.

.

Q.  5:  What do they call G.I. Joe in the U.K.?

.

.

Q.  6:  What was US President Woodrow Wilson’s first name?

.

.

Q.  7:  In which American town or city was the TV series “Ironside” set?

.

.

Q.  8:  What is your “niddick”? (Yes, ladies you have one too.)

.

.

Q.  9:  In which movie, also starring Dustin Hoffman, did Sir Laurence Olivier play a Nazi war criminal named Dr. Christian Szell?

.

.

Q. 10:  What is the name for the metal band that joins the eraser to a pencil, or the metal band at the end of a cane?

.

.

Q. 11:  Name the only U.S. state that borders three different Canadian provinces.

.

.

Q. 12:  Who succeeded Nasser as President of Egypt and was later assassinated?

.

.

Q. 13:  Where did camels originate?

.

.

Q. 14:  What famous musical was set in Austria?

.

.

Q. 15:  What is the Scoville Heat Index and what is it used for?

.

.

Q. 16:  Who conquered Greece in 336 at the head of a vast Macedonian Army?

.

.

Q. 17:  Name the three lead stars in the movie “Some Like It Hot”.

.

.

Q. 18:  What was the first country to seek diplomatic relations with the United States.

.

.

Q. 19:  In which movies did Charlton Heston play the following roles?

    a. George Taylor,

    b. Moses,

    c. Michelangelo,

    d. General ‘Chinese’ Gordon,

    e. Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar,

    f. John the Baptist

(One point for each correct answer so your chance to earn six points here!)

.

.

Q. 20:  What was the only father-daughter collaboration to hit number one on the Billboard pop chart? (One point each for the names of the two artists and for the name of the song.

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

ANSWERS

.

Q.  1:  How many Dalmatians starred in the 1961 Disney movie?

A.  1:  101

.

.

Q.  2:  Where do they make California license plates?

A.  2:  All California license plates are made in prisons.

.

.

Q.  3:  What is the collective term for a group of eggs, such as those found in a bird’s nest?

A.  3:  A group of eggs, such as those found in a bird’s nest, is known as a “clutch.”

.

.

Q.  4:  Which famous lady edited Michael Jackson’s 1988 autobiography “Moonwalk”?

A.  4:  Michael Jackson’s 1988 autobiography Moonwalk was edited by Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

.

.

Q.  5:  What do they call G.I. Joe in the U.K.?

A.  5:  G.I. Joe is called “Action Man” in the U.K.

.

.

Q.  6:  What was US President Woodrow Wilson’s first name?

A.  6:  Woodrow Wilson’s first name was Thomas. Woodrow was actually his middle name.

.

.

Q.  7:  In which American town or city was the TV series “Ironside” set?

A.  7:  San Francisco

.

.

Q.  8:  What is your “niddick”? (Yes, ladies you have one too.)

A.  8:  “Niddick” is another name for the nape of your neck.

.

.

Q.  9:  In which movie, also starring Dustin Hoffman, did Sir Laurence Olivier play a Nazi war criminal named Dr. Christian Szell?

A.  9:  Marathon Man.

.

.

Q. 10:  What is the name for the metal band that joins the eraser to a pencil, or the metal band at the end of a cane?

A. 10:  The metal band that joins the eraser to a pencil and the metal band at the end of a cane is a called a “ferrule.”

.

.

Q. 11:  Name the only U.S. state that borders three different Canadian provinces.

A. 11:  Montana is the only U.S. state that borders three different Canadian provinces (Alberta, British Columbia, and Saskatchewan).

.

.

Q. 12:  Who succeeded Nasser as President of Egypt and was later assassinated?

A. 12:  Anwar Sadat.

.

.

Q. 13:  Where did camels originate?

A. 13:  Camels actually originated in North America.

.

.

Q. 14:  What famous musical was set in Austria?

A. 14:  The Sound Of Music.

.

.

Q. 15:  What is the Scoville Heat Index and what is it used for?

A. 15:  The Scoville Heat Index is a scale for measuring the spiciness of food. The spiciest pepper has over 1,000,000 Scoville units.

.

.

Q. 16:  Who conquered Greece in 336 at the head of a vast Macedonian Army?

A. 16:  Alexander The Great.

.

.

Q. 17:  Name the three lead stars in the movie “Some Like It Hot”.

A. 17:  Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Marilyn Monroe.

.

.

Q. 18:  What was the first country to seek diplomatic relations with the United States.

A. 18:  In 1777, Morocco became the first country to seek diplomatic relations with the United States.

.

.

Q. 19:  In which movies did Charlton Heston play the following roles?

    a. George Taylor,

    b. Moses,

    c. Michelangelo,

    d. General ‘Chinese’ Gordon,

    e. Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar,

    f. John the Baptist

(One point for each correct answer so your chance to earn six points here!)

A. 19:  Charlton Heston played

    a. George Taylor in “Planet of the Apes (Beneath the Planet of the Apes)”

    b. Moses in “The Ten Commandments”

    c. Michelangelo in “The Agony and the Ecstasy”

    d. General ‘Chinese’ Gordon in “Khartoum”

    e. Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar in “El Cid”

    f. John the Baptist in “The Greatest Story Ever Told”

.

.

Q. 20:  What was the only father-daughter collaboration to hit number one on the Billboard pop chart? (One point each for the names of the two artists and for the name of the song.)

A. 20:  The only father-daughter collaboration to hit number one on the Billboard pop chart was “Something Stupid” by Frank & Nancy Sinatra in 1967.

.

.

=====================================

.

Did You Know? More Random Fact File Fun

“Fight Against Stupidity And Bureaucracy”

.

Facts don’t more random than these selections.

A little something for everyone seems to be the goal, so I hope you find at least one fact in here of interest.

Enjoy.

.

did you know5

.

People say “bless you” when you sneeze

because your heart stops for a millisecond.

achoo

.

.

US gold coins used to say

“In Gold We Trust”.

in gold we trust

.

.

Kuwait is about 60% male

(highest in the world).

Kuwaiti men

.

.

Latvia is about 54% female

(highest in the world).

latvian women

.

.

The Hawaiian alphabet has only 12 letters.

Hawaiian Alphabet

.

.

Julius Caesar’s autograph is worth about $2,000,000.

Caesar

.

.

The surface of the Earth is about 60% water and 10% ice,

but the volume of fresh water compared to

the volume of the earth is a lot smaller.

global-water-volume-fresh

.

.

For every 230 cars that are made, 1 will be stolen.

car-theft

.

.

Lightning strikes the earth about 8 million times a day.

Lightning Strikes

.

.

John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and James Monroe died on July 4th.

Presidential funeral procession

.

.

In 1386, a pig in France was executed

by public hanging for the murder of a child

pig hanged

.

.

Human thigh bones are stronger than concrete.

thigh bone

.

.

Present population of 7 billion plus people of the world

is predicted to become 15 billion by 2080.

world_popluation_1

.

.

A man named Charles Osborne

had the hiccups for 69 years!

Charles Osborne

.

.

A giraffe can clean its ears with its 21-inch tongue!

(That takes some lickin’)

giraffe tongue

.

.

The average person laughs 10 times a day!

(But obviously readers of the Fasab blog are well above average!)

laughing-men

.

.

Someone paid $14,000 for the bra worn by

Marilyn Monroe in the film ‘Some Like It Hot’.

slih-bra

.

.

More than 1,000 different languages

are spoken on the continent of Africa.

africa_languages

.

.

The White House has 132 rooms and

a total floor area of around 55,000 ft²

(5,100 square metres).

white-house

.

.

Buckingham Palace in England has 775 rooms and

the total floor area of the Palace, from basement to roof,

covers over 828,000 square feet (77,000 square metres).

Buckingham Palace

.

=====================================

.