General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2 - Set 1

41
General Quiz

Transcript of General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2 - Set 1

Page 1: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

General Quiz

Page 2: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

What sobriquet did he receive as a result of this war?

• Alexander was the second son of Prince Yaroslav Vsevolodovich and seemed to have no chance of claiming the throne of Vladimir. In 1236, however, he was summoned by the Novgorodians to become  kniaz' (or prince) of Novgorod and, as their military leader, to defend their northwest lands from Swedish and German invaders. After the Swedish army had landed at the confluence of the rivers Izhora and Y. His small army suddenly attacked the Swedes on 15 July 1240 and defeated them.

Page 3: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Nevsky

Page 4: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

How is Dr. Johann Georg better known?

• Dr. Johann Georg was an itinerant alchemist, astrologer, and magician of the German Renaissance. Because of his early treatment as a in literature, it is very difficult to establish historical facts about his life with any certainty.  For the year 1506, there is a record of him appearing as performer of magical tricks and horoscopes in Gelnhausen. Over the following 30 years, there are numerous similar records spread over southern Germany. He appeared as physician, doctor of philosophy, alchemist, magician and astrologer, and was often accused as a fraud. The church denounced him as a blasphemer in league with the devil.

Page 5: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Faust

Page 6: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• What is the Latin phrase for “you should have the body”?

Page 7: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Habeas Corpus

Page 8: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• Pactolus is a river near the Aegean coast of Turkey. The river rises from Mount Tmolus, flows through the ruins of the ancient city of Sardis, and empties into the Gediz River, the ancient Hermus. The Pactolus once contained electrum that was the basis of the economy of the ancient state of Lydia.

• Which act “validates” the electrum present in the river?

Page 9: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

King Midas washing his hands to lose his Golden touch.

Page 10: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Name this goddess.

• In Norse mythology, she was the daughter of Loki. Her kingdom, Niflheim, or the World of Darkness, was divided into several sections. Murderers, Adulterers suffered torment in a castle filled with serpents’ venom, while the dragon Nidhogg sucked their blood.

Page 11: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Hel

Page 12: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

 

• Poets' Corner is the name traditionally given to a section of the South Transept of Westminster Abbey because of the high number of poets, playwrights, and writers buried and commemorated there.

• Who is the first poet to be interred in Poets' Corner?

Page 13: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1
Page 14: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Geoffrey Chaucer

Page 15: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

What is its male counterpart called?

•  A Caryatid is a sculpted female figure serving as an architectural support taking the place of a column or a pillar supporting an entablature on her head. The Greek term karyatides literally means "maidens of Karyai", an ancient town of Peloponnese.

Page 16: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1
Page 17: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Atlas

Page 18: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Id this region.

• They refer to themselves as Vainakhs ,which means "our people" in their language, or Nokhchiy. They and Ingush peoples are collectively known as the Vainakh. The region they have inhabited derives its name from this ethnic group, which is predominantly Muslim.

Page 19: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Chechenya

Page 20: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• Which geographical feature’s French name is La Manche, meaning The Sleeve, is a reference to its shape, which gradually narrows from about 112 miles in the west to only 21 miles in the east?

Page 21: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1
Page 22: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• Arakan Yoma is a mountain range in western Myanmar, between the coast of Rakhine State and the Central Burma Basin, in which flows the Irrawaddy River. It is the most prominent of a series of parallel ridges that arc through Assam, Nagaland, Mizoram and Burma.

• What is its major contribution to Indian Economy?

Page 23: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Andaman & Nicobar Islands Tourism

Page 24: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• These are small cetaceans of the family Phocoenidae. The name derives from a French word, which is possibly derived from the conjunction of two Medieval Latin words meaning “pig” and “fish”, classical( “sea hog”).

• They are distinct from dolphins, although this word has been used to refer to any small dolphin, especially by sailors and fishermen. The most obvious visible difference between the two groups is that these species have shorter beaks and flattened, spade-shaped teeth distinct from the conical teeth of dolphins.

Page 25: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Porpoise

• “pig” and “fish” ( porcus + piscis )

Page 26: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• In 1630, a Dutch physician named Jacobus Bontius encountered the disease while working in Java. In the first known description of this disease, he wrote: “A certain very troublesome affliction, which attacks men, is called by the inhabitants _______(which means sheep). I believe those, whom this same disease attacks, with their knees shaking and the legs raised up, walk like sheep. It is a kind of paralysis, or rather tremor: for it penetrates the motion and sensation of the hands and feet indeed sometimes of the whole body.”

• The origin of this term comes from a Sinhalese phrase meaning “weak, weak” or "I cannot, I cannot.”

Page 27: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Beriberi

Page 28: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Which word may refer to :• a mayonnaise-based sauce•  an umbrella term for Turkic peoples in the territory of

the former Russian Empire• hardened dental plaque• a meat dish made from ground raw beef

• Ancient name for K2C4H4O6.

Page 29: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Tartar

Page 30: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• The game is called "zesta-punta" (basket tip) in Basque. The Basque Government promotes the game as "the fastest sport in the world" because of the ball speed. The sport once held the world record for ball speed with a 125–140 g ball covered with goatskin that traveled at 302 km/h (188 mph), performed by José Ramón Areitio at the Newport, Rhode Island.

• In Basque language it means “merry festival”. Identify the game.

Page 31: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Jai alai

Page 32: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• King Charles II instructed John Flamsteed (the first person to hold this post) to “forthwith to apply himself with the most exact care and diligence to the rectifying the tables of the motions of the heavens, and the places of the fixed stars, so as to find out the so-much desired longitude of places, for the perfecting the art of navigation.”

• 1675–1719 John Flamsteed• 1720–1742 ______ ______• 1995–present Martin Rees, Baron Rees of Ludlow

Page 33: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Astronomer RoyalEdmund Halley

Page 34: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• "his Excellency President for Life, Field Marshal Alhaji Dr. _____ ______ Dada, VC, DSO, MC, CBE“

• “Lord of All the Beasts of the Earth and Fishes of the Sea”

• “Conqueror of the British Isles” • Which other title was claimed by this man, which was

made into a movie by Kevin McDonald based on a novel of the same name by Giles Foden?

Page 35: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1
Page 36: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• Identify the brand from the initial logo on the left and a clue to lead you to its present logo on the right.

Page 37: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1
Page 38: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• The phrase, as it is normally quoted in Latin, comes from the Satires of Juvenal, the 1st/2nd century Roman satirist. Although in its modern usage the phrase has universal, timeless applications to concepts such as tyrannical governments, uncontrollably oppressive dictatorships, and police or judicial corruption and overreach, in context within Juvenal's poem it refers to the impossibility of enforcing moral behaviour on women when the enforcers are corruptible.

• audio quid ueteres olim moneatis amici,"pone seram, cohibe." sed quis custodiet ipsoscustodes? cauta est et ab illis incipit uxor.

• Which phrase?

Page 39: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Who watches the Watchmen?

• quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

Page 40: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

• Only two non-Indians were awarded the Bharat Ratna.• Name both of them. (2 points)

Page 41: General Quiz - Quiz Of The Week 2  - Set 1

Nelson MandelaKhan Abdul Ghaffar Khan