CUP/PLATE QUARTER FINAL 29TH January
Questions set by the British Flag and the Robin Hood
|             1.  |                       Which purple flowering plant is commonly known as the “butterfly bush” because it attracts butterflies ?  |           ||
|             BUDDLEIA  |           |||
|             2.  |                       The name of which popular garden flowering plant, literally means “many flowers”?  |           ||
|             POLYANTHUS  |           |||
|             3.  |                       Which town in the USA is the only place in the world to have built a full scale replica of the Parthenon in Athens for its centennial in 1897 ?  |           ||
           NASHVILLE (TENNESSEE) |           |||
|             4.  |                       Which part of the British Isles is divided into six areas called sheadings ?  |           ||
|             ISLE OF MAN  |           |||
|             5.  |                       In the Old Testament, who was the Canaanite warrior god and god of fertility ?  |           ||
|             BAAL  |           |||
|             6.  |                       In classical mythology, who was the Greek equivalent of Pax, the Roman goddess of peace ?  |           ||
|             IRENE  |           |||
|             7.  |                       In a square in which English city is the large 6 m cast-iron statue of a mummified “Iron Man”, by Antony Gormley, that was erected in 1993 ?  |           ||
           BIRMINGHAM |           |||
|             8.  |                       Which university has in its coat of arms a shield with a circle in the top left hand corner as you view it ?  |           ||
           THE OPEN UNIVERSITY |           |||
|             9.  |                       Which term for structures such as telephone boxes, news stands and information booths, was originally used in Islamic architecture for an open circular pavilion ?  |           ||
|             KIOSK  |           |||
|             10  |                       The Free Trade Hall in Manchester was built on the site where which famous event took place in 1819 ?  |           ||
|             PETERLOO MASSACRE  |           |||
|             11.  |                       In heraldry, what is the term for a broad horizontal stripe running across the middle of the shield ?  |           ||
|             FESS (OR FESSE)  |           |||
|             12.  |                       What is the name, derived from a Czech word meaning “catapult” , for a short-range cannon with a steep angle of fire, related to the mortar ?  |           ||
|             HOWITZER  |           |||
|             13.  |                       Which English song-writer’s 1977 debut album has the title “My Aim Is True” ?  |           ||
|             ELVIS COSTELLO 
  |           |||
|             14.  |                       Which New York R&B singer won five of the top 2002 Grammy Awards, including Best New Artist, Song Of The Year for ‘Fallin’ and Best R&B album for “Songs in A Minor” ?  |           ||
|             ALICIA KEYS  |           |||
|             15.  |                       In the nursery rhyme, which insect is told to fly away home because ‘your house is on fire and your children are gone ‘ ?  |           ||
|             LADYBIRD  |           |||
|             16.  |                       In which 1915 short story by Franz Kafka does the hero, Gregor Samsa, find himself transformed into a human-sized beetle ?  |           ||
|             METAMORPHOSIS  |           |||
|             17.  |                       Which country’s flag features a cedar tree ?  |           ||
|             LEBANON  |           |||
|             18.  |                       A deficiency of what vitamin causes the failure of blood to clot ?  |           ||
|             VITAMIN K  |           |||
|             19.  |                       Which major thoroughfare in the centre of the borough of Manhattan in New York City is the dividing line that separates streets labelled East and West ?  |           ||
|             
 
  |                       5TH AVENUE (“the most expensive street in the world”)  |           ||
|             20.  |                       Which river, immortalised in the paintings of John Constable, forms much of the boundary between Essex and Suffolk ?  |           ||
           STOUR |           |||
|             21.  |                       Which sport gave rise to the phrase ‘to win hands down’ ?  |           ||
|             HORSE RACING                 |           |||
|             22.  |                       In what game are unplayed pieces gathered in a ‘boneyard’ ?  |           ||
|             DOMINOES  |           |||
|             23.  |                       Which US Mathematician was awarded the Nobel Prize for economics in 1944, despite suffering from severe schizophrenia ?  |           ||
|             JOHN FORBES NASH (Jnr)  |           |||
|             24.  |                       Which English mathematician worked on the design of the Automatic Computing Engine (ACE) and in 1950 devised a test (the ‘imitation game’) for determining whether a computer can be said to ‘think’ ?  |           ||
|             ALAN TURING  |           |||
|             25.  |                       Pesto sauce traditionally consists of crushed garlic, basil, and which nuts blended with olive oil ?  |           ||
|             PINE NUTS 
  |           |||
|             26.  |                       Which climbing garden plant is known as Traveller’s Joy and Old Man’s Beard ?  |           ||
|             CLEMATIS  |           |||
|             27.  |                       What is the name for the ‘dimples’ on voting papers which played a controversial part in the election of US President George W. Bush in 2001 ?  |           ||
|             CHADS  |           |||
|             28.  |                       What is the more common term for the phenomenon of bioluminescence ?  |           ||
|             FOXFIRE (also accept FAIRY FIRE) (created by some species of fungi present in decaying wood).  |           |||
|             29.  |                       Name either of the two Flemish painters who worked in England who were knighted by King Charles I ?  |           ||
|             
  |                       PETER PAUL RUBENS OR ANTHONY VAN DYCK  |           ||
|             30.  |                       There are only 3 ferromagnetic elements (those which can be permanently magnetised). Iron is one – name another ?  |           ||
|             NICKEL OR COBALT  |           |||
|             31.  |                       According to the Gospels, who asked for the body of Jesus after the crucifixion and placed it in his own garden tomb ? Full answer required.  |           ||
|             JOSEPH OF ARIMATHAEA  |           |||
|             32.  |                       In the popular nursery rhyme, how much was owed to the bells of St Martin’s ?  |           ||
|             FIVE FARTHINGS  |           |||
|             33.  |                       In which 1932 novel by William Faulkner is Joe Christmas the tragic victim of violent racial prejudice ?  |           ||
|             LIGHT IN AUGUST  |           |||
|             34.  |                       Who wrote the 1848 Children’s Christmas story ‘The Little Match Girl’ ?  |           ||
|             HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN  |           |||
|             35.  |                       Which phrase from Shakespeare’s Othello was used by Edward Elgar as the title of a set of five marches for a symphony orchestra ?  |           ||
|             POMP AND CIRCUMSTANCE  |           |||
|             36.  |                       The name of which make of car happens to be a latin word meaning ‘let it be done’ and is used as a decree, a formal command or a short order or warrant of a judge ?  |           ||
|             FIAT  |           |||
|             37.  |                       Who was the only bachelor President of the USA ?  |           ||
|             JAMES BUCHANAN  |           |||
|             38.  |                       By what name is Gustav Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 in E-Flat Major (1906) popularly known, because of the huge number of performers required ?  |           ||
|             SYMPHONY OF A THOUSAND 
  |           |||
|             39.  |                       Which playwright designed Blenheim Palace and Castle Howard ?  |           ||
|             SIR JOHN VANBURGH  |           |||
|             40.  |                       Which nineteenth century President of the USA had the shortest presidential term in office ?  |           ||
|             WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON                 |           |||
|             41.  |                       Where specifically in the human body would you find the PISIFORM bone ?  |           ||
|             THE WRIST  |           |||
|             42.  |                       What name is given to diacritic marks such as the dot on a lower-case ‘i’ ?  |           ||
|             TITTLE  |           |||
|             43.  |                       Who was the designer of the silk crepe dress held together with safety pins which Elizabeth Hurley wore for the premiere of the 1994 film ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral’ ?  |           ||
|             GIANNI VERSACE  |           |||
|             44.  |                       Which Paris fashion designer launched the ‘Space Age look’ in the late 1960s ?  |           ||
|             PIERRE CARDIN  |           |||
|             45.  |                       Which ‘make-your-own’ toy character, created by New York designer George Lerner, came as a package of twenty eight plastic face and body parts, including ears, noses and mouths ?  |           ||
           MR. POTATO HEAD |           |||
|             46.  |                       Under which trade name did Coleco market the handmade cloth dolls that American arts student Xavier Roberts designed in 1978, and called ‘Little People’ ?  |           ||
           CABBAGE PATCH KIDS |           |||
|             47.  |                       What is the state capital of Oregon ?  |           ||
           SALEM |           |||
|             48.  |                       What is the state capital of Montana ?  |           ||
           HELENA |           |||
|             49.  |                       What is the name of the cup awarded to the winner of the annual swim across the Serpentine in Hyde Park every Christmas Day ?  |           ||
|             PETER PAN CUP  |           |||
|             50.  |                       The Super Bowl is awarded to the winners of the USA National Football League Championship game. What is the name of the equivalent trophy played for in Canada ?  |           ||
|             THE GREY CUP  |           |||
|             51.  |                       On which Antarctic island is the active volcano Mount Erebus ?  |           ||
|             ROSS ISLAND  |           |||
|             52.  |                       Which Arab country is the only one without a desert ?  |           ||
|             LEBANON  |           |||
|             53.  |                       What uniquely connects Russia, Egypt and Turkey ?  |           ||
|             THEY EACH SPAN ACROSS TWO CONTINENTS  |           |||
|             54.  |                       What is the unique connection between Chad and Romania and between The Netherlands and Luxembourg ?  |           ||
|             EACH PAIR HAS THE SAME NATIONAL FLAG  |           |||
|             55.  |                       To whom is the design of the ceremonial uniform of the Swiss Guards of the Vatican City attributed ?  |           ||
|             MICHELANGELO  |           |||
|             56.  |                       Whose last words after a nurse had commented that ‘”he seemed to be a little better”, are said to have been “on the contrary” ?  |           ||
|             HENRIK IBSEN  |           |||
|             57.  |                       Name the classic children’s TV series in which you could find Gabriel the toad  |           ||
|             BAGPUSS  |           |||
|             58.  |                       On TV, whose pet carrier pigeon was called Speckled Jim ?  |           ||
|             GENERAL MELCHETT (Blackadder)  |           |||
|             59.  |                       Name the hotel in Huddersfield where twenty two clubs famously met in 1895 to form the Northern Rugby Football Union  |        ||
           GEORGE HOTEL |        |||
|             60.  |                       Which Sydney-born Warrington rugby league player was the most prolific try scorer in the history of the game, scoring 796 tries between 1946 and 1964 (740 for Warrington alone !) ?  |        ||
|             BRIAN BEVAN  |        |||
|             61.  |                       Which letter in Morse code is represented by dot dash?  |           ||
|             A  |           |||
|             62.  |                       What is the only country outside of Europe in the Top Ten for annual per capita consumption of beer?  |           ||
|             AUSTRALIA  |           |||
|             63.  |                       Who gave his name to his invention the whirlpool bath?  |           ||
|             (Candido) JACUZZI  |           |||
|             64.  |                       What Islamic edifice was built in the city of Agra by Shah Jahan?  |           ||
|             TAJ MAHAL  |           |||
|             65.  |                       It was once traditional to put something in your cup before drinking to someone’s health. What was put into the cup ?  |           ||
|             PIECE OF TOAST OR ROASTED BREAD  |           |||
|             66.  |                       Complete the following line from Monty Python 'The Philosophers Song' with the last name of a philosopher. "And Wittgenstein was a beery swine, Who was just as schloshed as ......"  |           ||
|             SCHLEGEL  |           |||
|             67.  |                       What name was given to the revolution in the Ukraine 2004 to 2005 ?  |           ||
|             THE ORANGE REVOLUTION  |           |||
|             68.  |                       What was the title taken by Mr William Morris of Morris motors?  |           ||
|             LORD NUFFIELD  |           |||
|             69.  |                       The national anthem of which European Union country has no words?  |           ||
|             SPAIN  |           |||
|             70.  |                       Since 1810, the largest fair in the world, Oktoberfest, renowned for beer consumption, has been cancelled 24 times, usually due to war. Why was it cancelled in 1923 and 1924?  |           ||
|             OUT OF CONTROL INFLATION  |           |||
|             71.  |                       Which British writer, comedienne and dinner lady famously said "I thought coq au vin was love in a lorry"?  |           ||
|             VICTORIA WOOD  |           |||
|             72.  |                       This is a pub quiz after all, so on which brewers site in Chiswick has there been a brewery for more than 300 years?  |           ||
|             FULLERS  |           |||
|             73.  |                       What are the inhabitants of Sardinia called?  |           ||
|             SARDS  |           |||
|             74.  |                       An English word for a vital body part and the Chinese word for dragon are the same. What is the word ?  |           ||
|             LUNG  |           |||
|             75.  |                       The American Charles Osborne got the hickups in 1922. How long did it last for?  |           ||
|             68 YEARS !! (ACCEPT +/- 5 YEARS : 63 TO 73)  |           |||
|             76.  |                       Who was the first non royal to appear on a UK postage stamp?  |           ||
|             SHAKESPEARE (in 1964)  |           |||
|             77.  |                       Who is the 2014 European Ryder Cup captain ?  |           ||
|             
  |                       PAUL McGINLEY 
  |           ||
|             78.  |                       The Akita is a breed of dog originating from which country ?  |           ||
|             JAPAN  |           |||
|             79.  |                       Symbolising innocence, which birthstone is associated with the month of April?  |           ||
|             DIAMOND  |           |||
|             80.  |                       How Many Nautical Miles Are There in A League ?  |           ||
|             3  |           |||
|             81.  |                       Which pine nut had a famous nose?  |           ||
|             PINOCCHIO (Pinocchio is a Tuscan word meaning "pine nut")  |           |||
|             82.  |                       What is the title of the officer who serves as a 'police chief' on board a Royal Navy or US navy ship?  |           ||
|             MASTER AT ARMS  |           |||
|             83.  |                       What is the more common name for the medical condition know as periorbital haematoma ?  |           ||
|             BLACK EYE  |           |||
|             84.  |                       Which company marketed the first diesel driven car?  |           ||
|             MERCEDES BENZ  |           |||
|             85.  |                       The Anglo-Persian Oil Company is now better known by which name?  |           ||
|             BP or BRITISH PETROLEUM                 |           |||
|             86.  |                       The Langeled pipeline is the world's longest underwater pipeline. It carries natural gas to the United Kingdom from which country?  |           ||
|             NORWAY  |           |||
|             87.  |                       What sporting event has been held at Hamilton in Canada, Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia and Kingston in Jamaica, amongst others ?  |           ||
|             COMMONWEALTH GAMES  |           |||
|             88.  |                       Which notorious murderer lived at 10 Rillington Place?  |           ||
|             JOHN CHRISTIE  |           |||
|             89.  |                       What is the name of the maidenhair tree or 'living fossil', the first tree to bud in Hiroshima after the atom bomb?  |           ||
|             GINKGO  |           |||
|             90.  |                       In which country could you formerly have seen this famous signpost: Wimbledon 16, 999 kilometres, Flushing Meadow 16, 690 kilometres, Roland Garros 16, 878 kilometres?  |           ||
|             AUSTRALIA (Melbourne Park)  |           |||
|             91.  |                       The stadium in Athens for the 1896 games was built from which material?  |           ||
|             MARBLE  |           |||
|             92.  |                       Semiotics is the study of what ?  |           ||
|             SIGNS AND SYMBOLS  |           |||
|             93.  |                       Hagiology" is the branch of literature dealing with the lives & legends of whom?  |           ||
|             SAINTS  |           |||
|             94.  |                       The words "Ars Gratia Artis" appear on the logo for MGM films. What does it mean?  |           ||
|             ART FOR ARTS SAKE  |           |||
|             95.  |                       Art for Arts Sake was a hit record, first charting in 1975, for which group?  |           ||
|             10cc  |           |||
|             96.  |                       Which edible product did the ancient Greeks use to cast ballots?  |           ||
|             BEANS (some politicians were full of beans !)  |           |||
|             97.  |                       Braille is based around a grid using how many dots?  |           ||
|             6                 |           |||
|             98.  |                       What is a Worcester pearmain?  |           ||
|             APPLE  |           |||
|             99.  |                       What type of acid is in bee stings?  |           ||
|             FORMIC ACID (also accept Methanoic Acid)  |           |||
|             100.  |                       Which variation of culinary ingredient is sometimes called the 'Black Diamond"?  |           ||
|             TRUFFLES (specifically a black truffle (accept truffle)  |           |||
|             101.  |                       What kind of therapy is Balneotherapy?  |           ||
|             BATHING – WATER (usually in a spa) for disease treatment  |           |||
|             102.  |                       In which city is the Royal Armouries Museum?  |           ||
|             LEEDS  |           |||
|             103.  |                       Which country has the international vehicle registration M?  |           ||
|             MALTA  |           |||
|             104.  |                       For which film did Jack Nicholson win his first Oscar?  |           ||
|             ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST (12 times nominated and 3 time winner)  |           |||
|             105.  |                       Translated into English what was Tchaikovsky’s first name,  |           ||
|             PETER  |           |||
|             106.  |                       Which fictional character was created by Edgar Rice Burroughs?  |           ||
|             TARZAN  |           |||
|             107.  |                       What was the name of the actor who wrote, produced and starred in the iconic 1970 film “Le Mans”?  |           ||
|             STEVE McQUEEN 
  |           |||
|             108.  |                       According to American psychologist Lewis Terman, above what IQ level would you be classed as a genius ?  |           ||
|             140  |           |||
|             109.  |                       What is a baby elephant called?  |           ||
|             CALF  |           |||
|             110.  |                       On which river does Shrewsbury stand?  |           ||
|             SEVERN  |           |||
|             111.  |                       Which famous explorer discovered Jamaica?  |           ||
|             CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS  |           |||
|             112.  |                       In which decade were ATM’s 1st used in Britain?  |           ||
|             1960s (27th June 1967 - Barclays Bank in Enfield, Middlesex. The first person to withdraw money from it was On The Buses star, Reg Varney, aka bus driver Stan Butler)  |           |||
|             113.  |                       In the American dice game craps what name is given to a throw of double one ?  |           ||
|             SNAKE EYES  |           |||
|             114.  |                       In the USA which medal would you receive if wounded on military service?  |           ||
|             PURPLE HEART  |           |||
|             115.  |                       Which film has 4 sequels with prefixes to the original title of Beneath, Escape From, Conquest Of and Battle For?  |           ||
|             PLANET OF THE APES  |           |||
|             116.  |                       The TRIPITAKA (Sanskrit word meaning “Three Baskets” is the sacred text of which religion?  |           ||
|             BUDDHISM  |           |||
|             117.  |                       Which word beginning with Z means the study or practice of fermentation in brewing, wine making or distilling ?  |           ||
|             ZYMURGY  |           |||
|             118.  |                       Which word beginning with the letter Z means a fertilized ovum ?  |           ||
|             ZYGOTE  |           |||
|             119.  |                       Who formed the Scottish Labour Party and was the first independent Labour MP ? .  |           ||
|             (James) KIER HARDIE  |           |||
|             120.  |                       What is a TurkishVan ?  |           ||
|             BREED OF CAT  |           
SUPPLEMENTARIES:
|             1.  |                       In 1953 which country singer died in the back of a car on his way to a New Year’s Day concert in Ohio, aged 29 - both names required ?  |        |
|             HANK WILLIAMS                   |        ||
|             2.  |                       HIPPOPOTO – MONSTRO – SESQUI – PEDALIO - PHOBIA is the fear of what ?  |        |
|             LONG WORDS  |        ||
|             3.  |                       Which British pop group auditioned for Decca on New Year’s Day 1962 ?  |        |
|             THE BEATLES (they were turned down !)  |        ||
|             4.  |                       Which notorious British serial killer committed suicide on the 1st January 1995 ? Both names required  |        |
|             FRED WEST  |        ||
|             5.  |                       What does an ORGANOLEPTIC analyse ?  |        |
|             FOOD SNIFFER/TASTER                |        ||
|             6.  |                       Who, an X factor finalist in 2012 was the winner of Celebrity Big Brother series 11 that finished last week ?  |        |
|             RYLAN CLARK  |        ||
|             7.  |                       How would you say 'house wine' in French ?  |        |
|             VIN (DE LA) MAISON 
  |        ||
|             8.  |                       How would you say 'house wine' in Italian ?  |        |
|             VINO DELLA CASA 
  |        
TIE_BREAK QUESTION (IF NEEDED):
|             How much money was raised by the end of the telethon on the BBC Children In Need show broadcast on 16th November 2012 ?  |        |
|             
 £ 26,757,446 (the current record amount)  |        

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