20th January–Cup/Plate Quarter Finals
1. Who composed the Goldberg Variations?
J.S. Bach
2. In which town was William the Conqueror born?
Falaise in Normandy
3. JCB is the name of the famous earth-moving machines; what does the B stand for?
Joseph Cyril Bamford, the company's founder (1916-2001)
4. In which year did Albert Einstein publish his General Theory of Relativity?
1916
5. How are the elements fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine and astatine known collectively?
Halogens
6. The chief naval battle of the First World War. In Germany it is known as the Skagerrak. How is it known in Britain?
The Battle of Jutland
7. Which stretch of water connects the Mediterranean Sea with the Atlantic Ocean?
Strait of Gibraltar
8. Whose engravings inspired Stravinsky's opera The Rakes's Progress?
Hogarth's
9. What does it mean if a racehorse is described as a maiden?
It has never won a race
10. Beata Beatrix is an idealized portrait of the artist's late wife Elizabeth Siddal. Which member of the Pre-Raphaelites painted it?
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
11. In which country did the samba originate?
Brazil
12. What part of the body interests a rhinologist?
Nose
13. Which picturesque village on Dartmoor, in Devon, is renowned for its annual fair?
Widdecombe
14. Taking its name from the Latin for apple, which crystalline acid is found in unripe apples and other fruits?
Malic acid
15. In which British city is the Mary Rose to be found?
Portsmouth
16. Brimstone is a form of which element?
Sulphur
17. For whom was Etruria Hall in Stoke-on-Trent built? (now a hotel)
Josiah Wedgwood
18. In Scottish cuisine what is a bannock
A griddle cake of oatmeal or other meal
19. If a person is suffering from aphonia, what are they unable to do?
Speak
20. Macclesfield Town FC play home matches at the Moss Rose Stadium, but who plays their home matches at the J. Davidson Stadium on Moss Lane?
Altrincham
21. Worcester pearmain is a variety of which fruit?
Apple
22. Who composed the music to the Ode to Joy which is used for the European anthem?
Ludwig van Beethoven
23. Who was the father of Richard II?
Edward Prince of Wales-The Black Prince
24. What is the capacity of a 'barrel' as commonly referenced for crude oil production?
35 UK gallons or 42 US gallons, or 159 litres
25. Who was the English Nurse executed by the Germans in Brussels in 1915?
Edith Cavell
26. Name one of the Noble gases?
helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, or radon
27. : Which English palace was built by Cardinal Wolsey and later enlarged by Henry VIII and altered by Sir Christopher Wren?
Hampton Court Palace
28. To which island group do the islands of Rhodes and Kos belong?
Dodecanese
29. What is the occupation of Escamillo in the opera Carmen?
Bullfighter
30. What is the term for two under par in golf?
Eagle
31. What do the letters “ap” on an etching or print stand for?
Artist's proof
32. Who wrote the music for West Side Story?
Leonard Bernstein
33. A haematologist is a doctor who specializes in diseases of?
Blood
34. In which British city are Cavern Walks, Strawberry Field and Penny Lane?
Liverpool
35. If a dog is canine, what is a pig?
Porcine
36. In which port is the SS Great Britain moored?
Bristol
37. The name of which semi-precious mineral is derived from the French words for blue/yellow?
Bluejohn
38. Which family currently own Capesthorne Hall?
The Bromley Davenports
39. Barnacle, Greylag, Brent and Canada are types of which bird?
Goose
40. In golf what is meant by the Nineteenth hole?
Clubhouse or bar
41. On wine labels what is the meaning of the word recolté?
Vintage or crop
42. Early Champagne, Timperley Early and Victoria are varieties of which desert plant?
Rhubarb
43. Who composed the opera The Queen of Spades??
Tchaikovsky
44. Who was described as "the wisest fool in Christendom"?
James VI & I
45. Joseph Grimaldi (1779-1837) was called “The Father of …” what?
Clowns
46. What icon of 20th century design was the Chapman Root Glass Company of Indiana responsible for introducing in 1915?
The Coca-Cola bottle
47. Which acid is commonly present in a lead-acid car battery?
Sulphuric acid
48. What is the name of the ninth century Bishop of Winchester who's feast day is held in England on the 15th of July?
St Swithin
49. Two Commonwealth countries are islands in the Mediterranean Sea. Name either of the two?
Cyprus, Malta
50. In which Shakespeare play does the eponymous character smother his wife?
Othello
51. Which football club plays its home fixtures at Anfield?
Liverpool
52. The Golden Bear in Berlin, the Golden Shell in San Sebastian and the Golden Lion in Venice are major awards given in which area of the arts?
Film
53. Who wrote the song made famous by Elvis Presley, Blue Suede Shoes?
Carl Perkins
54. Which acid with the formula HCOOH occurs naturally in ants?
Formic acid
55. In which European capital city is Oscar Wilde buried?
Paris
56. The Terra Nova ship carried whose Antarctic expedition in 1910?
Robert Falcon Scott
57. Poultney Bridge is in which city?
Bath
58. In the well-known equation, E=mc2, what does c represent?
The velocity of light.
59. Which Prime Minister lived at New Hawarden Castle in Flintshire?
William Ewart Gladstone
60. Sinophobia is the fear of which race or nation?
China
61. The football stadium known as The Den in South Bermondsey is the home to which team?
Millwall
62. In the news recently because of the ravages of time the DUKW was an amphibious transport vehicle first used in WW2. Who manufactured it?
GMC (General Motors Corporation)
63. PZKW was the abbreviation for what kind of German military vehicle?
Tank (Panzerkampfwagen - armoured fighting vehicle)
64. The music of Alexander Borodin was used as inspiration for which Hollywood musical?
Kismet
65. Who was the eldest child of Queen Victoria?
Princess Victoria
66. What is denoted by the following prefixes? First, Middle, Morning, Forenoon, Afternoon, First Dog, Last Dog.
Watches at sea.
67. In 1915, Hugo Junkers constructed the first what?
Fighter Plane
68. What is being described by the phrase, “induction, compression, ignition, expansion, exhaust”?
The action of an internal combustion engine.
69. Who began writing his diary on New year's day 1660?
Samuel Pepys
70. What is the capital of Saudi Arabia?
Riyadh
71. Who won an Oscar for his song I Just Called To Say I Love You?
Stevie Wonder
72. Flushing Meadow, Roland Garros and Melbourne Park are all Grand Slam venues in which sport?
Tennis
73. In which British city can you find Knott Mill, The Printworks and Canal Street.
Manchester
74. Whose backing group originally the Tennessee Two became the Tennessee Three?
Johnny Cash
75. What name is commonly given to the red transparent variety of the mineral corundum?
Ruby
76. If you sailed due east from Newcastle upon Tyne, which would be the first country you would reach?
Denmark
77. What is the chief investigating branch of the US Department of justice called?
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
78. Where can you walk the Golden Mile?
Blackpool
79. Plumbum is the Latin name for which element?
Lead
80. Which Prime Minister lived at Hughenden Manor, near High Wycombe
Benjamin Disraeli
81. What does the girl's name Verity mean?
Truth
82. The US Marine Corps memorial at Arlington Ridge Depicts what event?
Raising the flag on Iwo Jima
83. What is the name of the French satirical magazine whose offices were attacked recently?
Charlie Hebdo
84. Which convicted rapist footballer did Oldham FC not sign up recently?
Ched Evans
85. Who was the composer of the symphony “From the New World”?
Antonin Dvořák
86. Who was the first Queen of Great Britain and Ireland?
Queen Anne
87. Who was Lady Creighton-Ward?
Lady Penelope from TV's 'Thunderbirds'.
88. In 1915, the remains of composer Rouget de Lisle were brought to Le Invalides in Paris. What was his most famous composition?
La Marseillaise
89. Whose law can be expressed as V = IxR?
Ohm's law
90. The Isle of Man was, until 1266 a dependency of which country?
Norway
91. Lusaka is the capital city of which African country
Zambia
92. On which musical instrument would a paradiddle be played?
Drum
93. In which athletic event would you use the Fosbury Flop?
High jump
94. In which classic 1960 film does Marion Crane steal $40,000 from her boss and unwisely make her escape via the Bates Motel?
Psycho
95. What Instrument was played by jazz musician Stan Getz?
Saxophone
96. What letter links an SI unit of temperature and the chemical symbol for potassium?
K (Kelvin)
97. What is Kentish Rag?
Limestone
98. What does the term guerrilla warfare mean literally?
Little war
99. Where in Britain is the Land of Green Ginger?
It is a street in Hull
100. Bauxite is the main ore of which metal?
Aluminium
101. Which Prime Minister lived at The Hirsel near Coldstream?
Alec Douglas Home
102. Worn on the head, what is a chaplet?
Ornamental wreath of flowers or beads
103. What flavour is the Mexican Liqueur Kahlua?
Coffee flavoured
104. Tia Maria is another coffee flavoured liqueur. What does Tia mean in Spanish?
Aunt
105. Made in 1940, which was Charlie Chaplin’s first true talking picture?
The Great Dictator
106. “Nessun Dorma” is an aria from an opera by which composer?
Giacomo Puccini
107. Who met Henry VIII at “The Field of the Cloth of Gold”?
François (Francis) Ist of France
108. Who was the first Englishman to be killed in a plane crash?
Charles Stewart Rolls (of Rolls Royce fame)
109. The 1915 hit song “Keep the Home Fires Burning” was written by which Welshman?
Ivor Novello
110. Whose law can be expressed as PxV = k?
Boyle's law
111. From where did the first regular British television broadcasts start transmission in London in 1936?
Alexandra Palace
112. What is the name of the range of hills in South Dakota in which the Mount Rushmore National Memorial is situated?
Black Hills
113. In the 1961 film, which guns did Gregory Peck, Anthony Quinn, David Niven and Anthony Quayle set out to demolish?
The Guns of Navarone
114. Luffing, tacking and gybing are all terms used in which sport?
Sailing/yachting
115. Where in London does the Lutine Bell hang?
: Lloyds of London
116. What musical form might be described as Delta, or Chicago?
Blues
117. In 1781 astronomer William Herschel discovered the seventh major planet from the Sun. What was it?
Uranus
118. Rioja is a wine produced in which country?
Spain
119. Which part of speech modifies or describes a verb?
Adverb
120. In which British city is Tombland
It is by Norwich Cathedral
Sup 1: In which town in Normandy is the major tourist attraction a 23 foot long embroidery that dates from the eleventh century?
Bayeux
Sup 2: How many heads had the mythical dog Cerberus?
Three
Sup 3: Who in 1940 were referred to by Churchill as "the few"?
The pilots/airmen in the Battle of Britain
Sup 4: hat term is used in law to refer to a wall which separates two adjoining properties and which belongs to the owners equally?
Party Wall (not common wall)
Sup 5: What word describes the result of multiplying two or more numbers together?
Product
Sup 6: Epistaxis is the medical name for which common condition or complaint?
Nosebleed
Tie Breaker
To the nearest second what was the record shortest time for the amputation of a leg by a Naval Surgeon in Nelson’s time.
1 minute 40 seconds
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