These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2016-07-25,
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 to the newsgroup in a single followup,
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. For further information
see my 2016-05-31 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
Remember that, as I post this, QFTCIMM16 current events 3-4 is
running concurrently.
I wrote one of these rounds.
* Game 10, Round 2 - History - US Presidential Losers
Donald J. Trump proclaims that, unlike his opponents, he's not
a loser. Future history will weigh in on the validity of that
judgment. In the meantime, let's give some consideration to the
also-rans and coulda-beens of past US presidential elections.
1. Which Democrat ran unsuccessfully against Dwight Eisenhower in
1952 and 1956?
2. This Democratic senator from Colorado was initially a strong
candidate for his party's 1988 presidential nomination, but
was undone by rumored marital infidelity and stories of bad
debts from a previous campaign. Who is he?
3. This man was the Democratic nominee three times -- in 1896,
1900, and 1908 -- but never won. As a candidate he was known
for advocating that silver as well as gold should be a standard
for currency; later on he supported Prohibition, and, famously,
opposed Darwinism. Name him.
4. This famed newspaper editor ran against General Ulysses S. Grant
in 1872. Despite the corruption of Grant's first term as
president, and despite having two parties behind him, he lost
badly and died 3 weeks after voting day. Who was he?
5. Who was the Socialist candidate who ran for president five times
from 1900 to 1920? His best showing was in 1912, when he scored
6% of the popular vote. In 1920, he ran from jail.
6. Of course, Franklin Roosevelt had the longest record of winning
presidential elections. Name any one of the four second-place
finishers that he defeated.
7. The adage "try, try again" didn't work out for either <answer 3>
or <answer 5>, but some other candidates who got a second kick at
winning the presidency actually managed to pull it off. Who is
the most recent losing candidate to later become president?
8. The most successful independent candidate in the past 100
years ran in 1992, gaining almost 19% of the popular vote and
apparently taking support equally from both George H.W. Bush
and Bill Clinton. He ran under a different banner in 1996 with
less success. Name him.
Please decode the rot13 for the last two questions only after you
have finished with the rest of the round.
9. Gur 1968 Avkba/Uhzcuerl ryrpgvba unq n guveq pnaqvqngr jub
tbg 13.5% bs gur cbchyne ibgr naq 46 Ryrpgbeny Pbyyrtr ibgrf.
Uvf ehaavat zngr jnf Pbyq Jne trareny Phegvf YrZnl. Anzr uvz.
10. Anghenyyl, ivpr-cerfvqragvny pnaqvqngrf jvaq hc nf ybfref
whfg nf bsgra nf gur urnqyvare ba gur gvpxrg. Va gur 1948 Uneel
Gehzna / Gubznf Qrjrl zngpu-hc (bs "Qrjrl Qrsrngf Gehzna" snzr),
Qrjrl'f ehaavat zngr jnf n sbezre Tbireabe bs Pnyvsbeavn naq
n shgher Puvrs Whfgvpr bs gur HF Fhcerzr Pbheg. Fb... znlor
abg fhpu n ybfre nsgre nyy. Jub jnf ur?
* Game 10, Round 3 - Miscellaneous - Etymology
1. Which one of these words is derived from Latin roots meaning
"on top of the face": incidental, inconsequential, insignificant,
meaningless, negligible, paltry, petty, superficial, trivial,
unimportant?
2. Which one of these words is derived from Latin roots meaning
"talk together": colloquy, confab, conference, consultation,
conversation, debate, dialogue, discussion, palaver, parley?
3. Which one of these words is derived from a Dutch word meaning
"master": boss, bureaucrat, chancellor, director, executive,
magistrate, manager, marshal, officer, president?
4. Which one of these words is derived from a Latin word that means
"noon", although you might guess it referred to a different time
(it comes to us by way of another language): break, intermission,
interval, leisure, relax, repose, rest, siesta, tranquilize,
vacation?
5. Which one of these words is derived from a Latin word meaning
"bristle" or "tremble", via French: angst, doubt, dread, fear,
fright, horror, jitters, scare, suspicion, terror?
6. Which one of these words is derived from the Latin word for
"needle": acute, astute, brainy, bright, clever, discerning,
intelligent, knowledgeable, perspicacious, smart?
7. Which one of these words is derived originally from the Latin
for "answer", but you can see that it came to us through both
Italian and French: answer, comeback, refutation, rejoinder,
repartee, reply, response, riposte, solution, wisecrack?
8. Which one of these words is originally a place name: brawl,
donnybrook, fight, fray, melee, rhubarb, riot, ruckus, rumble,
slugfest?
9. Which one of these words is derived from the Arabic word for
"cannabis": assassinate, execute, extirpate, guillotine, hang,
liquidate, lynch, murder, regicide, slaughter?
10. Which one of these words is derived from a Greek word for
"one who destroys an image": agnostic, apostate, atheist,
doubter, freethinker, heathen, heretic, iconoclast, infidel,
skeptic?
In the original game, the lists of words were on a handout and
the questions were in the style "On List B, which word...?"
There were 8 decoy lists on the handout, but none of the words
were selected for reasons to do with etymology, so there won't
be any extra questions for fun, but for no points. However,
here are the decoy lists, for your putative interest:
* Clergyman, cleric, minister, padre, parson, pastor, preacher,
priest, rabbi, reverend.
* Aliment, chow, comestibles, food, nourishment, nutriment,
provender, provisions, sustenance, victuals.
* Alluring, appealing, attractive, beautiful, comely, cute,
gorgeous, lovely, pretty, ravishing.
* Chairman, dictator, doge, duce, emperor, Führer, kaiser, leader,
premier, president.
* Commonplace, customary, frequent, periodical, reappearing,
recurring, regular, reiterating, routine, usual.
* Adhesive, binding, cement, fastener, fixative, glue, mortar,
mucilage, paste, sealant.
* Clay, dirt, earth, ground, humus, land, loam, mud, soil, turf.
* Cage, confine, detain, immure, impound, imprison, incarcerate,
intern, jail, remand.
--
Mark Brader "After many years of teaching, you get to learn
Toronto quite a lot about how to design a better idiot."
m...@vex.net --Peter Moylan
My text in this article is in the public domain.