Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

QFTCIBSI Game 10, Rounds 4,6: card games and Ireland

28 views
Skip to first unread message

Mark Brader

unread,
May 7, 2016, 10:56:26 PM5/7/16
to
These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-11-30,
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 Bloor St. Irregulars,
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 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


* Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games

1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
all cards in their hand. Name this game.

2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique.
Players score points by winning tricks and also by forming
combinations of cards into melds. Variations of the game are
called cutthroat, check, and double-deck. Name the game.

3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
will be a tie. Name the game.

4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
that may be used in which card game?

5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
always be split?

6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
the individual responsible for the distribution of bets
and payouts? This term also forms the title of a 1998 film
starring Clive Owen.

7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
and Stayman refer to?

8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
small slam?

9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?

10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
community card dealt?


* Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish

1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
("TEE-shock")?

2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.

4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
its fine glassware?

5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
for Literature.

6. By what name is Irishman Paul Hewson better known?

7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.

8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
rowdy fight or free-for-all".

9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
to?

10. He was born in Dublin in 1769. He served as British Prime
Minister twice, from January 1828 to November 1830 and briefly
again in 1834. He was granted a state funeral in 1852.
In downtown Toronto two streets and a subway station are
named in his honor. Who was he?

--
Mark Brader, Toronto "Yet Another Wonderful Novelty -- YAWN!"
m...@vex.net -- Liam Quin

My text in this article is in the public domain.

Dan Blum

unread,
May 7, 2016, 11:44:49 PM5/7/16
to
Mark Brader <m...@vex.net> wrote:

> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games

> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.

Canasta

> 2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
> It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique.
> Players score points by winning tricks and also by forming
> combinations of cards into melds. Variations of the game are
> called cutthroat, check, and double-deck. Name the game.

Pinochle

> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.

Baccarat

> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
> that may be used in which card game?

Cribbage

> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?

aces and nines

> 6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
> the individual responsible for the distribution of bets
> and payouts? This term also forms the title of a 1998 film
> starring Clive Owen.

croupier

> 7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
> and Stayman refer to?

bidding systems

> 8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
> small slam?

12

> 9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?

jack of spades; nine of spades

> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?

river

> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish

> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?

President

> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

Cork

> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.

bicycle tire with a tube

> 4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
> its fine glassware?

Waterford

> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.

James Joyce and William Butler Yeats

> 8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
> rowdy fight or free-for-all".

Donnybrook

> 9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
> then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
> The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
> to?

Nelson

> 10. He was born in Dublin in 1769. He served as British Prime
> Minister twice, from January 1828 to November 1830 and briefly
> again in 1834. He was granted a state funeral in 1852.
> In downtown Toronto two streets and a subway station are
> named in his honor. Who was he?

Wellington

--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum to...@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."

Joshua Kreitzer

unread,
May 8, 2016, 2:05:49 AM5/8/16
to
m...@vex.net (Mark Brader) wrote in news:k6OdnccbOPNHN7PKnZ2dnUU7-
QPN...@giganews.com:

> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games
>
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.

cesta

> 2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
> It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique.
> Players score points by winning tricks and also by forming
> combinations of cards into melds. Variations of the game are
> called cutthroat, check, and double-deck. Name the game.

euchre (?)

> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.

baccarat

> 6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
> the individual responsible for the distribution of bets
> and payouts? This term also forms the title of a 1998 film
> starring Clive Owen.

croupier

> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?

the river

> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish
>
> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?

prime minister

> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

Cork (?)

> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.

Beckett and Heaney

> 6. By what name is Irishman Paul Hewson better known?

Bono

> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
> shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.

national police

> 8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
> rowdy fight or free-for-all".

Donnybrook

> 9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
> then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
> The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
> to?

Nelson

--
Joshua Kreitzer
grom...@hotmail.com

Dan Tilque

unread,
May 8, 2016, 2:17:47 AM5/8/16
to
Mark Brader wrote:
>
>
> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games
>
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.
>
> 2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
> It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique.
> Players score points by winning tricks and also by forming
> combinations of cards into melds. Variations of the game are
> called cutthroat, check, and double-deck. Name the game.

pinochle

>
> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.

baccaat

>
> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
> that may be used in which card game?

cribbage

>
> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?

pair of aces and pair of jacks

>
> 6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
> the individual responsible for the distribution of bets
> and payouts? This term also forms the title of a 1998 film
> starring Clive Owen.
>
> 7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
> and Stayman refer to?

bidding conventions

>
> 8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
> small slam?

12

>
> 9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?
>
> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?

river

>
>
> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish
>
> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?

prime minister

>
> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

Cork

>
> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.
>
> 4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
> its fine glassware?
>
> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.

Joyce and ummm...

>
> 6. By what name is Irishman Paul Hewson better known?
>
> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
> shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.
>
> 8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
> rowdy fight or free-for-all".

Donnybrook

>
> 9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
> then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
> The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
> to?

Admiral Nelson

>
> 10. He was born in Dublin in 1769. He served as British Prime
> Minister twice, from January 1828 to November 1830 and briefly
> again in 1834. He was granted a state funeral in 1852.
> In downtown Toronto two streets and a subway station are
> named in his honor. Who was he?
>


--
Dan Tilque

Peter Smyth

unread,
May 8, 2016, 4:48:25 AM5/8/16
to
Mark Brader wrote:

> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-11-30,
> 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 Bloor St. Irregulars,
> 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 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
> Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
>
>
> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games
>
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.
Canasta
> 2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
> It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique.
> Players score points by winning tricks and also by forming
> combinations of cards into melds. Variations of the game are
> called cutthroat, check, and double-deck. Name the game.
Piquet
> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.
Baccarat
> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
> that may be used in which card game?
Cribbage
> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?
Eights
> 6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
> the individual responsible for the distribution of bets
> and payouts? This term also forms the title of a 1998 film
> starring Clive Owen.
Croupier
> 7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
> and Stayman refer to?
Conventions
> 8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
> small slam?
12
> 9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?
Jack of Clubs
> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?
River
>
> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish
>
> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?
Prime Minister
> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?
Cork
> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.
Vulcanised rubber
> 4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
> its fine glassware?
Waterford
> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.
George Bernard Shaw, Seamus Heaney
> 6. By what name is Irishman Paul Hewson better known?
Bono
> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
> shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.
Irish police force
> 8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
> rowdy fight or free-for-all".
>
> 9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
> then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
> The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
> to?
Nelson
> 10. He was born in Dublin in 1769. He served as British Prime
> Minister twice, from January 1828 to November 1830 and briefly
> again in 1834. He was granted a state funeral in 1852.
> In downtown Toronto two streets and a subway station are
> named in his honor. Who was he?
Duke of Wellington

Peter Smyth

Calvin

unread,
May 8, 2016, 6:17:49 AM5/8/16
to
On Sunday, May 8, 2016 at 12:56:26 PM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:

> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games
>
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.

Canasta

> 2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
> It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique.
> Players score points by winning tricks and also by forming
> combinations of cards into melds. Variations of the game are
> called cutthroat, check, and double-deck. Name the game.

Gin, Rummy

> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.

Baccarat

> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
> that may be used in which card game?

Cribbage

> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?

Aces and Eights

> 6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
> the individual responsible for the distribution of bets
> and payouts? This term also forms the title of a 1998 film
> starring Clive Owen.

Croupier

> 7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
> and Stayman refer to?

Bidding systems

> 8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
> small slam?

12

> 9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?

Jack of Clubs

> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?

The River


> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish
>
> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?

President, Prime Minister

> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

Cork

> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.

Vulcanised rubber

> 4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
> its fine glassware?

Waterford

> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.

Shaw and Yeats, Shaw and Wilde

> 6. By what name is Irishman Paul Hewson better known?

Bono Vox

> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
> shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.

Police force

> 8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
> rowdy fight or free-for-all".

Donnybrook

> 9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
> then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
> The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
> to?

Nelson?

> 10. He was born in Dublin in 1769. He served as British Prime
> Minister twice, from January 1828 to November 1830 and briefly
> again in 1834. He was granted a state funeral in 1852.
> In downtown Toronto two streets and a subway station are
> named in his honor. Who was he?

Wellington

cheers,
calvin

swp

unread,
May 8, 2016, 1:27:51 PM5/8/16
to
On Saturday, May 7, 2016 at 10:56:26 PM UTC-4, Mark Brader wrote:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-11-30,
> and should be interpreted accordingly.

bogus!

> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games
>
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.

canasta

> 2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
> It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique.
> Players score points by winning tricks and also by forming
> combinations of cards into melds. Variations of the game are
> called cutthroat, check, and double-deck. Name the game.

pinochle

> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.

baccarat

> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
> that may be used in which card game?

cribbage

> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?

aces and eights

> 6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
> the individual responsible for the distribution of bets
> and payouts? This term also forms the title of a 1998 film
> starring Clive Owen.

croupier

> 7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
> and Stayman refer to?

conventions

> 8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
> small slam?

12

> 9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?

jack of clubs

> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?

the river


> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish
>
> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?

prime minister

> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

cork

> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.

pneumatic tyres

> 4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
> its fine glassware?

waterford?

> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.

william butler yeats ; george bernard shaw

> 6. By what name is Irishman Paul Hewson better known?

bono

> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
> shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.

police force

> 8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
> rowdy fight or free-for-all".

donnybrook

> 9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
> then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
> The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
> to?

nelson's pillar?

> 10. He was born in Dublin in 1769. He served as British Prime
> Minister twice, from January 1828 to November 1830 and briefly
> again in 1834. He was granted a state funeral in 1852.
> In downtown Toronto two streets and a subway station are
> named in his honor. Who was he?

wellesley

swp

swp

unread,
May 8, 2016, 1:29:56 PM5/8/16
to
wellington is incorrect, unless preceded by "1st duke of" or words to that effect.

swp

Erland Sommarskog

unread,
May 8, 2016, 3:35:20 PM5/8/16
to
Mark Brader (m...@vex.net) writes:
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.

Canasta

> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.

Black Jack

> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?

Ace

> 7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
> and Stayman refer to?

Various conventions used in bidding

> 8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
> small slam?

12

> 9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?

Clubs

> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?

Oklahoma; Arizona

> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish
>
> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?

Prime Minister

> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

Galway; Cork

> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.

Vulcanised rubber

> 4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
> its fine glassware?

Limerick

> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.

Pinter, Joyce

> 9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
> then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
> The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
> to?

Lord Nelson




--
Erland Sommarskog, Stockholm, esq...@sommarskog.se

Jason Kreitzer

unread,
May 8, 2016, 6:03:04 PM5/8/16
to
On Saturday, May 7, 2016 at 10:56:26 PM UTC-4, Mark Brader wrote:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-11-30,
> 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 Bloor St. Irregulars,
> 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 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
> Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
>
>
> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games
>
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.
Cesto?
James Joyce and Dylan Thomas?
> 6. By what name is Irishman Paul Hewson better known?
Bono
> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
> shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.
>
> 8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
> rowdy fight or free-for-all".
Donnybrook?

Björn Lundin

unread,
May 9, 2016, 3:45:35 AM5/9/16
to
On 2016-05-08 04:56, Mark Brader wrote:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-11-30,
> 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 Bloor St. Irregulars,
> 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 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
> Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
>
>
> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games
>
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.

Canasta

>
> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.

Black Jack

>
> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?

Aces and ?

>
> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?

river; bank


>
> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish
>
>
> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

Limerick?

>
> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.

the air-filled tire



> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.

Joice



--
--
Björn

bbowler

unread,
May 9, 2016, 8:50:18 AM5/9/16
to
On Sat, 07 May 2016 21:56:26 -0500, Mark Brader wrote:

> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-11-30, 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 Bloor St. Irregulars, 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 2015-08-18
> companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
>
>
> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games
>
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to make
> melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing all cards
> in their hand. Name this game.
>
> 2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
> It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique. Players
> score points by winning tricks and also by forming combinations of
> cards into melds. Variations of the game are called cutthroat,
> check, and double-deck. Name the game.

Euchre, Penuckle

> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based on the
> sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether the player or
> banker will have a higher score, or the result will be a tie. Name
> the game.

Bacarat

> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
> that may be used in which card game?

Cribbage

> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?

10's and aces

> 6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
> the individual responsible for the distribution of bets and payouts?
> This term also forms the title of a 1998 film starring Clive Owen.

pit boss

> 7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
> and Stayman refer to?
>
> 8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
> small slam?

12

> 9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?

jack of diamonds

> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?

river

>
> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish
>
> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?
>
> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

cork

> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.

inflatable rubber tire

> 4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
> its fine glassware?

waterford

> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.

keats and yeats

Pete

unread,
May 9, 2016, 9:50:35 PM5/9/16
to
m...@vex.net (Mark Brader) wrote in news:k6OdnccbOPNHN7PKnZ2dnUU7-
QPN...@giganews.com:

> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-11-30,
> 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 Bloor St. Irregulars,
> 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 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
> Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
>
>
> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games
>
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.

Canasta

>
> 2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
> It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique.
> Players score points by winning tricks and also by forming
> combinations of cards into melds. Variations of the game are
> called cutthroat, check, and double-deck. Name the game.

Pinochle

>
> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.

Baccarat

>
> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
> that may be used in which card game?

Cribbage

>
> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?
>
> 6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
> the individual responsible for the distribution of bets
> and payouts? This term also forms the title of a 1998 film
> starring Clive Owen.

Croupier

>
> 7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
> and Stayman refer to?

Bidding conventions

>
> 8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
> small slam?

12

>
> 9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?

Jack of clubs

>
> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?

River

>
>
> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish
>
> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?

Duke; Earl

>
> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

Cork

>
> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.
>
> 4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
> its fine glassware?

Waterford

>
> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.
>
> 6. By what name is Irishman Paul Hewson better known?

Bono; Slash

>
> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
> shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.
>
> 8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
> rowdy fight or free-for-all".

Donnybrook

>
> 9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
> then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
> The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
> to?
>
> 10. He was born in Dublin in 1769. He served as British Prime
> Minister twice, from January 1828 to November 1830 and briefly
> again in 1834. He was granted a state funeral in 1852.
> In downtown Toronto two streets and a subway station are
> named in his honor. Who was he?
>

Pete Gayde

Marc Dashevsky

unread,
May 10, 2016, 9:21:30 AM5/10/16
to
In article <k6OdnccbOPNHN7PK...@giganews.com>, m...@vex.net says...
> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games
>
> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.
canasta

> 2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
> It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique.
> Players score points by winning tricks and also by forming
> combinations of cards into melds. Variations of the game are
> called cutthroat, check, and double-deck. Name the game.
>
> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.
>
> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
> that may be used in which card game?
cribbage

> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?
aces and eights

> 6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
> the individual responsible for the distribution of bets
> and payouts? This term also forms the title of a 1998 film
> starring Clive Owen.
>
> 7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
> and Stayman refer to?
bidding conventions

> 8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
> small slam?
12

> 9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?
>
> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?
river

> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish
>
> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?
>
> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?
>
> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.
inflatable tire

> 4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
> its fine glassware?
Waterford

> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.
>
> 6. By what name is Irishman Paul Hewson better known?
Bono

> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
> shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.
>
> 8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
> rowdy fight or free-for-all".
Donnybrook

> 9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
> then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
> The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
> to?
>
> 10. He was born in Dublin in 1769. He served as British Prime
> Minister twice, from January 1828 to November 1830 and briefly
> again in 1834. He was granted a state funeral in 1852.
> In downtown Toronto two streets and a subway station are
> named in his honor. Who was he?



--
Replace "usenet" with "marc" in the e-mail address.

Mark Brader

unread,
May 11, 2016, 3:38:54 AM5/11/16
to
Mark Brader:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2015-11-30,
> and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information
> see my 2015-08-18 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
> Inquisition (QFTCI*)".


> * Game 10, Round 4 - Sports - Card Games

> 1. This game's name means "basket" in Spanish. It is generally
> played in by 4 players in partnerships of 2. Players attempt to
> make melds of 7 cards of the same rank and "go out" by playing
> all cards in their hand. Name this game.

Canasta. 4 for Dan Blum, Peter, Calvin, Stephen, Erland, Björn,
Pete, and Marc.

Yes, there was a similar question on "Jeopardy!" (but with fewer
hints) on 2016-04-26.

> 2. This trick-taking card game is typically played by 2-4 players.
> It is played with a 48-card deck and is derived from bezique.
> Players score points by winning tricks and also by forming
> combinations of cards into melds. Variations of the game are
> called cutthroat, check, and double-deck. Name the game.

Pinochle. 4 for Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, Stephen, and Pete.
2 for Bruce.

> 3. This often high-stakes casino game has three variants: punto
> banco, chemin de fer, and banque. Scores are tabulated based
> on the sum of two or more cards. Bets are placed on whether
> the player or banker will have a higher score, or the result
> will be a tie. Name the game.

Baccarat. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Dan Tilque, Peter, Calvin, Stephen,
Bruce, and Pete.

> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
> that may be used in which card game?

Cribbage. 4 for Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, Peter, Calvin, Stephen, Bruce,
Pete, and Marc.

I play this myself and I only know three of the five terms.

> 5. In blackjack gambling strategy, which two pairs of cards should
> always be split?

8's, aces. 4 for Calvin, Stephen, and Marc.

> 6. What is another name for the dealer at a casino, specifically
> the individual responsible for the distribution of bets
> and payouts? This term also forms the title of a 1998 film
> starring Clive Owen.

Croupier. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Peter, Calvin, Stephen, and Pete.

> 7. In contract bridge, what do the terms Blackwood, Cappelletti
> and Stayman refer to?

(Bidding) conventions. (Not systems.) 4 for Dan Tilque, Peter,
Stephen, Erland, Pete, and Marc.

> 8. In contract bridge, how many tricks do you need to win for a
> small slam?

12. (That's 6 odd-tricks, but the question asked for tricks.)
4 for Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, Peter, Calvin, Stephen, Erland, Bruce,
Pete, and Marc.

> 9. In euchre, when spades are trump, what card is the left bower?

Jack of clubs. 4 for Peter, Calvin, Stephen, and Pete.

> 10. In Texas Hold'Em poker, what is the nickname of the last
> community card dealt?

River. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Dan Tilque, Peter, Calvin, Stephen,
Bruce, Pete, and Marc. 3 for Björn.


> * Game 10, Round 6 - Miscellaneous - All Things Irish

> 1. What is the English equivalent of the Irish title Taoiseach
> ("TEE-shock")?

Prime minister. (Not president, which is Uachtarán.) 4 for Joshua,
Dan Tilque, Peter, Stephen, and Erland. 2 for Calvin.

> 2. What is the second-largest city in the republic of Ireland?

Cork. (Belfast is bigger but is in Northern Ireland.) 4 for
Dan Blum, Joshua, Dan Tilque, Peter, Calvin, Stephen, Bruce, and Pete.
2 for Erland.

> 3. Scottish-born Belfast veterinarian John Boyd Dunlop was granted
> a patent for which invention? Be sufficiently specific.

Pneumatic tire. Both words or the equivalent were required.
4 for Dan Blum, Stephen, Björn, Bruce, and Marc.

> 4. Which Irish city in the southeast is traditionally known for
> its fine glassware?

Waterford. 4 for Dan Blum, Peter, Calvin, Stephen, Bruce, Pete,
and Marc.

The original Waterford Crystal company operated from 1783 to 1851.
A second one started in 1947 and operated until 2009. The brand
was later revived again under new ownership, but the main factory in
Waterford did not return to operation and so most of their products
are now manufactured elsewhere. (You can still take a tour of the
small "prestige factory" that they do have in Waterford, though;
I did this myself last year.)

> 5. Name two of the four Irish writers who have won the Nobel Prize
> for Literature.

Samuel Beckett, Seamus Heaney, George Bernard Shaw, William Butler
Yeats. 4 for Joshua, Peter, and Stephen. 3 for Calvin.

> 6. By what name is Irishman Paul Hewson better known?

Bono. I scored "Bono Vox" as almost correct; if Wikipedia is
correct, it's an old nickname that his stage name was derived from.
4 for Joshua, Peter, Stephen, Jason, and Marc. 3 for Calvin and Pete.

> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
> shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.

National police. Both words or the equivalent were required.
4 for Joshua and Peter.

> 8. Name the Dublin suburb whose name has become a word for "a
> rowdy fight or free-for-all".

Donnybrook. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Dan Tilque, Calvin, Stephen,
Jason, Pete, and Marc.

> 9. Erected in 1808, this Dublin "Pillar" was taller and older
> then its more famous London counterpart, which is a "Column".
> The Dublin Pillar was blown up in 1966. Who was it a monument
> to?

Admiral Horatio Nelson. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, Dan Tilque, Peter,
Calvin, and Erland. 3 for Stephen.

> 10. He was born in Dublin in 1769. He served as British Prime
> Minister twice, from January 1828 to November 1830 and briefly
> again in 1834. He was granted a state funeral in 1852.
> In downtown Toronto two streets and a subway station are
> named in his honor. Who was he?

Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington. (Either part was sufficient,
and no, I did not require "Duke of".) 4 for Dan Blum, Peter,
Calvin, and Stephen.


Scores, if there are no errors:

GAME 10 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 TOTALS
TOPICS-> His Ent Spo Mis
Stephen Perry 36 40 40 35 151
Dan Blum 28 24 28 24 104
Joshua Kreitzer 28 36 12 28 104
Pete Gayde 20 24 36 15 95
"Calvin" 24 8 32 28 92
Peter Smyth 16 8 32 32 88
Marc Dashevsky 8 32 24 16 80
Dan Tilque 32 4 24 16 76
Bruce Bowler 0 24 18 12 54
Jason Kreitzer 4 24 0 8 36
Erland Sommarskog 12 0 12 10 34
Björn Lundin 19 4 7 4 34

--
Mark Brader, Toronto | "Unfortunately, real life is usually
m...@vex.net | not a movie." --Al Kriman

Calvin

unread,
May 11, 2016, 6:03:30 AM5/11/16
to
On Wednesday, May 11, 2016 at 5:38:54 PM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:

> > 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
> > shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.
>
> National police.

I'm not protesting but the question doesn't really make sense. How can one speak of a function when no verb is required in the answer?

cheers,
calvin

Mark Brader

unread,
May 11, 2016, 11:50:40 AM5/11/16
to
Mark Brader:
>>> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána ("GUARD-ah
>>> shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.
>>
>> National police.

"Calvin":
> How can one speak of a function when no verb is required in the answer?

They function as national police.
--
Mark Brader, Toronto | "When I wanted to be a sigquote, that wasn't
m...@vex.net | the one I was thinking of." --Clive Feather

Peter Smyth

unread,
May 11, 2016, 2:56:02 PM5/11/16
to
I think the question was written from a North American perspective
where there are multiple local/state/national law enforcement agencies.

If this question was asked in the proverbial Dublin pub, I suspect most
people would just answer "The Police" and look blankly at you if you
asked them to be more specific.

Peter Smyth

Calvin

unread,
May 11, 2016, 4:17:15 PM5/11/16
to
On Thursday, May 12, 2016 at 4:56:02 AM UTC+10, Peter Smyth wrote:
> Calvin wrote:
>
> > On Wednesday, May 11, 2016 at 5:38:54 PM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:
> >
> > > > 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána
> > > > ("GUARD-ah shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.
> > >
> > > National police.
> >
> > I'm not protesting but the question doesn't really make sense. How
> > can one speak of a function when no verb is required in the answer?
> >
> I think the question was written from a North American perspective
> where there are multiple local/state/national law enforcement agencies.

Thanks Peter- that explains it.

cheers,
calvin

Gareth Owen

unread,
May 11, 2016, 4:53:04 PM5/11/16
to
m...@vex.net (Mark Brader) writes:

>> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
>> that may be used in which card game?
>
> Cribbage. 4 for Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, Peter, Calvin, Stephen, Bruce,
> Pete, and Marc.
>
> I play this myself and I only know three of the five terms.

Me too, and I only knew two (streets, pegging)

Mark Brader

unread,
May 11, 2016, 9:47:59 PM5/11/16
to
Mark Brader:
>>> 4. Streets, pone, spilikins, pegging, and muggins are terminology
>>> that may be used in which card game?
>>
>> Cribbage. 4 for Dan Blum, Dan Tilque, Peter, Calvin, Stephen, Bruce,
>> Pete, and Marc.
>>
>> I play this myself and I only know three of the five terms.

Gareth Owen:
> Me too, and I only knew two (streets, pegging)

Pone = opponent. Pegging = recording your score by moving your peg
along the cribbage board. Muggins = claiming points for yourself
when your opponent failed to score them.
--
Mark Brader, Toronto "This is, I am told, progress.
m...@vex.net But I beg leave to doubt it." --Frimbo

Mark Brader

unread,
May 11, 2016, 10:03:53 PM5/11/16
to
Mark Brader:
>>>>> 7. In Ireland, what is the function of the Garda Síochána
>>>>> ("GUARD-ah shick-AWE-nah")? Be sufficiently specific.
>>>>
>>>> National police. Both words or the equivalent were required.
>>>> 4 for Joshua and Peter.

"Calvin":
>>> I'm not protesting but the question doesn't really make sense. How
>>> can one speak of a function when no verb is required in the answer?

Peter Smyth:
>> I think the question was written from a North American perspective
>> where there are multiple local/state/national law enforcement agencies.

"Calvin":
> Thanks Peter- that explains it.

No it doesn't! Calvin's question was grammatical, and I already answered
it. Peter's response was on a completely separate matter, namely the
facts that the question was about.

And I assumed that BSI had them right, and didn't check until now.
Despite Peter's allegation of a "North American perspective", multiple
law-enforcement agencies exist in countries elsewhere such as the UK,
France, and Australia, and I assumed Ireland was another such one.

But in fact I now know that the Garda Síochána is the country's only
police force, and therefore the answer "police" should have been
accepted as sufficient.

4 for Joshua, Peter, *Calvin*, and *Stephen*.


Scores, if there are now no errors:

GAME 10 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 TOTALS
TOPICS-> His Ent Spo Mis
Stephen Perry 36 40 40 39 155
Dan Blum 28 24 28 24 104
Joshua Kreitzer 28 36 12 28 104
"Calvin" 24 8 32 32 96
Pete Gayde 20 24 36 15 95
Peter Smyth 16 8 32 32 88
Marc Dashevsky 8 32 24 16 80
Dan Tilque 32 4 24 16 76
Bruce Bowler 0 24 18 12 54
Jason Kreitzer 4 24 0 8 36
Erland Sommarskog 12 0 12 10 34
Björn Lundin 19 4 7 4 34

--
Mark Brader | "The dream of a common standard is er... enhanced
Toronto | by the diversity of a myriad of national rules..."
m...@vex.net | --Ian Walmsley

Calvin

unread,
May 12, 2016, 5:51:46 AM5/12/16
to
On Thursday, May 12, 2016 at 12:03:53 PM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:

> But in fact I now know that the Garda Síochána is the country's only
> police force, and therefore the answer "police" should have been
> accepted as sufficient.

Thank you!

cheers,
calvin

0 new messages