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The 12/11 Quiz
English Languages Activities Society
By:
Vighnesh Hegde
November 12, 2018
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 1 / 104
Rules:
30 Questions.
No negatives. Guess away.
Joke answers may fetch brownie points.
A friendly warning - titles to the questions can be grossly misleading.
Your opinion on the matter of blocking hints is unnecessary unless
asked for.
Mod is God. Argument is futile.
The highest scorer of this quiz is entitled to a cup of chai at Nutan.
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Q1.
The signalling pathway is one of the key regulators of animal
development and is present in all bilaterians. The pathway takes its name
from its polypeptide ligand, an intercellular signalling molecule called
found in fruit flies of the genus Drosophila. The signalling
molecule, in turn, takes its name from an animal, because of the
appearance of fruit fly larva lacking the gene. Mutant larvae tend to have
”solid lawns” of denticles. The appearance of the stubby and ”hairy” larvae
inspired the name.
What is the name of this gene? (Image follows)
Hint: Concentrate on the question number.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 2 / 104
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 3 / 104
Q2.
The Yreka Bakery situated in a city in California called Yreka. It was
founded in 1856 by a baker called Frederick Deng. In the 20th century, it
moved to 322 West Miner Street in the same city where it famously
continued to operate till 1965, when the chief baker Martin retired.
Popular mathematics author Martin Gardner wrote about the bakery in an
article much later, when one of his readers pointed out that Yreka Bakery
no longer existed - the premises were occupied by an art store.
What was this art store named, aptly?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 4 / 104
Q3. What’s yours?
Dynamic Tripod
Lateral Tripod
Adaptive Tripod (D’Nealian)
Inter digital brace
Digital Pronate
Lateral Quadrupod
Dynamic Quadrupod
Thumb Tuck
(Non-exhaustive) list of what?
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Q4.
In an Anime show called ”Hunter x Hunter”, a character called ”Hisoka” is
seen to be of a villainous nature, a serial killer with irresistible murderous
tendencies and a long list of victims.
Which popular villain is his character said to have
been inspired from?
(Larger image follows)
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Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 7 / 104
Q5. Nosey Parker
Afraid that he would go the way of his three elder brothers who died as
infants, X’s family raised him as a girl. His nose was pierced, and he wore a
nose-ring as a kid. This ornament gave him his name, which means
who wears a nose-ring.
X was, however, feminine by no metric. A journalist by profession, he went
on to commit a crime the entire country knows him for.
Id X.
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Q6. Let’s talk about the weather
Sweeping from Butchers Stalls, Dung, Guts, and Blood,
Drown’d Puppies, stinking Sprats, all drench’d in Mud,
Dead Cats and Turnip-Tops come tumbling down the Flood.
These lines appear in a satirical poem - ”A Description of a ”,
written by Jonathan Swift, first published in the 1710 collection of the
Tatler magazine. The poem’s meaning has been much debated, but it has
been seen as a denunciation of the London Society.
One of the many theories about the origin of the phrase X points to this
poem. It is further supported by the fact that Swift, in his 1738 work - A
Complete Collection of Polite and Ingenious Conversation, used it for the
first time in its current form - ’I know Sir John will go, though he was sure
it would X’
ID the phrase X.
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Q7. All Correct.
This ungrammatical phrase is ubiquitous in India, and pre-dates
Independence. There are numerous theories about how it came to be, but
nobody knows its exact origins.
In 2015, the Maharashtra state government banned it, deciding that this
phrase, which was somewhat useful decades ago when the highways in our
country were mostly single-lane, is now obsolete.
Which phrase?
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Q8. No u
There is a popular legend in folklore about the origin of the phrase X, which
allegedly dates back to the Battle of Agincourt (1415), where the French
army was defeated by the English.
The English archers, renowned for their use of longbows, were supposedly
mutilated when defeated – their fingers were chopped off, which made it
impossible to draw the bow. Longbows were made of the native English yew
tree, and so the act of drawing the longbow was known as ”plucking yew”.
Thus, when the victorious English waved their fingers at the defeated
French, they said, ’See, we can still pluck yew! PLUCK YEW!’ Over
time, the phrased altered in form, but is still in use, as an expression of
defiance or aggression.
This myth has been debunked, based on the lack of any evidence of
mutilation of fingers, and evidence that the phrase was in use independently
before the Battle of Agincourt.
Identify X, a phrase all of us are familiar with.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 11 / 104
Q9.
What is the blanked out title of this image?
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Q10. Recognise this?
The etymology of X is obscure.
The use of X in a programming context is generally credited to the Tech
Model Railroad Club (TMRC) of MIT from circa 1960. In the complex
model system, there were emergency switches located at numerous places
around the room that could be thrown if something undesirable was about
to occur, such as a train going full-bore at an obstruction. Another feature
of the system was a digital clock on the dispatch board. When someone hit
a scram switch, the clock stopped and the display was replaced with the
word X.
X’s use in connection with Y is generally traced to the World War II military
slang FUBAR (Fucked Up Beyond All Recognition), later bowdlerised to the
conjunction XY.
What is XY—something everyone who has studied computer science has
encountered—and how is it used in the programming context?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 13 / 104
Q11. You and I
Uys and Buys in Afrikaans
Tik and Tak in Arabic
Brea and Bray in Cornish
Kadlec and Tkadlec in Czech
Citserono and Tsicerono in Esperanto
Schultze and Schulze in German
Santu and Bantu in Hindi
Clodius and Claudius in Latin
Tajniak and Jawniak in Polish
Hern´andez and Fern´andez in Spanish
Skapti and Skafti in Icelandic
Nisbet and Nesbit in Scots
Roobroeck and Roobrouck in West Flemish (Kortrijk dialect)
Aspeslagh and Haspeslagh in West Flemish (Ostend dialect)
What is the above a non-exhaustive list of?
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Q12.
Pancho Gonzales (1928-1995) was an American professional tennis player,
regarded as one of the greats in the pre-open era. He holds the record for
being ranked world no.1 for eight years.
In 1949, Gonzales was seeded second in Wimbledon, but lost in the first
round. This poor performance was criticised heavily in the press, and a
British journalist called him a ”cheese champion”.
This, put together with his name, earned him the nickname ,
which stuck among his colleagues throughout his professional career.
What was Gonzales’ nickname?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 15 / 104
Q13.
suggests something amenable, affable, amicable, where is
harder, harsher, more hostile. , I think, may be expected to seep
more gently and co-operatively out of the bottle than the possibly balky and
truculent . sounds to me a more aggressive man, and writer,
than . An might be expected to proffer a limp regal
handshake, where sounds more apt for trouble in nightclubs and
service in Iraq.
The paragraph above appears in an article by David McKie in The Guardian.
What is the article about? Put funda.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 16 / 104
Q14.
The X effect is a name given to an analogy that correlates the fame of a
sports tournament with the economic success of the business establishments
in the region. The point of the analogy is that an institution can be very
successful despite the lack of strong native competition, due to the
activities that center around the sport.
For example, Sumo in Japan is a big sport, and a lot of revenue is procured
through activities directly or indirectly related to Sumo. However, there has
been only one Japanese-born Yokozuna (Grand Champion) in the last
twenty years. This is an example of X effect.
ID X.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 17 / 104
Q15.
When some of his officers and the troops under them were angry about not
being paid in 1783, George Washington did something. He was reading
them a letter from Congress and said:
”Gentlemen, you will permit me to , for I have not only
grown gray but almost in the service of my country.”
In those days, X was considered not to be for real men. So when he
deliberately asked their permission to do this action, the men in the room
gasped in shock. Here was this paragon of military leaders humbled before
their very eyes. Washington turned his weakness into a ”Look at what I’ve
sacrificed for my country” moment.
What is X?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 18 / 104
Q16.
X Y is a brand of products we all are likely to have used. (X is a name
and Y is a number)
This product was launched about 6 decades ago in India, and became
popular. Wary of counterfeit products flooding the market, the founders of
this brand decided to attach the number Y along with the name, and that
has stuck since. Y was chosen to be the registration number of this
company with the Indian Government.
ID X Y
Half points if you name only
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Q17.
Auguste Piccaard
was a Swiss physicist, inventor and
explorer, known for his helium balloon flights where he
studied earth’s upper atmosphere and cosmic rays. He
is also known for the invention of the first bathyscaphe
which was used to explore the depths of the oceans.
Which famous fictional character did he inspire?
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Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 21 / 104
Q18.
Cyrano de Bergerac, a play written in 1897, is about an eponymous
character who is a brash, strong-willed man of many talents but has an
extraordinarily large nose that makes him look ugly.
The plot revolves around how this doubt about his likeability prevents
him from expressing his love for his distant cousin called Roxane. Roxane
likes another handsome young man called Christian who is not very smart
with words. However, Cyrano uses his wit to feed words into Christian’s
mouth to seduce Roxane and wins a kiss for Christian.
A 2018 movie is based on this play. ID the movie.
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Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 23 / 104
Q19.
X was an American businessman. He is well known for an eponymous
design for this ubiquitous device. He succeeded in bringing the design to
industrial manufacturing and promoting its rapid adoption as an industry
standard. By 1940, 85% of U.S. manufacturers of this commodity had a
license for his design.
The type X is popular because of its self-centering design, which makes it
ideal for automation.
What/who is X?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 24 / 104
Q20.
Ustad Allauddin Khan, a musician of the Maihar court who was moved by a
tragedy in the early 20th century that orphaned many children, taught them
how to play music and formed an orchestral group later known as the
Maihar Band.
This band included a unique instrument of Allauddin Khan’s invention, one
which is called ”Nal Tarang”. It was made of cylindrical tubes set in a
resonant xylophone-like frame. A version of this instrument exists closer
home, in Pilani (image follows).
What did Allauddin Khan use to make his nal tarang? (Image follows)
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Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 26 / 104
Q21. BoB tribute
Advertisement for which brand?
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Q22.
Dan Bern created this song called & in 2010. What does it
commemorate?
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Q23. from 0 to 60 mph in 5 seconds.
Actor X, in preparation for movie Y, dropped about 28 kilograms to suit
the role. His rather famous diet consisted of a can of tuna, an apple and a
black coffee everyday, along with a lot of water. The movie Y was a great
success.
However, he could not rejoice on that success too long. He had to gain
weight within six months again, to suit his role in movie Z, which he
reportedly did by gorging on pizza and ice cream.
Give me Y and Z.
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Q24.
Ruth Graves Wakefield, an American chef, invented this recipe during the
period when she owned the Toll House Inn, in Whitman, Massachusetts. In
this era, the Toll House Inn was a popular restaurant that featured home
cooking. It is often incorrectly reported that she accidentally developed the
recipe, but in fact, she has stated that she deliberately invented it. The
guests loved this novelty, and people began to come to the inn just to eat it.
Ruth Wakefield had used a bar of Nestle chocolate in her recipe. So Ruth
went to Nestle with it. Nestle liked the idea, and they got permission from
Ruth to put her recipe on the back of their chocolate bars. In return, she
got all the chocolate she wanted to keep on cooking her famous food item.
What is this the recipe for?
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Q25.
Pedestrianism was a 19th-century form of competitive walking, often
professional and funded by wagering, from which the modern sport of
racewalking developed.
It was first codified in the last half of the 19th century, in order to make it
distinct from other similar track and field sports, like long distance cross
country fell running, and recreational hiking or hillwalking. Competitors
were expected to extend their legs straight at least once in their stride and
obey what was called the ”fair and ” rule.
Fill in the blanks for half a point, and explain the rule for the other half.
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Q26.
In 1870, a German chemist named Erich von Wolf was researching the
nutritional benefits of . In his notes, he accidentally printed the
decimal point in the wrong spot. Wolf accidentally increased its iron level
to 10 times the actual amount - 3.5 milligrams of iron suddenly became
35 milligrams, an extremely high amount of iron.
In 1930, re-investigations on the matter of the iron content in this particular
food item pointed out the error. In 1981, the British Medical Journal
published an article to try and debunk the the myth but it continues to be
widespread till date, thanks to its propagation in the media.
What are we talking about?
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Q27.
Two poachers were attacked and killed in 2006 by members of the
Sentinelese tribe in Andaman. An Indian Coast Guard helicopter sent to
retrieve the bodies was repelled by a volley of arrows. However, the Indian
government did not try to prosecute the murders, because it considers the
Sentinelese a sovereign people, with the right to kill interlopers with
impunity. Why is this unique right awarded to the Sentinelese people?
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Q28.
This convention was started by Queensland Government Employee
Clement Wragge in 1887, but it stopped with his retirement in 1907. It did
not become popular until after the Second World War, when it was revived
in the Western Pacific region.
Multiple schemes exist around the world in modern times, but each of them
maintains lists of names that circulate every once in four-six years. Each
list typically contains 19-24 names, and upon exhaustion within a year,
either an auxiliary list is used or the Greek alphabet is made use of.
What are we talking about?
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Q29.
This plant with an edible fruit was originally domesticated from the wild
nightshade species thorn or bitter apple, Solanum incanum, somewhere in
South Asia. The ancient Dravidian word for this was adapted into Sanskrit
as v¯atigagama. From there, it migrated to the west along with the Persian
and Arabian traders that also took the plant there.
The Catalans and subsequently the French took this word from there and
thence it went to Britain as the word X.
The Portuguese also took it up from the Arabians and modified it suitably.
This word was later taken into Indian English as Y, and is more popular in
India, South Africa, Malaysia, etc.
Give me X and Y, both names of the same plant.
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Q30.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, upon seeing this photograph, realized the
image would make an excellent symbol for the upcoming Seventh War Loan
Drive, and ordered the participants identified and sent to Washington, D.C.
Using a photographic enlargement, one of the participants identified four
others in the photograph besides himself, but refused to identify the sixth
because he had warned him not to. He revealed the name of the sixth
person only after being informed that he was being ordered by the President
to reveal the information and that refusing would be a serious crime.
President Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945. Three of the six people in the
photograph met President Truman on April 20 at the White House before
going on the bond tour which began on May 11 in New York City. The
bond drive was a success, raising $26.3 billion, twice the tour’s goal.
ID this iconic photograph.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 36 / 104
Cycle Back
Answers
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 37 / 104
ANSWERS
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 38 / 104
Q1.
The signalling pathway is one of the key regulators of animal
development and is present in all bilaterians. The pathway takes its name
from its polypeptide ligand, an intercellular signalling molecule called
found in fruit flies of the genus Drosophila. The signalling
molecule, in turn, takes its name from an animal, because of the
appearance of fruit fly larva lacking the gene. Mutant larvae tend to have
”solid lawns” of denticles. The appearance of the stubby and ”hairy” larvae
inspired the name.
What is the name of this gene? (Image follows)
Hint: Concentrate on the question number.
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Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 40 / 104
A1
Hegdehog
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 41 / 104
Q2.
The Yreka Bakery situated in a city in California called Yreka. It was
founded in 1856 by a baker called Frederick Deng. In the 20th century, it
moved to 322 West Miner Street in the same city where it famously
continued to operate till 1965, when the chief baker Martin retired.
Popular mathematics author Martin Gardner wrote about the bakery in an
article much later, when one of his readers pointed out that Yreka Bakery
no longer existed - the premises were occupied by an art store.
What was this art store named, aptly?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 42 / 104
A2
Yrella Gallery. Both these names are palindromes.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 43 / 104
Q3. What’s yours?
1 Dynamic Tripod
2 Lateral Tripod
3 Adaptive Tripod (D’Nealian)
4 Inter digital brace
5 Digital Pronate
6 Lateral Quadrupod
7 Dynamic Quadrupod
8 Thumb Tuck
(Non-exhaustive) list of what?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 44 / 104
A3
Handwriting grasps/Pencil grips.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 45 / 104
Q4.
In an Anime show called ”Hunter x Hunter”, a character called ”Hisoka” is
seen to be of a villainous nature, a serial killer with irresistible murderous
tendencies and a long list of victims.
Which popular villain is his character said to have
been inspired from?
(Larger image follows)
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Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 47 / 104
A4.
Joker
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 48 / 104
Q5. Nosey Parker
Afraid that he would go the way of his three elder brothers who died as
infants, X’s family raised him as a girl. His nose was pierced, and he wore a
nose-ring as a kid. This ornament gave him his name, which means
who wears a nose-ring.
X was, however, feminine by no metric. A journalist by profession, he went
on to commit a crime the entire country knows him for.
Id X.
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A5
Nathuram Godse
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 50 / 104
Q6. Let’s talk about the weather
Sweeping from Butchers Stalls, Dung, Guts, and Blood,
Drown’d Puppies, stinking Sprats, all drench’d in Mud,
Dead Cats and Turnip-Tops come tumbling down the Flood.
These lines appear in a satirical poem - ”A Description of a ”,
written by Jonathan Swift, first published in the 1710 collection of the
Tatler magazine. The poem’s meaning has been much debated, but it has
been seen as a denunciation of the London Society.
One of the many theories about the origin of the phrase X points to this
poem. It is further supported by the fact that Swift, in his 1738 work - A
Complete Collection of Polite and Ingenious Conversation, used it for the
first time in its current form - ’I know Sir John will go, though he was sure
it would X’
ID the phrase X.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 51 / 104
A6
Rain cats and dogs.
The poem was called ”A Description of a City Shower.”
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 52 / 104
Q7. All Correct.
This ungrammatical phrase is ubiquitous in India, and pre-dates
Independence. There are numerous theories about how it came to be, but
nobody knows its exact origins.
In 2015, the Maharashtra state government banned it, deciding that this
phrase, which was somewhat useful decades ago when the highways in our
country were mostly single-lane, is now obsolete.
Which phrase?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 53 / 104
A7
Horn OK Please
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 54 / 104
Q8. Too easy.
There is a popular legend in folklore about the origin of the phrase X, which
allegedly dates back to the Battle of Agincourt (1415), where the French
army was defeated by the English.
The English archers, renowned for their use of longbows, were supposedly
mutilated when defeated – their fingers were chopped off, which made it
impossible to draw the bow. Longbows were made of the native English yew
tree, and so the act of drawing the longbow was known as ”plucking yew”.
Thus, when the victorious English waved their fingers at the defeated
French, they said, ’See, we can still pluck yew! PLUCK YEW!’ Over
time, the phrased altered in form, but is still in use, as an expression of
defiance or aggression.
This myth has been debunked, based on the lack of any evidence of
mutilation of fingers, and evidence that the phrase was in use independently
before the Battle of Agincourt.
Identify X, a phrase all of us are familiar with.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 55 / 104
A8
Fuck You
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 56 / 104
Q9.
What is the blanked out title of this image?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 57 / 104
A9
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 58 / 104
Q10. Recognise this?
The etymology of X is obscure.
The use of X in a programming context is generally credited to the Tech
Model Railroad Club (TMRC) of MIT from circa 1960. In the complex
model system, there were emergency switches located at numerous places
around the room that could be thrown if something undesirable was about
to occur, such as a train going full-bore at an obstruction. Another feature
of the system was a digital clock on the dispatch board. When someone hit
a scram switch, the clock stopped and the display was replaced with the
word X.
X’s use in connection with Y is generally traced to the World War II military
slang FUBAR (Fucked Up Beyond All Recognition), later bowdlerised to the
conjunction XY.
What is XY—something everyone who has studied computer science has
encountered—and how is it used in the programming context?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 59 / 104
A10
foo bar - a placeholder name in computer programming
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 60 / 104
Q11. You and I
Uys and Buys in Afrikaans
Tik and Tak in Arabic
Brea and Bray in Cornish
Kadlec and Tkadlec in Czech
Citserono and Tsicerono in Esperanto
Schultze and Schulze in German
Santu and Bantu in Hindi
Clodius and Claudius in Latin
Tajniak and Jawniak in Polish
Hern´andez and Fern´andez in Spanish
Skapti and Skafti in Icelandic
Nisbet and Nesbit in Scots
Roobroeck and Roobrouck in West Flemish (Kortrijk dialect)
Aspeslagh and Haspeslagh in West Flemish (Ostend dialect)
What is the above a non-exhaustive list of?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 61 / 104
A11
Names of Thomson and Thompson in translated versions of Tintin
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 62 / 104
Q12.
Pancho Gonzales (1928-1995) was an American professional tennis player,
regarded as one of the greats in the pre-open era. He holds the record for
being ranked world no.1 for eight years.
In 1949, Gonzales was seeded second in Wimbledon, but lost in the first
round. This poor performance was criticised heavily in the press, and a
British journalist called him a ”cheese champion”.
This, put together with his name, earned him the nickname ,
which stuck among his colleagues throughout his professional career.
What was Gonzales’ nickname?
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A12
Gorgonzales
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 64 / 104
Q13.
suggests something amenable, affable, amicable, where is
harder, harsher, more hostile. , I think, may be expected to seep
more gently and co-operatively out of the bottle than the possibly balky and
truculent . sounds to me a more aggressive man, and writer,
than . An might be expected to proffer a limp regal
handshake, where sounds more apt for trouble in nightclubs and
service in Iraq.
The paragraph above appears in an article by David McKie in The Guardian.
What is the article about? Put funda.
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A13
Pronunciation of the letter H
Aitch suggests something amenable, affable, amicable, where haitch is
harder, harsher, more hostile. Aitch P Sauce, I think, may be expected to
seep more gently and co-operatively out of the bottle than the possibly
balky and truculent Haitch P Sauce. Haitch G Wells sounds to me a more
aggressive man, and writer, than Aitch G Wells. An Aitch R Aitch might be
expected to proffer a limp regal handshake, where Haitch R Haitch sounds
more apt for trouble in nightclubs and service in Iraq.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 66 / 104
Q14.
The X effect is a name given to an analogy that correlates the fame of a
sports tournament with the economic success of the business establishments
in the region. The point of the analogy is that an institution can be very
successful despite the lack of strong native competition, due to the
activities that center around the sport.
For example, Sumo in Japan is a big sport, and a lot of revenue is procured
through activities directly or indirectly related to Sumo. However, there has
been only one Japanese-born Yokozuna (Grand Champion) in the last
twenty years. This is an example of X effect.
ID X.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 67 / 104
A14
The Wimbledon effect
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 68 / 104
Q15.
When some of his officers and the troops under them were angry about not
being paid in 1783, George Washington did something. He was reading
them a letter from Congress and said:
”Gentlemen, you will permit me to , for I have not only
grown gray but almost in the service of my country.”
In those days, X was considered not to be for real men. So when he
deliberately asked their permission to do this action, the men in the room
gasped in shock. Here was this paragon of military leaders humbled before
their very eyes. Washington turned his weakness into a ”Look at what I’ve
sacrificed for my country” moment.
What is X?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 69 / 104
A15
Spectacles. They were supposed to be for intellectuals who never saw a
day of battle in their life, not for real men.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 70 / 104
Q16.
X Y is a brand of products we all are likely to have used. (X is a name
and Y is a number)
This product was launched about 6 decades ago in India, and became
popular. Wary of counterfeit products flooding the market, the founders of
this brand decided to attach the number Y along with the name, and that
has stuck since. Y was chosen to be the registration number of this
company with the Indian Government.
ID X Y
Half points if you name only X
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 71 / 104
A16
Nataraj 621
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 72 / 104
Q17.
Auguste Piccaard
was a Swiss physicist, inventor and
explorer, known for his helium balloon flights where he
studied earth’s upper atmosphere and cosmic rays. He
is also known for the invention of the first bathyscaphe
which was used to explore the depths of the oceans.
Which famous fictional character did he inspire?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 73 / 104
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 74 / 104
A17
Professor Cuthbert Calculus in Tintin
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 75 / 104
Q18.
Cyrano de Bergerac, a play written in 1897, is about an eponymous
character who is a brash, strong-willed man of many talents but has an
extraordinarily large nose that makes him look ugly.
The plot revolves around how this doubt about his likeability prevents
him from expressing his love for his distant cousin called Roxane. Roxane
likes another handsome young man called Christian who is not very smart
with words. However, Cyrano uses his wit to feed words into Christian’s
mouth to seduce Roxane and wins a kiss for Christian.
A 2018 movie is based on this play. ID the movie.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 76 / 104
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 77 / 104
A18
Sierra Burgess Is a Loser
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 78 / 104
Q19.
X was an American businessman. He is well known for an eponymous
design for this ubiquitous device. He succeeded in bringing the design to
industrial manufacturing and promoting its rapid adoption as an industry
standard. By 1940, 85% of U.S. manufacturers of this commodity had a
license for his design.
The type X is popular because of its self-centering design, which makes it
ideal for automation.
What/who is X?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 79 / 104
A19
Henry F. Phillips, inventor of the Phillips-head screws.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 80 / 104
Q20.
Ustad Allauddin Khan, a musician of the Maihar court who was moved by a
tragedy in the early 20th century that orphaned many children, taught them
how to play music and formed an orchestral group later known as the
Maihar Band.
This band included a unique instrument of Allauddin Khan’s invention, one
which is called ”Nal Tarang”. It was made of cylindrical tubes set in a
resonant xylophone-like frame. A version of this instrument exists closer
home, in Pilani (image follows).
What did Allauddin Khan use to make his nal tarang? (Image follows)
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 81 / 104
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 82 / 104
A20
Gun barrels from abandoned rifles.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 83 / 104
Q21. BoB tribute
Advertisement for which brand?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 84 / 104
A21
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 85 / 104
Q22.
Dan Bern created this song called & in 2010. What does it
commemorate?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 86 / 104
A22
The longest tennis match ever. In 2010 Wimbledon, John Isner and
Nicholas Mahut played for 11 hours, 5 minutes over three days.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 87 / 104
Q23. from 0 to 60 mph in 5 seconds.
Actor X, in preparation for movie Y, dropped about 28 kilograms to suit
the role. His rather famous diet consisted of a can of tuna, an apple and a
black coffee everyday, along with a lot of water. The movie Y was a great
success.
However, he could not rejoice on that success too long. He had to gain
weight within six months again, to suit his role in movie Z, which he
reportedly did by gorging on pizza and ice cream.
Give me Y and Z.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 88 / 104
A23
X - Christian Bale. Y - The Machinist, Z - Batman Begins
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 89 / 104
Q24.
Ruth Graves Wakefield, an American chef, invented this recipe during the
period when she owned the Toll House Inn, in Whitman, Massachusetts. In
this era, the Toll House Inn was a popular restaurant that featured home
cooking. It is often incorrectly reported that she accidentally developed the
recipe, but in fact, she has stated that she deliberately invented it. The
guests loved this novelty, and people began to come to the inn just to eat it.
Ruth Wakefield had used a bar of Nestle chocolate in her recipe. So Ruth
went to Nestle with it. Nestle liked the idea, and they got permission from
Ruth to put her recipe on the back of their chocolate bars. In return, she
got all the chocolate she wanted to keep on cooking her famous food item.
What is this the recipe for?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 90 / 104
A24
Choco-chip cookies
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 91 / 104
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 92 / 104
Q25.
Pedestrianism was a 19th-century form of competitive walking, often
professional and funded by wagering, from which the modern sport of
racewalking developed.
It was first codified in the last half of the 19th century, in order to make it
distinct from other similar track and field sports, like long distance cross
country fell running, and recreational hiking or hillwalking. Competitors
were expected to extend their legs straight at least once in their stride and
obey what was called the ”fair and ” rule.
Fill in the blanks for half a point, and explain the rule for the other half.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 93 / 104
A25
Fair heel and toe rule. The rule said that the toe of one foot could not
leave the ground before the heel of the next foot touched down.
(In other words, one foot had to be in contact with the ground at all times.)
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 94 / 104
Q26.
In 1870, a German chemist named Erich von Wolf was researching the
nutritional benefits of . In his notes, he accidentally printed the
decimal point in the wrong spot. Wolf accidentally increased its iron level
to 10 times the actual amount - 3.5 milligrams of iron suddenly became
35 milligrams, an extremely high amount of iron.
In 1930, re-investigations on the matter of the iron content in this particular
food item pointed out the error. In 1981, the British Medical Journal
published an article to try and debunk the the myth but it continues to be
widespread till date, thanks to its propagation in the media.
What are we talking about?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 95 / 104
A26
Spinach
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 96 / 104
Q27.
Two poachers were attacked and killed in 2006 by members of the
Sentinelese tribe in Andaman. An Indian Coast Guard helicopter sent to
retrieve the bodies was repelled by a volley of arrows. However, the Indian
government did not try to prosecute the murders, because it considers the
Sentinelese a sovereign people, with the right to kill interlopers with
impunity. Why is this unique right awarded to the Sentinelese people?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 97 / 104
A27
This neo-palaeolithic tribe, that lives on the North-Sentinel island in the
Andaman archipelago, is the last group of the so-called uncontacted
people left on Earth. Absolutely no contact exists between these people
and the outside world. Even the other Andaman tribes know very little
about them. The Sentinelese do not allow outsiders onto the island and are
very hostile towards them, and the Government does not interfere with
them in the interests of conservation.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 98 / 104
Q28.
This convention was started by Queensland Government Employee
Clement Wragge in 1887, but it stopped with his retirement in 1907. It did
not become popular until after the Second World War, when it was revived
in the Western Pacific region.
Multiple schemes exist around the world in modern times, but each of them
maintains lists of names that circulate every once in four-six years. Each
list typically contains 19-24 names, and upon exhaustion within a year,
either an auxiliary list is used or the Greek alphabet is made use of.
What are we talking about?
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 99 / 104
A28
Cyclone naming conventions
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 100 / 104
Q29.
This plant with an edible fruit was originally domesticated from the wild
nightshade species thorn or bitter apple, Solanum incanum, somewhere in
South Asia. The ancient Dravidian word for this was adapted into Sanskrit
as v¯atigagama. From there, it migrated to the west along with the Persian
and Arabian traders that also took the plant there.
The Catalans and subsequently the French took this word from there and
thence it went to Britain as the word X.
The Portuguese also took it up from the Arabians and modified it suitably.
This word was later taken into Indian English as Y, and is more popular in
India, South Africa, Malaysia, etc.
Give me X and Y, both names of the same plant.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 101 / 104
A29
X-Aubergine, Y-Brinjal
Sanskrit (v¯atigagama) → Persian (bˆadengˆan) → Arabic (al-b¯adinj¯an) →
Catalan (alberg´ınia) → French(aubergine) → English (aubergine) (X)
Sanskrit (v¯atigagama) → Persian (bˆadengˆan) → Arabic (al-b¯adinj¯an) →
Portuguese (brinjela) → English (brinjal) (Y)
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 102 / 104
Q30.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, upon seeing this photograph, realized the
image would make an excellent symbol for the upcoming Seventh War Loan
Drive, and ordered the participants identified and sent to Washington, D.C.
Using a photographic enlargement, one of the participants identified four
others in the photograph besides himself, but refused to identify the sixth
because he had warned him not to. He revealed the name of the sixth
person only after being informed that he was being ordered by the President
to reveal the information and that refusing would be a serious crime.
President Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945. Three of the six people in the
photograph met President Truman on April 20 at the White House before
going on the bond tour which began on May 11 in New York City. The
bond drive was a success, raising $26.3 billion, twice the tour’s goal.
ID this iconic photograph.
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 103 / 104
A30
Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima
Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 104 / 104

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The 12/11 Quiz

  • 1. The 12/11 Quiz English Languages Activities Society By: Vighnesh Hegde November 12, 2018 Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 1 / 104
  • 2. Rules: 30 Questions. No negatives. Guess away. Joke answers may fetch brownie points. A friendly warning - titles to the questions can be grossly misleading. Your opinion on the matter of blocking hints is unnecessary unless asked for. Mod is God. Argument is futile. The highest scorer of this quiz is entitled to a cup of chai at Nutan. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 1 / 104
  • 3. Q1. The signalling pathway is one of the key regulators of animal development and is present in all bilaterians. The pathway takes its name from its polypeptide ligand, an intercellular signalling molecule called found in fruit flies of the genus Drosophila. The signalling molecule, in turn, takes its name from an animal, because of the appearance of fruit fly larva lacking the gene. Mutant larvae tend to have ”solid lawns” of denticles. The appearance of the stubby and ”hairy” larvae inspired the name. What is the name of this gene? (Image follows) Hint: Concentrate on the question number. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 2 / 104
  • 4. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 3 / 104
  • 5. Q2. The Yreka Bakery situated in a city in California called Yreka. It was founded in 1856 by a baker called Frederick Deng. In the 20th century, it moved to 322 West Miner Street in the same city where it famously continued to operate till 1965, when the chief baker Martin retired. Popular mathematics author Martin Gardner wrote about the bakery in an article much later, when one of his readers pointed out that Yreka Bakery no longer existed - the premises were occupied by an art store. What was this art store named, aptly? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 4 / 104
  • 6. Q3. What’s yours? Dynamic Tripod Lateral Tripod Adaptive Tripod (D’Nealian) Inter digital brace Digital Pronate Lateral Quadrupod Dynamic Quadrupod Thumb Tuck (Non-exhaustive) list of what? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 5 / 104
  • 7. Q4. In an Anime show called ”Hunter x Hunter”, a character called ”Hisoka” is seen to be of a villainous nature, a serial killer with irresistible murderous tendencies and a long list of victims. Which popular villain is his character said to have been inspired from? (Larger image follows) Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 6 / 104
  • 8. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 7 / 104
  • 9. Q5. Nosey Parker Afraid that he would go the way of his three elder brothers who died as infants, X’s family raised him as a girl. His nose was pierced, and he wore a nose-ring as a kid. This ornament gave him his name, which means who wears a nose-ring. X was, however, feminine by no metric. A journalist by profession, he went on to commit a crime the entire country knows him for. Id X. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 8 / 104
  • 10. Q6. Let’s talk about the weather Sweeping from Butchers Stalls, Dung, Guts, and Blood, Drown’d Puppies, stinking Sprats, all drench’d in Mud, Dead Cats and Turnip-Tops come tumbling down the Flood. These lines appear in a satirical poem - ”A Description of a ”, written by Jonathan Swift, first published in the 1710 collection of the Tatler magazine. The poem’s meaning has been much debated, but it has been seen as a denunciation of the London Society. One of the many theories about the origin of the phrase X points to this poem. It is further supported by the fact that Swift, in his 1738 work - A Complete Collection of Polite and Ingenious Conversation, used it for the first time in its current form - ’I know Sir John will go, though he was sure it would X’ ID the phrase X. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 9 / 104
  • 11. Q7. All Correct. This ungrammatical phrase is ubiquitous in India, and pre-dates Independence. There are numerous theories about how it came to be, but nobody knows its exact origins. In 2015, the Maharashtra state government banned it, deciding that this phrase, which was somewhat useful decades ago when the highways in our country were mostly single-lane, is now obsolete. Which phrase? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 10 / 104
  • 12. Q8. No u There is a popular legend in folklore about the origin of the phrase X, which allegedly dates back to the Battle of Agincourt (1415), where the French army was defeated by the English. The English archers, renowned for their use of longbows, were supposedly mutilated when defeated – their fingers were chopped off, which made it impossible to draw the bow. Longbows were made of the native English yew tree, and so the act of drawing the longbow was known as ”plucking yew”. Thus, when the victorious English waved their fingers at the defeated French, they said, ’See, we can still pluck yew! PLUCK YEW!’ Over time, the phrased altered in form, but is still in use, as an expression of defiance or aggression. This myth has been debunked, based on the lack of any evidence of mutilation of fingers, and evidence that the phrase was in use independently before the Battle of Agincourt. Identify X, a phrase all of us are familiar with. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 11 / 104
  • 13. Q9. What is the blanked out title of this image? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 12 / 104
  • 14. Q10. Recognise this? The etymology of X is obscure. The use of X in a programming context is generally credited to the Tech Model Railroad Club (TMRC) of MIT from circa 1960. In the complex model system, there were emergency switches located at numerous places around the room that could be thrown if something undesirable was about to occur, such as a train going full-bore at an obstruction. Another feature of the system was a digital clock on the dispatch board. When someone hit a scram switch, the clock stopped and the display was replaced with the word X. X’s use in connection with Y is generally traced to the World War II military slang FUBAR (Fucked Up Beyond All Recognition), later bowdlerised to the conjunction XY. What is XY—something everyone who has studied computer science has encountered—and how is it used in the programming context? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 13 / 104
  • 15. Q11. You and I Uys and Buys in Afrikaans Tik and Tak in Arabic Brea and Bray in Cornish Kadlec and Tkadlec in Czech Citserono and Tsicerono in Esperanto Schultze and Schulze in German Santu and Bantu in Hindi Clodius and Claudius in Latin Tajniak and Jawniak in Polish Hern´andez and Fern´andez in Spanish Skapti and Skafti in Icelandic Nisbet and Nesbit in Scots Roobroeck and Roobrouck in West Flemish (Kortrijk dialect) Aspeslagh and Haspeslagh in West Flemish (Ostend dialect) What is the above a non-exhaustive list of? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 14 / 104
  • 16. Q12. Pancho Gonzales (1928-1995) was an American professional tennis player, regarded as one of the greats in the pre-open era. He holds the record for being ranked world no.1 for eight years. In 1949, Gonzales was seeded second in Wimbledon, but lost in the first round. This poor performance was criticised heavily in the press, and a British journalist called him a ”cheese champion”. This, put together with his name, earned him the nickname , which stuck among his colleagues throughout his professional career. What was Gonzales’ nickname? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 15 / 104
  • 17. Q13. suggests something amenable, affable, amicable, where is harder, harsher, more hostile. , I think, may be expected to seep more gently and co-operatively out of the bottle than the possibly balky and truculent . sounds to me a more aggressive man, and writer, than . An might be expected to proffer a limp regal handshake, where sounds more apt for trouble in nightclubs and service in Iraq. The paragraph above appears in an article by David McKie in The Guardian. What is the article about? Put funda. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 16 / 104
  • 18. Q14. The X effect is a name given to an analogy that correlates the fame of a sports tournament with the economic success of the business establishments in the region. The point of the analogy is that an institution can be very successful despite the lack of strong native competition, due to the activities that center around the sport. For example, Sumo in Japan is a big sport, and a lot of revenue is procured through activities directly or indirectly related to Sumo. However, there has been only one Japanese-born Yokozuna (Grand Champion) in the last twenty years. This is an example of X effect. ID X. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 17 / 104
  • 19. Q15. When some of his officers and the troops under them were angry about not being paid in 1783, George Washington did something. He was reading them a letter from Congress and said: ”Gentlemen, you will permit me to , for I have not only grown gray but almost in the service of my country.” In those days, X was considered not to be for real men. So when he deliberately asked their permission to do this action, the men in the room gasped in shock. Here was this paragon of military leaders humbled before their very eyes. Washington turned his weakness into a ”Look at what I’ve sacrificed for my country” moment. What is X? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 18 / 104
  • 20. Q16. X Y is a brand of products we all are likely to have used. (X is a name and Y is a number) This product was launched about 6 decades ago in India, and became popular. Wary of counterfeit products flooding the market, the founders of this brand decided to attach the number Y along with the name, and that has stuck since. Y was chosen to be the registration number of this company with the Indian Government. ID X Y Half points if you name only Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 19 / 104
  • 21. Q17. Auguste Piccaard was a Swiss physicist, inventor and explorer, known for his helium balloon flights where he studied earth’s upper atmosphere and cosmic rays. He is also known for the invention of the first bathyscaphe which was used to explore the depths of the oceans. Which famous fictional character did he inspire? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 20 / 104
  • 22. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 21 / 104
  • 23. Q18. Cyrano de Bergerac, a play written in 1897, is about an eponymous character who is a brash, strong-willed man of many talents but has an extraordinarily large nose that makes him look ugly. The plot revolves around how this doubt about his likeability prevents him from expressing his love for his distant cousin called Roxane. Roxane likes another handsome young man called Christian who is not very smart with words. However, Cyrano uses his wit to feed words into Christian’s mouth to seduce Roxane and wins a kiss for Christian. A 2018 movie is based on this play. ID the movie. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 22 / 104
  • 24. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 23 / 104
  • 25. Q19. X was an American businessman. He is well known for an eponymous design for this ubiquitous device. He succeeded in bringing the design to industrial manufacturing and promoting its rapid adoption as an industry standard. By 1940, 85% of U.S. manufacturers of this commodity had a license for his design. The type X is popular because of its self-centering design, which makes it ideal for automation. What/who is X? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 24 / 104
  • 26. Q20. Ustad Allauddin Khan, a musician of the Maihar court who was moved by a tragedy in the early 20th century that orphaned many children, taught them how to play music and formed an orchestral group later known as the Maihar Band. This band included a unique instrument of Allauddin Khan’s invention, one which is called ”Nal Tarang”. It was made of cylindrical tubes set in a resonant xylophone-like frame. A version of this instrument exists closer home, in Pilani (image follows). What did Allauddin Khan use to make his nal tarang? (Image follows) Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 25 / 104
  • 27. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 26 / 104
  • 28. Q21. BoB tribute Advertisement for which brand? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 27 / 104
  • 29. Q22. Dan Bern created this song called & in 2010. What does it commemorate? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 28 / 104
  • 30. Q23. from 0 to 60 mph in 5 seconds. Actor X, in preparation for movie Y, dropped about 28 kilograms to suit the role. His rather famous diet consisted of a can of tuna, an apple and a black coffee everyday, along with a lot of water. The movie Y was a great success. However, he could not rejoice on that success too long. He had to gain weight within six months again, to suit his role in movie Z, which he reportedly did by gorging on pizza and ice cream. Give me Y and Z. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 29 / 104
  • 31. Q24. Ruth Graves Wakefield, an American chef, invented this recipe during the period when she owned the Toll House Inn, in Whitman, Massachusetts. In this era, the Toll House Inn was a popular restaurant that featured home cooking. It is often incorrectly reported that she accidentally developed the recipe, but in fact, she has stated that she deliberately invented it. The guests loved this novelty, and people began to come to the inn just to eat it. Ruth Wakefield had used a bar of Nestle chocolate in her recipe. So Ruth went to Nestle with it. Nestle liked the idea, and they got permission from Ruth to put her recipe on the back of their chocolate bars. In return, she got all the chocolate she wanted to keep on cooking her famous food item. What is this the recipe for? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 30 / 104
  • 32. Q25. Pedestrianism was a 19th-century form of competitive walking, often professional and funded by wagering, from which the modern sport of racewalking developed. It was first codified in the last half of the 19th century, in order to make it distinct from other similar track and field sports, like long distance cross country fell running, and recreational hiking or hillwalking. Competitors were expected to extend their legs straight at least once in their stride and obey what was called the ”fair and ” rule. Fill in the blanks for half a point, and explain the rule for the other half. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 31 / 104
  • 33. Q26. In 1870, a German chemist named Erich von Wolf was researching the nutritional benefits of . In his notes, he accidentally printed the decimal point in the wrong spot. Wolf accidentally increased its iron level to 10 times the actual amount - 3.5 milligrams of iron suddenly became 35 milligrams, an extremely high amount of iron. In 1930, re-investigations on the matter of the iron content in this particular food item pointed out the error. In 1981, the British Medical Journal published an article to try and debunk the the myth but it continues to be widespread till date, thanks to its propagation in the media. What are we talking about? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 32 / 104
  • 34. Q27. Two poachers were attacked and killed in 2006 by members of the Sentinelese tribe in Andaman. An Indian Coast Guard helicopter sent to retrieve the bodies was repelled by a volley of arrows. However, the Indian government did not try to prosecute the murders, because it considers the Sentinelese a sovereign people, with the right to kill interlopers with impunity. Why is this unique right awarded to the Sentinelese people? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 33 / 104
  • 35. Q28. This convention was started by Queensland Government Employee Clement Wragge in 1887, but it stopped with his retirement in 1907. It did not become popular until after the Second World War, when it was revived in the Western Pacific region. Multiple schemes exist around the world in modern times, but each of them maintains lists of names that circulate every once in four-six years. Each list typically contains 19-24 names, and upon exhaustion within a year, either an auxiliary list is used or the Greek alphabet is made use of. What are we talking about? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 34 / 104
  • 36. Q29. This plant with an edible fruit was originally domesticated from the wild nightshade species thorn or bitter apple, Solanum incanum, somewhere in South Asia. The ancient Dravidian word for this was adapted into Sanskrit as v¯atigagama. From there, it migrated to the west along with the Persian and Arabian traders that also took the plant there. The Catalans and subsequently the French took this word from there and thence it went to Britain as the word X. The Portuguese also took it up from the Arabians and modified it suitably. This word was later taken into Indian English as Y, and is more popular in India, South Africa, Malaysia, etc. Give me X and Y, both names of the same plant. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 35 / 104
  • 37. Q30. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, upon seeing this photograph, realized the image would make an excellent symbol for the upcoming Seventh War Loan Drive, and ordered the participants identified and sent to Washington, D.C. Using a photographic enlargement, one of the participants identified four others in the photograph besides himself, but refused to identify the sixth because he had warned him not to. He revealed the name of the sixth person only after being informed that he was being ordered by the President to reveal the information and that refusing would be a serious crime. President Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945. Three of the six people in the photograph met President Truman on April 20 at the White House before going on the bond tour which began on May 11 in New York City. The bond drive was a success, raising $26.3 billion, twice the tour’s goal. ID this iconic photograph. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 36 / 104
  • 38. Cycle Back Answers Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 37 / 104
  • 39. ANSWERS Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 38 / 104
  • 40. Q1. The signalling pathway is one of the key regulators of animal development and is present in all bilaterians. The pathway takes its name from its polypeptide ligand, an intercellular signalling molecule called found in fruit flies of the genus Drosophila. The signalling molecule, in turn, takes its name from an animal, because of the appearance of fruit fly larva lacking the gene. Mutant larvae tend to have ”solid lawns” of denticles. The appearance of the stubby and ”hairy” larvae inspired the name. What is the name of this gene? (Image follows) Hint: Concentrate on the question number. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 39 / 104
  • 41. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 40 / 104
  • 42. A1 Hegdehog Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 41 / 104
  • 43. Q2. The Yreka Bakery situated in a city in California called Yreka. It was founded in 1856 by a baker called Frederick Deng. In the 20th century, it moved to 322 West Miner Street in the same city where it famously continued to operate till 1965, when the chief baker Martin retired. Popular mathematics author Martin Gardner wrote about the bakery in an article much later, when one of his readers pointed out that Yreka Bakery no longer existed - the premises were occupied by an art store. What was this art store named, aptly? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 42 / 104
  • 44. A2 Yrella Gallery. Both these names are palindromes. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 43 / 104
  • 45. Q3. What’s yours? 1 Dynamic Tripod 2 Lateral Tripod 3 Adaptive Tripod (D’Nealian) 4 Inter digital brace 5 Digital Pronate 6 Lateral Quadrupod 7 Dynamic Quadrupod 8 Thumb Tuck (Non-exhaustive) list of what? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 44 / 104
  • 46. A3 Handwriting grasps/Pencil grips. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 45 / 104
  • 47. Q4. In an Anime show called ”Hunter x Hunter”, a character called ”Hisoka” is seen to be of a villainous nature, a serial killer with irresistible murderous tendencies and a long list of victims. Which popular villain is his character said to have been inspired from? (Larger image follows) Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 46 / 104
  • 48. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 47 / 104
  • 49. A4. Joker Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 48 / 104
  • 50. Q5. Nosey Parker Afraid that he would go the way of his three elder brothers who died as infants, X’s family raised him as a girl. His nose was pierced, and he wore a nose-ring as a kid. This ornament gave him his name, which means who wears a nose-ring. X was, however, feminine by no metric. A journalist by profession, he went on to commit a crime the entire country knows him for. Id X. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 49 / 104
  • 51. A5 Nathuram Godse Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 50 / 104
  • 52. Q6. Let’s talk about the weather Sweeping from Butchers Stalls, Dung, Guts, and Blood, Drown’d Puppies, stinking Sprats, all drench’d in Mud, Dead Cats and Turnip-Tops come tumbling down the Flood. These lines appear in a satirical poem - ”A Description of a ”, written by Jonathan Swift, first published in the 1710 collection of the Tatler magazine. The poem’s meaning has been much debated, but it has been seen as a denunciation of the London Society. One of the many theories about the origin of the phrase X points to this poem. It is further supported by the fact that Swift, in his 1738 work - A Complete Collection of Polite and Ingenious Conversation, used it for the first time in its current form - ’I know Sir John will go, though he was sure it would X’ ID the phrase X. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 51 / 104
  • 53. A6 Rain cats and dogs. The poem was called ”A Description of a City Shower.” Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 52 / 104
  • 54. Q7. All Correct. This ungrammatical phrase is ubiquitous in India, and pre-dates Independence. There are numerous theories about how it came to be, but nobody knows its exact origins. In 2015, the Maharashtra state government banned it, deciding that this phrase, which was somewhat useful decades ago when the highways in our country were mostly single-lane, is now obsolete. Which phrase? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 53 / 104
  • 55. A7 Horn OK Please Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 54 / 104
  • 56. Q8. Too easy. There is a popular legend in folklore about the origin of the phrase X, which allegedly dates back to the Battle of Agincourt (1415), where the French army was defeated by the English. The English archers, renowned for their use of longbows, were supposedly mutilated when defeated – their fingers were chopped off, which made it impossible to draw the bow. Longbows were made of the native English yew tree, and so the act of drawing the longbow was known as ”plucking yew”. Thus, when the victorious English waved their fingers at the defeated French, they said, ’See, we can still pluck yew! PLUCK YEW!’ Over time, the phrased altered in form, but is still in use, as an expression of defiance or aggression. This myth has been debunked, based on the lack of any evidence of mutilation of fingers, and evidence that the phrase was in use independently before the Battle of Agincourt. Identify X, a phrase all of us are familiar with. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 55 / 104
  • 57. A8 Fuck You Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 56 / 104
  • 58. Q9. What is the blanked out title of this image? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 57 / 104
  • 59. A9 Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 58 / 104
  • 60. Q10. Recognise this? The etymology of X is obscure. The use of X in a programming context is generally credited to the Tech Model Railroad Club (TMRC) of MIT from circa 1960. In the complex model system, there were emergency switches located at numerous places around the room that could be thrown if something undesirable was about to occur, such as a train going full-bore at an obstruction. Another feature of the system was a digital clock on the dispatch board. When someone hit a scram switch, the clock stopped and the display was replaced with the word X. X’s use in connection with Y is generally traced to the World War II military slang FUBAR (Fucked Up Beyond All Recognition), later bowdlerised to the conjunction XY. What is XY—something everyone who has studied computer science has encountered—and how is it used in the programming context? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 59 / 104
  • 61. A10 foo bar - a placeholder name in computer programming Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 60 / 104
  • 62. Q11. You and I Uys and Buys in Afrikaans Tik and Tak in Arabic Brea and Bray in Cornish Kadlec and Tkadlec in Czech Citserono and Tsicerono in Esperanto Schultze and Schulze in German Santu and Bantu in Hindi Clodius and Claudius in Latin Tajniak and Jawniak in Polish Hern´andez and Fern´andez in Spanish Skapti and Skafti in Icelandic Nisbet and Nesbit in Scots Roobroeck and Roobrouck in West Flemish (Kortrijk dialect) Aspeslagh and Haspeslagh in West Flemish (Ostend dialect) What is the above a non-exhaustive list of? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 61 / 104
  • 63. A11 Names of Thomson and Thompson in translated versions of Tintin Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 62 / 104
  • 64. Q12. Pancho Gonzales (1928-1995) was an American professional tennis player, regarded as one of the greats in the pre-open era. He holds the record for being ranked world no.1 for eight years. In 1949, Gonzales was seeded second in Wimbledon, but lost in the first round. This poor performance was criticised heavily in the press, and a British journalist called him a ”cheese champion”. This, put together with his name, earned him the nickname , which stuck among his colleagues throughout his professional career. What was Gonzales’ nickname? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 63 / 104
  • 65. A12 Gorgonzales Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 64 / 104
  • 66. Q13. suggests something amenable, affable, amicable, where is harder, harsher, more hostile. , I think, may be expected to seep more gently and co-operatively out of the bottle than the possibly balky and truculent . sounds to me a more aggressive man, and writer, than . An might be expected to proffer a limp regal handshake, where sounds more apt for trouble in nightclubs and service in Iraq. The paragraph above appears in an article by David McKie in The Guardian. What is the article about? Put funda. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 65 / 104
  • 67. A13 Pronunciation of the letter H Aitch suggests something amenable, affable, amicable, where haitch is harder, harsher, more hostile. Aitch P Sauce, I think, may be expected to seep more gently and co-operatively out of the bottle than the possibly balky and truculent Haitch P Sauce. Haitch G Wells sounds to me a more aggressive man, and writer, than Aitch G Wells. An Aitch R Aitch might be expected to proffer a limp regal handshake, where Haitch R Haitch sounds more apt for trouble in nightclubs and service in Iraq. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 66 / 104
  • 68. Q14. The X effect is a name given to an analogy that correlates the fame of a sports tournament with the economic success of the business establishments in the region. The point of the analogy is that an institution can be very successful despite the lack of strong native competition, due to the activities that center around the sport. For example, Sumo in Japan is a big sport, and a lot of revenue is procured through activities directly or indirectly related to Sumo. However, there has been only one Japanese-born Yokozuna (Grand Champion) in the last twenty years. This is an example of X effect. ID X. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 67 / 104
  • 69. A14 The Wimbledon effect Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 68 / 104
  • 70. Q15. When some of his officers and the troops under them were angry about not being paid in 1783, George Washington did something. He was reading them a letter from Congress and said: ”Gentlemen, you will permit me to , for I have not only grown gray but almost in the service of my country.” In those days, X was considered not to be for real men. So when he deliberately asked their permission to do this action, the men in the room gasped in shock. Here was this paragon of military leaders humbled before their very eyes. Washington turned his weakness into a ”Look at what I’ve sacrificed for my country” moment. What is X? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 69 / 104
  • 71. A15 Spectacles. They were supposed to be for intellectuals who never saw a day of battle in their life, not for real men. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 70 / 104
  • 72. Q16. X Y is a brand of products we all are likely to have used. (X is a name and Y is a number) This product was launched about 6 decades ago in India, and became popular. Wary of counterfeit products flooding the market, the founders of this brand decided to attach the number Y along with the name, and that has stuck since. Y was chosen to be the registration number of this company with the Indian Government. ID X Y Half points if you name only X Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 71 / 104
  • 73. A16 Nataraj 621 Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 72 / 104
  • 74. Q17. Auguste Piccaard was a Swiss physicist, inventor and explorer, known for his helium balloon flights where he studied earth’s upper atmosphere and cosmic rays. He is also known for the invention of the first bathyscaphe which was used to explore the depths of the oceans. Which famous fictional character did he inspire? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 73 / 104
  • 75. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 74 / 104
  • 76. A17 Professor Cuthbert Calculus in Tintin Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 75 / 104
  • 77. Q18. Cyrano de Bergerac, a play written in 1897, is about an eponymous character who is a brash, strong-willed man of many talents but has an extraordinarily large nose that makes him look ugly. The plot revolves around how this doubt about his likeability prevents him from expressing his love for his distant cousin called Roxane. Roxane likes another handsome young man called Christian who is not very smart with words. However, Cyrano uses his wit to feed words into Christian’s mouth to seduce Roxane and wins a kiss for Christian. A 2018 movie is based on this play. ID the movie. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 76 / 104
  • 78. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 77 / 104
  • 79. A18 Sierra Burgess Is a Loser Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 78 / 104
  • 80. Q19. X was an American businessman. He is well known for an eponymous design for this ubiquitous device. He succeeded in bringing the design to industrial manufacturing and promoting its rapid adoption as an industry standard. By 1940, 85% of U.S. manufacturers of this commodity had a license for his design. The type X is popular because of its self-centering design, which makes it ideal for automation. What/who is X? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 79 / 104
  • 81. A19 Henry F. Phillips, inventor of the Phillips-head screws. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 80 / 104
  • 82. Q20. Ustad Allauddin Khan, a musician of the Maihar court who was moved by a tragedy in the early 20th century that orphaned many children, taught them how to play music and formed an orchestral group later known as the Maihar Band. This band included a unique instrument of Allauddin Khan’s invention, one which is called ”Nal Tarang”. It was made of cylindrical tubes set in a resonant xylophone-like frame. A version of this instrument exists closer home, in Pilani (image follows). What did Allauddin Khan use to make his nal tarang? (Image follows) Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 81 / 104
  • 83. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 82 / 104
  • 84. A20 Gun barrels from abandoned rifles. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 83 / 104
  • 85. Q21. BoB tribute Advertisement for which brand? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 84 / 104
  • 86. A21 Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 85 / 104
  • 87. Q22. Dan Bern created this song called & in 2010. What does it commemorate? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 86 / 104
  • 88. A22 The longest tennis match ever. In 2010 Wimbledon, John Isner and Nicholas Mahut played for 11 hours, 5 minutes over three days. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 87 / 104
  • 89. Q23. from 0 to 60 mph in 5 seconds. Actor X, in preparation for movie Y, dropped about 28 kilograms to suit the role. His rather famous diet consisted of a can of tuna, an apple and a black coffee everyday, along with a lot of water. The movie Y was a great success. However, he could not rejoice on that success too long. He had to gain weight within six months again, to suit his role in movie Z, which he reportedly did by gorging on pizza and ice cream. Give me Y and Z. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 88 / 104
  • 90. A23 X - Christian Bale. Y - The Machinist, Z - Batman Begins Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 89 / 104
  • 91. Q24. Ruth Graves Wakefield, an American chef, invented this recipe during the period when she owned the Toll House Inn, in Whitman, Massachusetts. In this era, the Toll House Inn was a popular restaurant that featured home cooking. It is often incorrectly reported that she accidentally developed the recipe, but in fact, she has stated that she deliberately invented it. The guests loved this novelty, and people began to come to the inn just to eat it. Ruth Wakefield had used a bar of Nestle chocolate in her recipe. So Ruth went to Nestle with it. Nestle liked the idea, and they got permission from Ruth to put her recipe on the back of their chocolate bars. In return, she got all the chocolate she wanted to keep on cooking her famous food item. What is this the recipe for? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 90 / 104
  • 92. A24 Choco-chip cookies Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 91 / 104
  • 93. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 92 / 104
  • 94. Q25. Pedestrianism was a 19th-century form of competitive walking, often professional and funded by wagering, from which the modern sport of racewalking developed. It was first codified in the last half of the 19th century, in order to make it distinct from other similar track and field sports, like long distance cross country fell running, and recreational hiking or hillwalking. Competitors were expected to extend their legs straight at least once in their stride and obey what was called the ”fair and ” rule. Fill in the blanks for half a point, and explain the rule for the other half. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 93 / 104
  • 95. A25 Fair heel and toe rule. The rule said that the toe of one foot could not leave the ground before the heel of the next foot touched down. (In other words, one foot had to be in contact with the ground at all times.) Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 94 / 104
  • 96. Q26. In 1870, a German chemist named Erich von Wolf was researching the nutritional benefits of . In his notes, he accidentally printed the decimal point in the wrong spot. Wolf accidentally increased its iron level to 10 times the actual amount - 3.5 milligrams of iron suddenly became 35 milligrams, an extremely high amount of iron. In 1930, re-investigations on the matter of the iron content in this particular food item pointed out the error. In 1981, the British Medical Journal published an article to try and debunk the the myth but it continues to be widespread till date, thanks to its propagation in the media. What are we talking about? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 95 / 104
  • 97. A26 Spinach Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 96 / 104
  • 98. Q27. Two poachers were attacked and killed in 2006 by members of the Sentinelese tribe in Andaman. An Indian Coast Guard helicopter sent to retrieve the bodies was repelled by a volley of arrows. However, the Indian government did not try to prosecute the murders, because it considers the Sentinelese a sovereign people, with the right to kill interlopers with impunity. Why is this unique right awarded to the Sentinelese people? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 97 / 104
  • 99. A27 This neo-palaeolithic tribe, that lives on the North-Sentinel island in the Andaman archipelago, is the last group of the so-called uncontacted people left on Earth. Absolutely no contact exists between these people and the outside world. Even the other Andaman tribes know very little about them. The Sentinelese do not allow outsiders onto the island and are very hostile towards them, and the Government does not interfere with them in the interests of conservation. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 98 / 104
  • 100. Q28. This convention was started by Queensland Government Employee Clement Wragge in 1887, but it stopped with his retirement in 1907. It did not become popular until after the Second World War, when it was revived in the Western Pacific region. Multiple schemes exist around the world in modern times, but each of them maintains lists of names that circulate every once in four-six years. Each list typically contains 19-24 names, and upon exhaustion within a year, either an auxiliary list is used or the Greek alphabet is made use of. What are we talking about? Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 99 / 104
  • 101. A28 Cyclone naming conventions Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 100 / 104
  • 102. Q29. This plant with an edible fruit was originally domesticated from the wild nightshade species thorn or bitter apple, Solanum incanum, somewhere in South Asia. The ancient Dravidian word for this was adapted into Sanskrit as v¯atigagama. From there, it migrated to the west along with the Persian and Arabian traders that also took the plant there. The Catalans and subsequently the French took this word from there and thence it went to Britain as the word X. The Portuguese also took it up from the Arabians and modified it suitably. This word was later taken into Indian English as Y, and is more popular in India, South Africa, Malaysia, etc. Give me X and Y, both names of the same plant. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 101 / 104
  • 103. A29 X-Aubergine, Y-Brinjal Sanskrit (v¯atigagama) → Persian (bˆadengˆan) → Arabic (al-b¯adinj¯an) → Catalan (alberg´ınia) → French(aubergine) → English (aubergine) (X) Sanskrit (v¯atigagama) → Persian (bˆadengˆan) → Arabic (al-b¯adinj¯an) → Portuguese (brinjela) → English (brinjal) (Y) Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 102 / 104
  • 104. Q30. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, upon seeing this photograph, realized the image would make an excellent symbol for the upcoming Seventh War Loan Drive, and ordered the participants identified and sent to Washington, D.C. Using a photographic enlargement, one of the participants identified four others in the photograph besides himself, but refused to identify the sixth because he had warned him not to. He revealed the name of the sixth person only after being informed that he was being ordered by the President to reveal the information and that refusing would be a serious crime. President Roosevelt died on April 12, 1945. Three of the six people in the photograph met President Truman on April 20 at the White House before going on the bond tour which began on May 11 in New York City. The bond drive was a success, raising $26.3 billion, twice the tour’s goal. ID this iconic photograph. Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 103 / 104
  • 105. A30 Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima Vighnesh Hegde The 12/11 Quiz November 12, 2018 104 / 104