Wednesday, June 29, 2011

The Wednesday quiz has sailed the seas and come to the holy city of Byzantium

It's:


The Wednesday Quiz, in its second incarnation, has been a weekly game of knowledge, intuition, inductive reasoning, and willingness to risk public embarrassment in a friendly and moderately supportive environment!!  I hope you've enjoyed it.  A new incarnation is in the works, and will be coming your way soon.

Answers come out Fridayish.

1. Name the poet:
An aged man is but a paltry thing,
A tattered coat upon a stick, unless
Soul clap its hands and sing, and louder sing
For every tatter in its mortal dress,
Nor is there singing school but studying
Monuments of its own magnificence;
And therefore I have sailed the seas and come
To the holy city of Byzantium.
2. Where's this?



3. In the late 1880s and early 1890s, as the rules of American football were evolving into something resembling their current form, one team dominated all others. Who ran up a 67-2 record from 1888-1892?

4. Russia has rubles, China has ________.

5. Nestled in the shadow of Mount Ararat, the capital of Armenia is the home to a third of that country's population. Twenty-eight centuries of continuous habitation put it on the short list of the world's oldest cities. What's its name, again?

6. This poor little airplane is experiencing _________.


7. A long 1500 kilometer drive north from Edmonton, this city of 20,000 on the north shore of the Great Slave Lake is capital of a huge chunk of Canada.

8. This pretty plant can pose problems for a calvaryman in a couple different ways. One is, it's poisonous to horses. What's it called?



9. It's the setting of Wuthering Heights, All Things Bright and Beautiful, and Behind the Scenes at the Museum.

10. Bos grunniens or Bos mutus is a Central Asian critter. Although it is basically a domesticated species, there is a small wild population as well. What's the common name?

----

There is no tie-breaker this week.  However, I would like you to identify yourself if you (a) realized that this would be the 26th and necessarily final edition of the alphabet-based quizzes, (b) considered that it would be possible to go back and figure out in advance what this week's letter would be, or even (c) actually did so.

--

Put your answers in the comments, in an attempt to show a total mastery analogous to that of the dominant football team of the early days of the sport.  

21 comments:

Christine M. said...

1. Yeats
2. Yemen
3. Yale
4. yuan
5. dunno
6. sitting in a cake pan waiting for the batter to be poured over it
7. Yellowknife
8. yew
9. Yorkshire
10. yak

gS49 said...

1. Yeats
2. Yemen
3. Yale
4. Yuan
5. Yerevan
6. Yaw
7. Yellowhorse
8. Yew
9. Yorkshire
10. Yak

(a) Doesn't seem that many; maybe I missed some.
(b) I suppose so, but
(c) You must be kidding!!

What's next? By numbers?

Elizabeth said...

1. Yeats, I expect.
2. Yemen?
3. I'll say the Yankees.
4. Yuan.
5. Ya got me there.
6. Yaw?
7. Yellowknife.
8. Yew.
9. Yorkshire.
19. Yak.

You have GOT to be kidding me on any of (a), (b), or particularly (c). I eagerly await the next cycle.

Voron X said...

1. Yeats!
2. Yemen!
3. Yikes, no clue! Yankees? No, wait, didn't it start as college rugby? Yale then!
4. Yen is Japanese. Chinese too perhaps?
5. Yerevan (Thank you Orson Scott Card for making Petra Arkanian Armenian)!
6. Yaw!
7. Yukon City is probably not the answer. I'll guess Youngstown.
8. Yew! (also used for making longbows!) I believe the flesh of the berries (but not the seeds) are the only part that's safe to eat.
9. Yorkshire? (I had York but changed it.)
10. Yak!

TB: haven't been around that long.

Rebel said...

1. Yeats
2. Yemen
3. Yankees
4. Yuen?
5.
6. Yaw
7.
8. yew
9 Yorkshire, England
10. Yak

Still wondering what happened to last weeks answers. =/

mrs.5000 said...

1 Yeats
2 Yemen
3 Yale
4 yen
5 oh, I can't think of it. Oh, the deep, deep shame.
6 yaw
7 Yellowknife
8 yew. It would be bad to have to fight your way through a dense yew forest with your horse crippled by yew poisoning, while merry archers with yew bows shot at you from behind the yew boughs.
9 Beautiful Yorkshire. Home of the Ribblehead Viaduct!
10 yak

I was told of this solemn occasion the other day, and quickly realized my memory was not up the task of positive identification. Yet I did have a vague sense that it must be at the end of the alphabet.

Long live the Wednesday quiz!

Dug said...

Yates
Yemen
Yale
Yuan
Yerevan
Yaw - or is it Yurbulence?
Yellowknife
Yerbena?
Yorkshire
Yak

Anonymous said...

1. Yeats
2. Yemen
3. Yale
4. Yen
5. Yever
6. Yaw
7. Yellowknife
8. Yellowroot
9. Yorkshire
10. Yak

Didn't even think about it.

Ben said...

1. Yeats, William Butler
2. Yemen
3. Yale?
4. Yen? I thought that was Japanese. Maybe spelled slightly differently, like "yuen"?
5. Ye Olde Towne
6. Yaw
7. Yukon? (damn capital Y cities...)
8. Yew. As in, "I'm cutting yew down, sucka!"
9. Yorkshire (for some reason, I was thinking ATB&B was set in Devonshire...)
10. Yak?

UnwiseOwl said...

1. Letter of the week says that this is Yeats.
2. Yemen
3. Maybe...Yorktown or Yale...Yale.
4. Yuan
5. Yerevan is ringing bells, but it's possible that it's hilariously wrong.
6. Yaw? Thanks Aviatrix.
7. Y...ellowknife? Need to brush up on my Canadian geography, methinks.
8. Yeah, I don't know this.
The only trees I know that start with y are Yew and Yukon Pine, and I doubt that Yukon pine was ever a huge problem for Cavalry. Ah, a problem from Cavalrymen, as in a 'Battle of Agincourt' problem for cavalrymen, nice. Yew.
9. Yorkshire.
10. Again, not many choices, I'll say Yak.

Touchdown!

(a) yes
(b) yes
(c) didn't have to, I've been ticking them off on a napkin on my desk.

pfly said...

1. I don't know; oh, Y? Yeats?
2. Yemen
3. You gotta be kidding
4. yuan
5. hrm
6. yaw
7. Yellowknife--good place to see the aurora borealis.
8. um... yew? Two, yew wood makes good bows?
9. hrm
10. yak!
a b & c: no, aw.

Dug said...

Wow - I misspelled Yeats, didn't I? Now I feel dumb. Thing is we have a politician in town named Yates and I'm always having to listen to him yammer at meetings so that's my excuse. That and my illiteracy.

Elaine said...

1. Yeats
2. Yemen
3. Yale
4. Yen
5. Ypsilanti? Just kidding.
6. Yaw?
7. Yellowknife is the only Y city in Canada that I know.
8. YEW! This is how I got the Letter of the Day.
9. Yorkshire
10. Y....can't be yaks, can't be yellowhammers, can't be youse,

Alas, not knowing very many of these, and no, I had no idea this was The End.

Melissa said...

1. Yeats
2. Yemen?
3. No clue
4. Yen
5. Why don't I know this? I blame my public education. Weak in geography.
6. Yaw
7. Yukon City?
8.
9. Yorkshire
10. Yak

margaret said...

1. Yates? Yeats?
2. Yemen
3. Yale
4. yuan!
5. Yassar
6. yurbulence
7. Yottawa
8. Yew?
9. Yorkshire, sir!
10. yippy dog

a. no
b. that'd be too clever
c. ditto

Elaine said...

Oh, god. I read 'Central ASIA' as 'Central America.' Just wait til YOU are 64, and you'll see why this is happening. God. Old Age is much worse than advertised. I just thought you got OLD, not stupid.

dhkendall said...

Looks like there's still time:

1. Yates?
2. Yemen. (Also pictured, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Eritrea and Djibouti. Unless you mean more general and "Arabian Peninsula". ;) )
3.
4. yuan
5. Yerevan
6. yaw?
7. Northwest Territories (and not as much of a "huge chunk" now that Nunavut is separated.)
8.
9. Yorkshire
10. yak

a) haven't been here that long, so no.
b) would be fun ...
c) why didn't I?

Eavan said...

Oh well, guess I'll stick my answers in:

1. Yeats
2. Yemen
3.Yale
4.yuan
5. Yerevan
6. I got a copilot, he can figure it out.
7. Yellowknife
8. Yarrow
9. Yorkshire
10. Yak

Eavan said...

Oh. Yeah, I was thinking of yew. Oops.

Congratulations, Aviatrix! :-)

Michael5000 said...

Oh hey, answers. UnWise Owl got 'em all, above.

Eavan: "thinking of yew." Heh. But why are we congratulating Aviatrix? The implied shout-out of an aviation-related question next to a Canada-related question?

Aviatrix said...

Looks like I missed a quiz, but that won't stop me.

1. Shelley, because I think he liked ancient lands, but it has to be Yeats who is close enough to Shelley for someone of my literary shortcomings.

2. East Yemen, because I think there's more than one of them, and that looks eastish. But I'll knock it down to just Yemen for letter compliance.

3. Boston, because I think they existed. No, Yale, because it begins with Y.

4. Renmibi. No, yuan. (So what are the other things beginning with R?)

5. Yerevan

6. Confinement in a zoetrope. Oh wait, today is Y! Yaw.

7. Yellowknife, not to be confused with Slave Lake, which is on the shore of the Lesser Slave Lake and isn't the capital of anything, plus it burned down last month.

8. I'm going for yew, and the other problem is that if your horse gallops under its low branches it whacks you in the face.

9. Yorkshire. Got it from the Herriot, not the Jane Austen.

10. Yak, and I can't remember if it actually has pink milk or if that's just a widely propagated false fact.

(a) I usually forget that there's a letter at all, until I get two answers witht he same letter in a row, then I go back and change all my other guesses to match, so no.

(b) I had indeed realized that it would be possible to narrow down the choices as the weeks progressed and had considered keeping a tally, but preferred to be surprised each week. I did not know that this was the 26th week, but knew with sadness that the final week would soon arrive.

I very much enjoy the quizzes, and find the letter cue a brilliant way to make participation more enjoyable even when I don't know the subject matter.