Category: Pursuit of the Trivial

  • WYSIWYG

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    Here are a few questions about acronyms and initialisms. You don’t have multiple choices today; you need to provide your own answer. What words decipher these groups of initials?

    1. What seven words in computing does the post title WYSIWYG stand for?
    2. FLOTUS, seven letters which mean…
    3. AWOL means…
    4. NASA is the…
    5. SCUBA means…

    Good luck! I will post the answers later today.

  • On top of the world | Answers

    The answers to my earlier post are shown in bold below. I have included the question simply for your information.

    Baily’s beads. The effect is also called the diamond ring and is a feature of total and annular solar eclipses. As the Moon covers the Sun during a solar eclipse, the rugged topography of the lunar limb allows beads of sunlight to shine through in some places while not in others. Image Wikipedia
    1. On 15 May 1836, Francis Baily observed a phenomenon, now known as Baily’s beads, during what event?
      • Solar eclipse—During a solar eclipse, Baily’s beads, named after Francis Baily who observed them in 1836, occur when sunlight shines through the Moon’s uneven edge, creating a ring of light with beads. The diamond ring effect happens when only one or two beads remain.
    2. On this day nylon stockings first became available for the general public in the United States. In what year did this take this take place?
      • 1940—Nylon stockings were first made available to the general public, and American stores sold out within days.
        Sherpa Tenzing Norgay.
        Image Wikipedia
    3. The mountaineer who conquered Mount Everest with Edmund Hillary was possibly born on 15 May 1914, what was he commonly known as?
      • Sherpa Tenzing—Tenzing Norgay, a Nepali-Indian Sherpa mountaineer, along with Edmund Hillary, was the first to reach the summit of Mount Everest in 1953. He was named one of the 100 most influential people of the 20th century.
        Mickey Mouse Plane Crazy.
        Image Wikipedia
    4. Mickey Mouse’s debut was made today in 1928 with the premiere of what cartoon?
      • Plane CrazyPlane Crazy, the first Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse film, was originally a silent film released in 1928. After the success of Steamboat Willie, it was officially released as a sound cartoon in 1929. The plot sees Mickey trying to imitate Charles Lindbergh‘s flying achievements.
        Old Mormon Fort.
        Image Wikipedia
    5. Las Vegas was founded on 15 May 1905. What historic site stands at the intersection of Las Vegas Boulevard and Washington Avenue?
      • Old Mormon Fort—Old Las Vegas Mormon Fort State Historic Park contains the Old Mormon Fort, the first permanent structure built in Las Vegas. The fort, built in 1855, was a midpoint between Salt Lake City and Los Angeles, later occupied by the U.S. Army and renamed Fort Baker.
  • On top of the world

    Here are a few questions which are related to today’s date, 15 May.

    Looking north to Mount Everest.
    Image Wikipedia
    1. On 15 May 1836, Francis Baily observed a phenomenon, now known as Baily’s beads, during what event?
      • Papal inauguration Mass
      • Solar eclipse
      • Swimming underwater in a coral lagoon
    2. On this day, nylon stockings first became available for the general public in the United States. In what year did this take place?
      • 1902
      • 1921
      • 1940
    3. The mountaineer who conquered Mount Everest with Edmund Hillary was possibly born on 15 May 1914. What was he commonly known as?
      • Sherpa Doqing
      • Sherpa Laxing
      • Sherpa Tenzing
    4. Mickey Mouse’s debut was made today in 1928 with the premiere of what cartoon?
      • House Mouse
      • Monkey Business
      • Plane Crazy
    5. Las Vegas was founded on 15 May 1905. What historic site stands at the intersection of Las Vegas Boulevard and Washington Avenue?
      • Old Baptist Mission
      • Old Quaker Meeting House
      • Old Mormon Fort

    Good luck! I will post the answers later today.

  • It might be possible that the world itself is without meaning. | Answers

    The answers to my earlier post are shown in bold below. I have included the question simply for your information.

    THX1138
    Image Encyclopædia Britannica
    1. THX 1138 (1971) was the directorial debut of which filmmaker, who was born on 14 May 1944?
      • George Lucas—Warner Brothers–Seven Arts signed Lucas to direct a feature-length version of his student film, Electronic Labyrinth: THX 1138 4EB, with Francis Ford Coppola executive-producing. The film, a grim fantasy about a robotised society, received respectful reviews but was not widely embraced.
        The ruins at Jamestown, Virginia, USA from: Robert Sears, A pictorial description of the United States (s.n., 1854), pg. 315. Google Books
        Image Wikipedia
    2. On this day in 1607, the first English colony in North America was founded and named after England’s King James I. Who was the mother of the king?
      • Mary, Queen of Scots—James VI and I, the only son of Mary, Queen of Scots, and the first Stuart monarch. He ruled Scotland as James VI from 1567 and England and Ireland as James I from 1603 until his death in 1625. He advocated for a single parliament, sponsored the King James Version of the Bible and saw the start of English colonisation of the Americas.
        Virginia Woolf.
        Image Wikipedia
    3. On 14 May 1925, the novel Mrs Dalloway was published. Who was the author?
      • Virginia WoolfMrs Dalloway, a novel by Virginia Woolf, follows Clarissa Dalloway, an upper-class woman in post-WWI England, on a day as she prepares for a party. The novel explores time and social structure through Clarissa’s life and the party. The title of this post is from Mrs Dalloway.
        Eric Morecambe.
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    4. John Eric Bartholomew was born today in 1926. Which comedian/actor is he better known as?
      • Eric Morecambe—Eric Morecambe, born John Eric Bartholomew, was an English comedian known for his double act with Ernie Wise. The partnership lasted from 1941 until Morecambe’s death in 1984.
    5. May 14, saw the beginning of the last witchcraft trial held in the United States. In what year did this take place?
      • 1878—In 1878, Lucretia Brown accused Daniel Spofford of witchcraft in Salem, Massachusetts. The case, considered the last witchcraft trial in the US, was dismissed by the judge.
  • It might be possible that the world itself is without meaning.

    THX1138
    Image Encyclopædia Britannica

    Here are a few questions which are related to today’s date, 14 May.

    1. THX 1138 (1971) was the directorial debut of which filmmaker, who was born on 14 May 1944?
      • George Lucas
      • Steven Spielberg
      • Robert Zemeckis
    2. On this day in 1607, the first English colony in North America was founded and named after England’s King James I. Who was the mother of the king?
      • Mary I of England
      • Mary of Guise
      • Mary, Queen of Scots
    3. On 14 May 1925, the novel Mrs Dalloway was published. Who was the author?
      • Virginia Plain
      • Virginia Rogers
      • Virginia Woolf
    4. John Eric Bartholomew was born today in 1926. Which comedian/actor is he better known as?
      • Eric Idle
      • Eric Morecambe
      • Eric Sykes
    5. May 14, saw the beginning of the last witchcraft trial held in the United States. In what year did this take place?
      • 1778
      • 1828
      • 1878

    Good luck! I will post the answers later today.

    It might be possible that the world itself is without meaning.

  • Terrible Twos | Answers

    The answers to my earlier post are shown in bold below. I have included the question simply for your information.

    Pratchett’s Night Watch at the top and Rembrandt’s The Night Watch below.
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    1. Willem van Ruytenburch, dressed in yellow, is depicted in a 1642 Rembrandt painting titled similarly to a Discworld novel by Terry Pratchett. What two words which form the novel’s title are also present in the painting’s title?
      • Night Watch—Rembrandt’s The Night Watch depicts a civic guard company, while Terry Pratchett’s novel follows Sir Samuel Vimes and the Ankh-Morpork City Watch.
    2. One was the Bond girl Solitaire, and the other was Henry VIII’s third wife. What was their shared name, first and last?
      • Jane Seymour—Jane Seymour, Henry VIII’s third wife, died of postnatal complications after giving birth to Edward VI. Jane Seymour, born Joyce Frankenberg, is a British actress known for roles in film and television. A Bond girl, she played psychic Solitaire in Live and Let Die (1973).
    3. What crow is also the name of a Tchaikovsky ballet?
      • Nutcracker—The nutcracker genus, Nucifraga, comprises four species of passerine birds in the Corvidae family. Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s 1892 ballet, The Nutcracker, is based on Alexandre Dumas’s short story and features a nutcracker doll. The ballet’s score, particularly its use of the celesta, has become famous and is widely performed.
    4. What name links a London gunmaker, which is over 200-years old, and a character in The New Avengers, a British television series from the 1970s?
      • Purdey—James Purdey & Sons, a British gunmaker based in London, specialises in high-end bespoke sporting shotguns and rifles. The company holds Royal Warrants of appointment as gun and rifle makers to the British and other European royal families. Purdey, played by Joanna Lumley, was a spy working for British Intelligence in The New Avengers, a British television series in the seventies.
    5. The Royal Guardsmen’s song “_ vs. the Red Baron” peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1966. The fictional character missing from the song title became a mascot for aerospace safety in 1969 and has often since been associated with NASA. Can you name the character?
      • Snoopy—The Royal Guardsmen are an American band with several snoopy related hits. Snoopy has been associated with NASA since the Apollo era, inspiring generations to dream big about space exploration. During Artemis I, Snoopy will serve as the zero-gravity indicator, symbolising the journey to the Moon. This partnership continues to promote STEM education and excitement about space exploration. (Snoopy/NASA)
  • Terrible twos


    Today’s trivia features a variety of questions without multiple-choice options, requiring you to come up with the answers yourself.

    Mrs Henry VIII, the third.
    Image Wikipedia
    1. Willem van Ruytenburch, dressed in yellow, is depicted in a 1642 Rembrandt painting titled similarly to a Discworld novel by Terry Pratchett. What two words, which form the novel’s title, are also present in the painting’s title?
    2. One was the Bond girl Solitaire, and the other was Henry VIII’s third wife. What was their shared name, first and last?
    3. What crow is also the name of a Tchaikovsky ballet?
    4. What name links a London gunmaker, which is over 200-years old, and a character in The New Avengers, a British television series from the 1970s?
    5. The Royal Guardsmen’s song “_ vs. the Red Baron” peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 in December 1966. The fictional character missing from the song title became a mascot for aerospace safety in 1969 and has often since been associated with NASA. Can you name the character?

  • Main St. to Westminster Abbey via the North Pole | Answers

    Exile on Main St. Rolling Stones.
    Image Pinterest.
    1. Exile on Main St., a double album was released on 12 May 1972 by…
      • Rolling StonesExile on Main St. is the Rolling Stones’ tenth studio album, released in 1972. The album, recorded in France and Los Angeles, features a mix of blues, rock and roll, swing, country and gospel influences. It is considered a pivotal hard rock album and is often regarded as the Rolling Stones’ best work.
        Norge airship.
        Image Wikipedia
    1. The first verified flight over the North Pole took place on this date in 1926. The flight was made in a…
      • Semirigid airship—The Norge, an Italian-built airship, completed the first verified flight to the North Pole on 12 May 1926. The expedition, led by Roald Amundsen and funded by Lincoln Ellsworth, was the first to fly over the polar ice cap between Europe and America.
        Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother.
        Portrait by Richard Stone
        Image Wikipedia
    2. On 12 May 1937, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth were crowned. George had been king since December 1936, following his brother Edward VIII’s abdication. Prior to Edward’s abdication, the new king and queen were known by what titles?
      • Duke and Duchess of York—George VI, born Albert, and titled Duke of York, became king after his brother Edward VIII abdicated to marry Wallis Simpson.. He led the UK through World War II, symbolising British determination. He died in 1952, his daughter becoming Queen Elizabeth II. His widowed consort, now styled Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, lived for a further 50 years.
        During the Berlin Airlift in 1948, U.S., British, and French planes delivered food and other goods to Berlin, which was blockaded by Soviet forces. In this photo, German children stand on a hillside and watch a U.S. plane fly overhead.
        Image Wikipedia
    3. On this day in 1949, the Soviet Union lifted its blockade of…
      • Berlin—The Soviet Union blockaded West Berlin in 1948–49, cutting off all land and water access. The Western Allies responded with the Berlin Airlift, supplying West Berlin by air for nearly a year until the Soviets lifted the blockade.
        Florence Nightingale, an angel of mercy. Crimean War: Florence Nightingale with her candle making the night round of the wards at Scutari hospital.
        Coloured mezzotint, c. 1855, by Tomkins after Butterworth.
        Image Wikipedia
    4. Three English people are listed, but one was born while her parents were on an extended honeymoon in the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. Can you identify which one?
      • Florence Nightingale, nurse and social reformer—Florence Nightingale, an English social reformer and statistician, revolutionised modern nursing. During the Crimean War, she led a team of nurses in Scutari, Turkey, improving hospital conditions and reducing mortality rates. Her dedication, known as the “Lady with the Lamp,” earned her international acclaim and led to the establishment of the first scientifically based nursing schools.
    Mission of Mercy: Florence Nightingale receiving the Wounded at Scutari.
    (Jerry Barrett, 1857)
    Image National Portrait Gallery, London/Wikipedia https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/15/Nightingale_receiving_the_Wounded_at_Scutari_by_Jerry_BarrettFXD.jpg
  • Main St. to Westminster Abbey via the North Pole

    George VI and Elizabeth, coronation portrait.
    Image Wikipedia
    1. Exile on Main Street, a double album, was released on 12 May 1972 by…
      • Bob Dylan
      • Chicago
      • Rolling Stones
    1. The first verified flight over the North Pole took place on this date in 1926. The flight was made in a…
      • Fokker bi-plane
      • Hot air Balloon
      • Semirigid airship
    2. On 12 May 1937, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth were crowned. George had been king since December 1936, following his brother Edward VIII’s abdication. Prior to Edward’s abdication, the new king and queen were known by what titles?
      • Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh
      • Duke and Duchess of Sussex
      • Duke and Duchess of York
    3. On this day in 1949, the Soviet Union lifted its blockade of…
      • Baghdad
      • Baku
      • Berlin
    4. Of the three English people listed one was born while their parents were on an extended honeymoon in the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. Can you identify which one?
      • Edward Lear, poet and illustrator
      • Florence Nightingale, nurse and social reformer
      • Dante Gabriel Rossetti, poet and painter
  • Legs 11 | Answers

    The answers to my earlier post are shown in bold below. I have included the question simply for your information.

    Statue of Constantine the Great in the Capitoline museums.
    Image Wikipedia
    1. Where, on 11 May 330, was dedicated as the “New Rome”? Byzantium—Constantine the Great renamed Byzantium as “New Rome” in 330 CE, later changing it to Constantinople. The city, founded in 657 BCE, was officially renamed Istanbul in the 20th century.
      Rhinoceros. Salvador Dali.
      Image Wikipedia
    2. Which Spanish artist born today in 1904, at Figueras, Spain, also died there in 1989? Salvador Dali—Salvador Dalí was a Spanish surrealist artist known for his technical skill and striking, bizarre images. He joined the Surrealist group in 1929 and achieved commercial success in the United States in the 1940s. Dalí’s work influenced Surrealism, pop art and contemporary artists.
      Entrance to the German death camp Auschwitz I in Poland. The sign “Arbeit macht frei” translates as “Work makes you free”.
      Image Wikipedia
    3. Former senior Nazi official Adolf Eichmann was captured by Israeli intelligence agents on 11 May 1960. Near what capital city was he captured? Buenos Aires, Argentina—Otto Adolf Eichmann, a German-Austrian Nazi official, was a key organiser of the Holocaust. He participated in the Wannsee Conference, where the Final Solution was planned, and oversaw the mass deportation of Jews to extermination camps. After the war, he escaped to Argentina but was captured by Mossad in 1960 and tried in Israel, where he was convicted and executed.
      Gary Kasparov vs Deep Blue, IBM Computer
      Encyclopædia Britannica
    4. On this day in 1997, Garry Kasparov was defeated in the final game of a six-game chess match. Which computer defeated him? Deep Blue—Deep Blue, a chess-playing supercomputer, was the first to defeat a reigning world champion under regular time controls. It first played Garry Kasparov in 1996, losing the match, but won a rematch in 1997.
      Gordon Brown.
      Image Wikipedia
    5. 11 May 2010, saw the resignation of which British prime minister? Gordon Brown—James Gordon Brown, a British politician, served as Prime Minister and Leader of the Labour Party from 2007 to 2010. Prior to this, he was Chancellor of the Exchequer under Tony Blair, overseeing significant economic reforms and the longest period of economic growth in British history. After leaving office, Brown continued to serve as an MP and later became a UN Special Envoy and WHO Ambassador.