Well, what do you know?
Part 2 of our trivia challenge
Here is the second half of the bumper brain-teaser compiled by Tom Maydon, AKA Trivia Tom from our weekly quiz in the Sunday Times Careers section. We hope your family had fun with the first part last week. Keep sane and keep your brain sharp during the lockdown. LITERATURE
66. Arthur Conan Doyle invented which literary detective, arguably the most famous of them all?
67. According to the story set in the 13th century, from which city did a pied piper abduct all the city’s children? 68. Name the author and 2002 Alan Paton Award winner who wrote the books The Heart of Redness and The Whale
Caller.
69. Which Frenchman wrote The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Les Misérables?
70. Which Botswana writer wrote the novels When Rain Clouds Gather and A Question of Power?
FINE ART
71. Name the French museum that is home to the Mona Lisa.
72. In which US city would you find the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim, Whitney Museum and the MoMA?
73. In which country was Salvador Dali born?
74. With which art movement would you associate the painters Claude Monet, Edgar Degas and Paul Cezanne?
75. In which city would you find the statue of Christ the
Redeemer?
76. Guernica, which portrays a city bombed during the Spanish Civil War, was created by which artist?
77. Which family were the patrons of Michelangelo?
78. Name the South African artist known for his charcoal and pastel drawings as well as his collaboration with the Handspring Puppet Company in creating animated films usually containing political messages.
79. Coptic art is associated with a group of Christians during the 5th-8th centuries AD living in which country?
80. Name the influential 20th-century American artist from New Mexico who was famous for her images of gigantic flowers, cityscapes and desert scenes.
FOOD AND DRINK
81. What is the primary ingredient of the dish called risotto? 82. What is typically served with tripe to make a traditional Xhosa dish?
83. Cristal and Bollinger are types of what?
84. What Italian dessert, which literally means “pull-meup”, is made with mascarpone cheese?
85. What “P” is another name for the African bird’s eye chili?
86. Which spice is obtained from crocuses?
87. What is generally added to eggs to make eggs Florentine?
88. What is the main alcohol ingredient in a piña colada? 89. Which liqueur is sometimes known as the green fairy? 90. What “P” is a drink comprising five ingredients, the name of which comes from the Sanskrit for “five”?
CLASSICAL MUSIC
91. How many strings does a standard violin have?
92. Who composed the opera The Magic Flute?
A. Beethoven
B. Mozart
C. Bach
D. Verdi
93. Who wrote the ballet Swan Lake?
94. With which instrument would you associate Yo-Yo Ma? A. Flute
B. Violin
C. Clarinet
D. Cello
95. What “H” is the composer of the oratorio Messiah that features the famous Hallelujah Chorus?
96. In what part of the orchestra would you find the timpani?
A. Woodwind
B. Strings
C. Percussion
D. Brass
97. Name the composer of The Unfinished Symphony.
A. Verdi
B. Liszt
C. Schubert
D. Brahms
98. What is the name of Prokofiev’s symphonic fairytale? 99. In which city would you find the Bolshoi Theatre, home of the Bolshoi Ballet?
100. What nationality was Antonin Dvorák?
A. Croatian
B. Czech
C. Russian
D. Hungarian
RELIGION
101. Who is the main prophet in Islam?
102. Diwali (the festival of lights) is synonymous with which religion?
103. Rosh Hashanah begins a new year for the people of which religion?
104. As a duty, and one of the Five Pillars of Islam, every able-bodied Muslim is expected to make a pilgrimage to Mecca at least once in their life. What is this pilgrimage called?
105. Name the period of merrymaking before Lent on the Christian calendar that literally means “goodbye meat”.
106. With which religious movement would you associate the magazine The Watchtower?
107. In which country did more than 900 people commit mass suicide under instruction from the cult leader Jim Jones?
A. Guyana
B. Haiti
C. Liberia
D. Costa Rica
108. Name the two sons of Abraham, one of whom is considered the father of the Jewish people and the other the patriarch of Islam.
109. In Christianity, by what name is the Sunday immediately before Easter known?
A. Pentecost
B. Palm Sunday
C. Whitsunday
D. Ascension Day
110. In the Christian Bible, which of the 12 apostles was also known as Didymus?
SA WILDLIFE
111. The African Big Five comprises the lion, leopard, rhino, elephant and which other animal?
112. What antelope is known as rooibok in Afrikaans?
113. Which South African mammal is also known as the gnu?
114. What is the current name for the bird formerly known as the grey loerie?
115. Which of these snakes is responsible for more fatalities than any other in Africa?
A. Black mamba B. Boomslang
C. Python
D. Puff adder
116. What is South Africa’s largest antelope?
117. Which of these South African animals is known to use the Milky Way for navigation?
A. Fruit bats
B. The civet
C. Dung beetle
D. Honey badger
118. Of what are leopard, hinged, geometric and angulate all types?
A. Frogs
B. Seals
C. Tortoises
D. Snakes
119. What is the former name of the African penguin?
120. What is SA’s national tree?
WACKY WORDS
121. The words “pyjama”, “shampoo” and “thug” all originate from what language?
A. Hindi
B. Latin
C. Swahili
D. Hebrew
122. What word comes from the Kongo language for “fetish” and in English is defined as a mindless, animated corpse with a love of human flesh?
123. What Japanese word meaning “team boss” is used in English to mean “assertive leader”?
A. Guru
B. Honcho
C. Dude
D. Bigwig
124. What word meaning “slippery area” in Yiddish is used in English to mean “a defect or malfunction in a machine or plan”?
125. The name for what notorious occupation is thought to be derived from an Islamic sect who drugged themselves before committing murders?
126. What eponym (a word derived from someone’s name) comes from the name of a former French ambassador to Portugal?
A. Guillotine
B. Nicotine
C. Quinine
D. Tangerine
127. The name of which branch of mathematics comes from the Arabic word for “restoring the balance”?
A. Combinatorics
B. Calculus
C. Algebra
D. Arithmetic
128. What word takes its name from the old practice that required moneylenders, if they became insolvent, to have their moneylending bench broken?
129. What word, originally from Latin, comes from an archaic notion that left-handed people were thought to be evil?
130. Which South African slang word meaning “great” or “pleasant” has its root in an Arabic word meaning “enjoyment” or “wellbeing”?
MIXED BAG
131. What is the official currency of Japan?
132. In chess, how many pieces are involved in castling?
133. The musical stage show Riverdance is based on traditional dancing from which country?
134. Of whom do the British burn an effigy in November each year?
135. Peter Parker is the alter ego of which superhero?
136. What colour is the precious stone tanzanite?
A. Blue
B. Green
C. Red
D. Yellow
137. In traditional fashion, what is the furry pocket worn in front of a kilt in Scotland?
138. A philatelist is interested in collecting what?
139. With which constellation would you associate the twins?
140. Cats supposedly descended from those kept by Ernest Hemingway in Florida, US, are known for having what physical anomaly?