“Welcome to ‘Old School: Answers Cheat Sheet’ for game version 1.13! This guide will provide a quick and easy way to find the answers you need by using the CTRL + F function. Don’t waste any more time searching for the answers – just check out our cheat sheet on ko-fi.com.”
Maths (1)
Q: What is the square root of 64? A: 8
Q: What is it called when we multiply a number by itself? A: Square
Q: Which number can only be divided by itself or 1? A: Prime number
Q: What kind of number uses dots? A: Decimal
Q: What kind of number divides another exactly? A: Factor
Q: What kind of angle is less than 90 degrees? A: Acute angle
Q: What kind of angle is between 90 and 180 degrees? A: Obtuse angle
Q: What kind of angle is greater than 180 degrees? A: Reflex angle
Q: What kind of triangle has 2 equal sides? A: Isosceles
Q: How many equal sides does an ‘Isosceles’ triangle have? A: 2
Q: What kind of triangle has 3 equal sides? A: Equilateral
Q: How many sides does a ‘Tetrahedron’ have? A: 4
Q: What kind of triangle has a 90-degree angle? A: Right angle
Q: What is the longest side of a triangle called? A: Hypotenuse
Q: What kind of mathematics uses letters instead of numbers? A: Algebra
Q: What is the outside of a circle known as? A: Circumference
Q: What is the width of a circle known as? A: Diameter
Q: What is the length from the centre of a circle to the outside? A: Radius
Q: What is the distance around a shape called? A: Perimeter
Q: What is the term for lines that form a right-angle? A: Perpendicular
Q: What is the term for a shape that can be placed over another? A: Congruent
Q: What is 10 cubed? A: 1000
Q: What is 5 squared? A: 25
Q: What is 5 squared? A: 25
Q: What is the value of Pi? A: 3.14159
Q: What is the number 3.14159 otherwise known as? A: Pi
Q: What might ‘Pi’ be used for? A: Measuring circles
Q: What is the bottom half of a fraction known as? A: Denominator
Q: What is the top half of a fraction known as? A: Numerator
Q: What is a quarter of 88? A: 22
Q: Which number is a factor of 12? A: 4
Q: What is the term for how steep a line is? A: Gradient
Q: What is a line that meets a curve called? A: Tangent
Q: What is a shape made of lines called? A: Polygon
Q: How many sides does a ‘heptagon’ have? A: 7
Q: What is a 7-sided shape called? A: Heptagon
Q: How many sides does a ‘hexagon’ have? A: 6
Q: What is a 6-sided shape called? A: Hexagon
Q: How many sides does an ‘octagon’ have? A: 8
Q: What is an 8-sided shape called? A: Octagon
Q: How many sides does a ‘pentagon’ have? A: 5
Q: What is a 5-sided shape called? A: Pentagon
Q: How many sides does a ‘nonagon’ have? A: 9
Q: What is a 9-sided shape called? A: Nonagon
Q: How many sides does a ‘decagon’ have? A: 10
Q: What is a 10-sided shape called? A: Decagon
Q: How many sides does a ‘triangle’ have? A: 3
Q: What is a 3-sided shape called? A: Triangle
Q: How many sides does a ‘trapezoid’ have? A: 4
Q: How many sides does a ‘rhombus’ have? A: 4
Q: How many sides does a ‘quadrilateral’ have? A: 4
Q: What is a 4-sided shape called? A: Square
Q: What kind of point is the same distance from another point? A: Locus
Q: What is the middle in a list of numbers called? A: Median
Q: What is the most common in a list of numbers called? A: Mode
Q: What is the total of numbers divided by how many there are? A: Mean
Q: What is the largest number in a list minus the smallest? A: Range
Q: What is 12 x 6? A: 72
Q: What is the ‘product’ of 3 and 21? A: 63
Q: What is 144 divided by 12? A: 12
Q: What do we call a decimal number that never ends or recurs? A: Irrational
Q: What do we call a decimal number that ends or recurs? A: Rational
Q: What do we call a number after 1 is divided by it? A: Reciprocal
Q: What is the ‘reciprocal’ of 4? A: 0.25
Q: How many kilometres are there in a mile? A: 1.6 km
Q: What is 100 kph in mph? A: 62 mph
Q: What is 50 mph in kph? A: 80 kph
Q: How many centimetres are there in an inch? A: 2.54 cm
Q: How many inches are there in a foot? A: 12
Q: How many centimetres are there in a foot? A: 30.48 cm
Q: How many metres are there in a yard? A: 0.9144
Q: How many feet are there in a yard? A: 3
Q: How many yards are there in a furlong? A: 220
Q: How many metres are there in a furlong? A: 201
Q: How many feet are there in a mile? A: 5,280
Q: How many furlongs are there in a mile? A: 8
Q: How many miles are there in a league? A: 3
Q: How many kilometres are there in a league? A: 4.8 km
Q: How many feet are there in a fathom? A: 6
Q: How many metres are there in a fathom? A: 1.8
Q: How many miles are there in a ‘nautical mile’? A: 1.15
Q: How many square feet is an acre? A: 43,560
Q: How many square yards is an acre? A: 4,840
Q: How many acres are in a hectare? A: 2.47
Q: How many litres are in a pint? A: 0.56
Q: How many litres are in a pint? A: 0.56
Q: How many ounces are in a pint? A: 20
Q: How many pints are in a quart? A: 2
Q: How many litres are in a quart? A: 1.136
Q: How many litres are in a gallon? A: 4.5
Q: How many pints are in a gallon? A: 8
Q: How many pounds are in a kilogram? A: 2.2
Q: How many pounds are in a kilogram? A: 2.2
Q: What is the abbreviation for ‘pounds’? A: lbs
Q: How many kilograms is 200 pounds? A: 91 kg
Q: How many pounds is 75 kilograms? A: 165 lbs
Q: How many grams are in an ounce? A: 28.35
Q: How many pounds are in a stone? A: 14
Q: How many kilograms are in a stone? A: 6.35
Q: How many pounds are in a ‘hundredweight’? A: 112
Q: How many kilograms are in a ‘hundredweight’? A: 50.8
Q: How many pounds are in a ton? A: 2,240
Q: How many kilograms are in a ton? A: 1,016
Q: What kind of triangle has a 90 degree angle? A: Right Angle
Q: What kind of triangle has 2 equal sides? A: Isosceles
Q: What kind of triangle has no equal sides? A: Scalene
Q: What kind of triangle has 3 equal angles? A: Equilateral
Q: What is it called when we multiply a number by itself? A: Square
Q: Which number can only be divided by itself or 1? A: Prime number
Q: What kind of number uses dots? A: Decimal
Q: What kind of number divides another exactly? A: Factor
Q: What kind of angle is less than 90 degrees? A: Acute angle
Q: What kind of angle is between 90 and 180 degrees? A: Obtuse angle
Q: What kind of angle is greater than 180 degrees? A: Reflex angle
Q: What kind of triangle has 2 equal sides? A: Isosceles
Q: How many equal sides does an ‘Isosceles’ triangle have? A: 2
Q: What kind of triangle has 3 equal sides? A: Equilateral
Q: How many sides does a ‘Tetrahedron’ have? A: 4
Q: What kind of triangle has a 90-degree angle? A: Right angle
Q: What is the longest side of a triangle called? A: Hypotenuse
Q: What kind of mathematics uses letters instead of numbers? A: Algebra
Q: What is the outside of a circle known as? A: Circumference
Q: What is the width of a circle known as? A: Diameter
Q: What is the length from the centre of a circle to the outside? A: Radius
Q: What is the distance around a shape called? A: Perimeter
Q: What is the term for lines that form a right-angle? A: Perpendicular
Q: What is the term for a shape that can be placed over another? A: Congruent
Q: What is 10 cubed? A: 1000
Q: What is 5 squared? A: 25
Q: What is 5 squared? A: 25
Q: What is the value of Pi? A: 3.14159
Q: What is the number 3.14159 otherwise known as? A: Pi
Q: What might ‘Pi’ be used for? A: Measuring circles
Q: What is the bottom half of a fraction known as? A: Denominator
Q: What is the top half of a fraction known as? A: Numerator
Q: What is a quarter of 88? A: 22
Q: Which number is a factor of 12? A: 4
Q: What is the term for how steep a line is? A: Gradient
Q: What is a line that meets a curve called? A: Tangent
Q: What is a shape made of lines called? A: Polygon
Q: How many sides does a ‘heptagon’ have? A: 7
Q: What is a 7-sided shape called? A: Heptagon
Q: How many sides does a ‘hexagon’ have? A: 6
Q: What is a 6-sided shape called? A: Hexagon
Q: How many sides does an ‘octagon’ have? A: 8
Q: What is an 8-sided shape called? A: Octagon
Q: How many sides does a ‘pentagon’ have? A: 5
Q: What is a 5-sided shape called? A: Pentagon
Q: How many sides does a ‘nonagon’ have? A: 9
Q: What is a 9-sided shape called? A: Nonagon
Q: How many sides does a ‘decagon’ have? A: 10
Q: What is a 10-sided shape called? A: Decagon
Q: How many sides does a ‘triangle’ have? A: 3
Q: What is a 3-sided shape called? A: Triangle
Q: How many sides does a ‘trapezoid’ have? A: 4
Q: How many sides does a ‘rhombus’ have? A: 4
Q: How many sides does a ‘quadrilateral’ have? A: 4
Q: What is a 4-sided shape called? A: Square
Q: What kind of point is the same distance from another point? A: Locus
Q: What is the middle in a list of numbers called? A: Median
Q: What is the most common in a list of numbers called? A: Mode
Q: What is the total of numbers divided by how many there are? A: Mean
Q: What is the largest number in a list minus the smallest? A: Range
Q: What is 12 x 6? A: 72
Q: What is the ‘product’ of 3 and 21? A: 63
Q: What is 144 divided by 12? A: 12
Q: What do we call a decimal number that never ends or recurs? A: Irrational
Q: What do we call a decimal number that ends or recurs? A: Rational
Q: What do we call a number after 1 is divided by it? A: Reciprocal
Q: What is the ‘reciprocal’ of 4? A: 0.25
Q: How many kilometres are there in a mile? A: 1.6 km
Q: What is 100 kph in mph? A: 62 mph
Q: What is 50 mph in kph? A: 80 kph
Q: How many centimetres are there in an inch? A: 2.54 cm
Q: How many inches are there in a foot? A: 12
Q: How many centimetres are there in a foot? A: 30.48 cm
Q: How many metres are there in a yard? A: 0.9144
Q: How many feet are there in a yard? A: 3
Q: How many yards are there in a furlong? A: 220
Q: How many metres are there in a furlong? A: 201
Q: How many feet are there in a mile? A: 5,280
Q: How many furlongs are there in a mile? A: 8
Q: How many miles are there in a league? A: 3
Q: How many kilometres are there in a league? A: 4.8 km
Q: How many feet are there in a fathom? A: 6
Q: How many metres are there in a fathom? A: 1.8
Q: How many miles are there in a ‘nautical mile’? A: 1.15
Q: How many square feet is an acre? A: 43,560
Q: How many square yards is an acre? A: 4,840
Q: How many acres are in a hectare? A: 2.47
Q: How many litres are in a pint? A: 0.56
Q: How many litres are in a pint? A: 0.56
Q: How many ounces are in a pint? A: 20
Q: How many pints are in a quart? A: 2
Q: How many litres are in a quart? A: 1.136
Q: How many litres are in a gallon? A: 4.5
Q: How many pints are in a gallon? A: 8
Q: How many pounds are in a kilogram? A: 2.2
Q: How many pounds are in a kilogram? A: 2.2
Q: What is the abbreviation for ‘pounds’? A: lbs
Q: How many kilograms is 200 pounds? A: 91 kg
Q: How many pounds is 75 kilograms? A: 165 lbs
Q: How many grams are in an ounce? A: 28.35
Q: How many pounds are in a stone? A: 14
Q: How many kilograms are in a stone? A: 6.35
Q: How many pounds are in a ‘hundredweight’? A: 112
Q: How many kilograms are in a ‘hundredweight’? A: 50.8
Q: How many pounds are in a ton? A: 2,240
Q: How many kilograms are in a ton? A: 1,016
Q: What kind of triangle has a 90 degree angle? A: Right Angle
Q: What kind of triangle has 2 equal sides? A: Isosceles
Q: What kind of triangle has no equal sides? A: Scalene
Q: What kind of triangle has 3 equal angles? A: Equilateral
Maths (2)
Languages (1)
Q: What is the German word for 1? A: Ein
Q: What is the German word for 2? A: Zwei
Q: What is the German word for 3? A: Drei
Q: What is the German word for 4? A: Vier
Q: What is the German word for 5? A: Funf
Q: What is the German word for 6? A: Sechs
Q: What is the German word for 7? A: Sieben
Q: What is the German word for 8? A: Acht
Q: What is the German word for 9? A: Neun
Q: What is the German word for 10? A: Zehn
Q: What is the German word for ‘Why’? A: Warum
Q: What is the German word for ‘Money’? A: Geld
Q: What is the German word for ‘How’? A: Wie
Q: What is the German word for ‘When’? A: Wann
Q: What is the German word for ‘Where’? A: Wo
Q: What is the German word for ‘Who’? A: Wer
Q: What is the German word for ‘Hello’? A: Hallo
Q: What is the German word for ‘Goodbye’? A: Auf wiedersehen
Q: What is the German word for ‘Please’? A: Bitte
Q: What is the German word for ‘Thanks’? A: Danke
Q: What is the German word for ‘Yes’? A: Ja
Q: What is the German word for ‘No’? A: Nein
Q: What is the German word for ‘Woman’? A: Frau
Q: What is the German word for ‘Friend’? A: Freund
Q: What is the French word for 1? A: Un
Q: What is the French word for 2? A: Deux
Q: What is the French word for 3? A: Trois
Q: What is the French word for 4? A: Quatre
Q: What is the French word for 5? A: Cinq
Q: What is the French word for 6? A: Six
Q: What is the French word for 7? A: Sept
Q: What is the French word for 8? A: Huit
Q: What is the French word for 9? A: Neuf
Q: What is the French word for 10? A: Dix
Q: What is French for ‘the’ when describing a male word? A: Le
Q: What is French for ‘the’ when describing a female word? A: La
Q: What is French for ‘the’ when describing a plural? A: Les
Q: What is French for ‘a’ when describing a male word? A: Un
Q: What is French for ‘a’ when describing a female word? A: Une
Q: What is the French word for ‘Why’? A: Pourquoi
Q: What is the French word for ‘French’? A: Francais
Q: What is the French word for ‘Money’? A: Argent
Q: What is the French word for ‘How’? A: Comment
Q: What is the French word for ‘When’? A: Quand
Q: What is the French word for ‘Where’? A: Ou
Q: What is the French word for ‘Who’? A: Qui
Q: What is the French word for ‘Hello’? A: Bonjour
Q: What is the French word for ‘Goodbye’? A: Au revoir
Q: What is the French word for ‘Please’? A: S’il vous plait
Q: What is the French word for ‘Thanks’? A: Merci
Q: What is the French word for ‘Yes’? A: Oui
Q: What is the French word for ‘No’? A: Non
Q: What is the French word for ‘Man’? A: Homme
Q: What is the French word for ‘Woman’? A: Femme
Q: What is the French word for ‘Friend’? A: Ami
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Spanish’? A: Espanol
Q: What is the Spanish word for 1? A: Uno
Q: What is the Spanish word for 2? A: Dos
Q: What is the Spanish word for 3? A: Tres
Q: What is the Spanish word for 4? A: Cuatro
Q: What is the Spanish word for 5? A: Cinco
Q: What is the Spanish word for 6? A: Seis
Q: What is the Spanish word for 7? A: Siete
Q: What is the Spanish word for 8? A: Ocho
Q: What is the Spanish word for 9? A: Nueve
Q: What is the Spanish word for 10? A: Diez
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Time’? A: Hora
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Why’? A: Por que
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘How’? A: Como
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘When’? A: Cuando
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Where’? A: Donde
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Who’? A: Quien
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Hello’? A: Hola
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Goodbye’? A: Adios
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Please’? A: Por favor
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Thanks’? A: Gracias
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Yes’? A: Si
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘No’? A: No
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Man’? A: Hombre
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Brother’? A: Ermano
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Friend’? A: Amigo
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Money’? A: Dinero
Q: What is the Chinese expression for ‘Hello’? A: Ni hao
Q: What is the Chinese expression for ‘Goodbye’? A: Zai jian
Q: What is the Chinese word for ‘China’? A: Zhong guo
Q: What is the Chinese word for ‘Chinese’? A: Zhong wen
Q: What is the Chinese word for ‘Why’? A: Wei shenme
Q: What does the Italian phrase ‘bon fortuna’ mean? A: Good luck
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Carpe Diem’ mean? A: Seize the day
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Mea Culpa’ mean? A: My fault
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Non Grata’ mean? A: Not welcome
Q: What does the Latin word ‘Gratis’ mean? A: Free
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Pater Noster’ mean? A: Our Father
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Ave Maria’ mean? A: Hail Mary
Q: What does the Latin word ‘Lucifer’ mean? A: Light bearer
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Anno Domini’ mean? A: Year of our Lord
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Canis Canem Edit’ mean? A: Dog eat dog
Q: What does the word ‘Caliph’ mean in Arabic? A: Successor
Q: What does the Arabic term ‘Mahr’ refer to? A: Dowry
Q: What does the Arabic term ‘Nikah’ refer to? A: Marriage
Q: What does the Arabic term ‘Imam’ refer to? A: Leader
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Jihad’ refer to? A: Striving to be good
Q: What does the Arabic term Shari’ah refer to? A: Islamic law
Q: What does the Arabic term ‘Adhan’ refer to? A: Call to prayer
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Halal’ mean? A: Permissible
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Haram’ mean? A: Forbidden
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Makruh’ mean? A: Disliked
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Allah’ mean? A: The God
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Tawhid’ refer to? A: Oneness of God
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Iman’ mean? A: Faith
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Ibadah’ refer to? A: Worship
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Ummah’ refer to? A: Community
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Shahadah’ refer to? A: Statement of belief
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Salah’ refer to? A: Prayer
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Sawm’ refer to? A: Fasting
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Zakah’ refer to? A: Charity
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Hajj’ refer to? A: Pilgrimage
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Niyyah’ refer to? A: Good intentions
Q: What does the Hebrew term ‘Israel’ mean? A: Struggle with God
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Shoah’ refer to? A: Holocaust
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Torah’ refer to? A: Law
Q: What does the Hebrew term Nevi’im refer to? A: Prophets
Q: What does the Hebrew term ‘Ketuvim’ refer to? A: Philosophy
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Mitzvah’ mean? A: Commandment
Q: What does the Hebrew term ‘Bar Mitzvah’ mean? A: Son of the Commandment
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Mikveh’ refer to? A: Bath
Q: What does ‘Aron Hakodesh’ refer to in Hebrew? A: Cupboard
Q: What does ‘Ner Tamid’ refer to in Hebrew? A: Lamp
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Sefer’ refer to? A: Scrolls
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Sofer’ refer to? A: Scribe
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Bimah’ refer to? A: Pulpit
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Minyan’ refer to? A: Congregation
Q: What does the Hebrew term ‘Yom Kippur’ mean? A: Day of Atonement
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Purim’ refer to? A: Lots
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Pesach’ refer to? A: Passover
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Shavuot’ refer to? A: Weeks
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Sukkot’ refer to? A: Tabernacles
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Kiddushin’ refer to? A: Wedding
Q: What does the Hebrew phrase ‘Mazel Tov’ mean? A: Good luck
Q: What does the Hebrew phrase L’Chaim mean? A: To life
Q: What does the word ‘Buddha’ mean? A: Enlightened One
Q: What does ‘Rupa’ refer to in Buddhism? A: Art
Q: What does ‘Stupa’ refer to in Buddhism? A: Burial place
Q: What does ‘Theravada’ mean in Buddhism? A: School of the Elders
Q: What does ‘Mahayana’ mean in Buddhism? A: Greater Vehicle
Q: What does ‘Vajrayana’ mean in Buddhism? A: Diamond Vehicle
Q: What does ‘Navayana’ mean in Buddhism? A: New Vehicle
Q: What does the Buddhist term ‘Vihara’ refer to? A: Shelter
Q: What does the term ‘Nirvana’ mean in Buddhism? A: Extinction
Q: What is the German word for 2? A: Zwei
Q: What is the German word for 3? A: Drei
Q: What is the German word for 4? A: Vier
Q: What is the German word for 5? A: Funf
Q: What is the German word for 6? A: Sechs
Q: What is the German word for 7? A: Sieben
Q: What is the German word for 8? A: Acht
Q: What is the German word for 9? A: Neun
Q: What is the German word for 10? A: Zehn
Q: What is the German word for ‘Why’? A: Warum
Q: What is the German word for ‘Money’? A: Geld
Q: What is the German word for ‘How’? A: Wie
Q: What is the German word for ‘When’? A: Wann
Q: What is the German word for ‘Where’? A: Wo
Q: What is the German word for ‘Who’? A: Wer
Q: What is the German word for ‘Hello’? A: Hallo
Q: What is the German word for ‘Goodbye’? A: Auf wiedersehen
Q: What is the German word for ‘Please’? A: Bitte
Q: What is the German word for ‘Thanks’? A: Danke
Q: What is the German word for ‘Yes’? A: Ja
Q: What is the German word for ‘No’? A: Nein
Q: What is the German word for ‘Woman’? A: Frau
Q: What is the German word for ‘Friend’? A: Freund
Q: What is the French word for 1? A: Un
Q: What is the French word for 2? A: Deux
Q: What is the French word for 3? A: Trois
Q: What is the French word for 4? A: Quatre
Q: What is the French word for 5? A: Cinq
Q: What is the French word for 6? A: Six
Q: What is the French word for 7? A: Sept
Q: What is the French word for 8? A: Huit
Q: What is the French word for 9? A: Neuf
Q: What is the French word for 10? A: Dix
Q: What is French for ‘the’ when describing a male word? A: Le
Q: What is French for ‘the’ when describing a female word? A: La
Q: What is French for ‘the’ when describing a plural? A: Les
Q: What is French for ‘a’ when describing a male word? A: Un
Q: What is French for ‘a’ when describing a female word? A: Une
Q: What is the French word for ‘Why’? A: Pourquoi
Q: What is the French word for ‘French’? A: Francais
Q: What is the French word for ‘Money’? A: Argent
Q: What is the French word for ‘How’? A: Comment
Q: What is the French word for ‘When’? A: Quand
Q: What is the French word for ‘Where’? A: Ou
Q: What is the French word for ‘Who’? A: Qui
Q: What is the French word for ‘Hello’? A: Bonjour
Q: What is the French word for ‘Goodbye’? A: Au revoir
Q: What is the French word for ‘Please’? A: S’il vous plait
Q: What is the French word for ‘Thanks’? A: Merci
Q: What is the French word for ‘Yes’? A: Oui
Q: What is the French word for ‘No’? A: Non
Q: What is the French word for ‘Man’? A: Homme
Q: What is the French word for ‘Woman’? A: Femme
Q: What is the French word for ‘Friend’? A: Ami
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Spanish’? A: Espanol
Q: What is the Spanish word for 1? A: Uno
Q: What is the Spanish word for 2? A: Dos
Q: What is the Spanish word for 3? A: Tres
Q: What is the Spanish word for 4? A: Cuatro
Q: What is the Spanish word for 5? A: Cinco
Q: What is the Spanish word for 6? A: Seis
Q: What is the Spanish word for 7? A: Siete
Q: What is the Spanish word for 8? A: Ocho
Q: What is the Spanish word for 9? A: Nueve
Q: What is the Spanish word for 10? A: Diez
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Time’? A: Hora
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Why’? A: Por que
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘How’? A: Como
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘When’? A: Cuando
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Where’? A: Donde
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Who’? A: Quien
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Hello’? A: Hola
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Goodbye’? A: Adios
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Please’? A: Por favor
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Thanks’? A: Gracias
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Yes’? A: Si
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘No’? A: No
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Man’? A: Hombre
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Brother’? A: Ermano
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Friend’? A: Amigo
Q: What is the Spanish word for ‘Money’? A: Dinero
Q: What is the Chinese expression for ‘Hello’? A: Ni hao
Q: What is the Chinese expression for ‘Goodbye’? A: Zai jian
Q: What is the Chinese word for ‘China’? A: Zhong guo
Q: What is the Chinese word for ‘Chinese’? A: Zhong wen
Q: What is the Chinese word for ‘Why’? A: Wei shenme
Q: What does the Italian phrase ‘bon fortuna’ mean? A: Good luck
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Carpe Diem’ mean? A: Seize the day
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Mea Culpa’ mean? A: My fault
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Non Grata’ mean? A: Not welcome
Q: What does the Latin word ‘Gratis’ mean? A: Free
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Pater Noster’ mean? A: Our Father
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Ave Maria’ mean? A: Hail Mary
Q: What does the Latin word ‘Lucifer’ mean? A: Light bearer
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Anno Domini’ mean? A: Year of our Lord
Q: What does the Latin phrase ‘Canis Canem Edit’ mean? A: Dog eat dog
Q: What does the word ‘Caliph’ mean in Arabic? A: Successor
Q: What does the Arabic term ‘Mahr’ refer to? A: Dowry
Q: What does the Arabic term ‘Nikah’ refer to? A: Marriage
Q: What does the Arabic term ‘Imam’ refer to? A: Leader
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Jihad’ refer to? A: Striving to be good
Q: What does the Arabic term Shari’ah refer to? A: Islamic law
Q: What does the Arabic term ‘Adhan’ refer to? A: Call to prayer
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Halal’ mean? A: Permissible
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Haram’ mean? A: Forbidden
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Makruh’ mean? A: Disliked
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Allah’ mean? A: The God
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Tawhid’ refer to? A: Oneness of God
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Iman’ mean? A: Faith
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Ibadah’ refer to? A: Worship
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Ummah’ refer to? A: Community
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Shahadah’ refer to? A: Statement of belief
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Salah’ refer to? A: Prayer
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Sawm’ refer to? A: Fasting
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Zakah’ refer to? A: Charity
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Hajj’ refer to? A: Pilgrimage
Q: What does the Arabic word ‘Niyyah’ refer to? A: Good intentions
Q: What does the Hebrew term ‘Israel’ mean? A: Struggle with God
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Shoah’ refer to? A: Holocaust
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Torah’ refer to? A: Law
Q: What does the Hebrew term Nevi’im refer to? A: Prophets
Q: What does the Hebrew term ‘Ketuvim’ refer to? A: Philosophy
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Mitzvah’ mean? A: Commandment
Q: What does the Hebrew term ‘Bar Mitzvah’ mean? A: Son of the Commandment
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Mikveh’ refer to? A: Bath
Q: What does ‘Aron Hakodesh’ refer to in Hebrew? A: Cupboard
Q: What does ‘Ner Tamid’ refer to in Hebrew? A: Lamp
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Sefer’ refer to? A: Scrolls
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Sofer’ refer to? A: Scribe
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Bimah’ refer to? A: Pulpit
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Minyan’ refer to? A: Congregation
Q: What does the Hebrew term ‘Yom Kippur’ mean? A: Day of Atonement
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Purim’ refer to? A: Lots
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Pesach’ refer to? A: Passover
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Shavuot’ refer to? A: Weeks
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Sukkot’ refer to? A: Tabernacles
Q: What does the Hebrew word ‘Kiddushin’ refer to? A: Wedding
Q: What does the Hebrew phrase ‘Mazel Tov’ mean? A: Good luck
Q: What does the Hebrew phrase L’Chaim mean? A: To life
Q: What does the word ‘Buddha’ mean? A: Enlightened One
Q: What does ‘Rupa’ refer to in Buddhism? A: Art
Q: What does ‘Stupa’ refer to in Buddhism? A: Burial place
Q: What does ‘Theravada’ mean in Buddhism? A: School of the Elders
Q: What does ‘Mahayana’ mean in Buddhism? A: Greater Vehicle
Q: What does ‘Vajrayana’ mean in Buddhism? A: Diamond Vehicle
Q: What does ‘Navayana’ mean in Buddhism? A: New Vehicle
Q: What does the Buddhist term ‘Vihara’ refer to? A: Shelter
Q: What does the term ‘Nirvana’ mean in Buddhism? A: Extinction
Languages (2)
Q: What does the term ‘Dharma’ mean in Buddhism? A: Eternal Truth
Q: What does ‘Dukkha’ refer to in Buddhism? A: Suffering
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Punjab’ refer to? A: 5 streams
Q: What does the word ‘Sikh’ mean? A: Learner
Q: What does the word ‘Singh’ mean in Sikhism? A: Lion
Q: What does the word ‘Kaur’ mean in Sikhism? A: Princess
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Kesh’ refer to? A: Hair
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Kanga’ refer to? A: Comb
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Kara’ refer to? A: Bracelet
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Kachera’ refer to? A: Underwear
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Kirpan’ refer to? A: Sword
Q: What does ‘Dukkha’ refer to in Buddhism? A: Suffering
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Punjab’ refer to? A: 5 streams
Q: What does the word ‘Sikh’ mean? A: Learner
Q: What does the word ‘Singh’ mean in Sikhism? A: Lion
Q: What does the word ‘Kaur’ mean in Sikhism? A: Princess
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Kesh’ refer to? A: Hair
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Kanga’ refer to? A: Comb
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Kara’ refer to? A: Bracelet
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Kachera’ refer to? A: Underwear
Q: What does the Sikh term ‘Kirpan’ refer to? A: Sword
Geography (1)
Q: How many states make up the United States of America? A: 50
Q: What is the population of China? A: 1.3 billion
Q: What is the population of the USA? A: 320 million
Q: In which continent would you find New Zealand? A: Australasia
Q: What is the Gross Domestic Product of the USA? A: $16 trillion
Q: What is the term for erosion caused by stones in a river? A: Abrasion
Q: What is the term for erosion caused by stones in a river? A: Abrasion
Q: What is it called when particles in a river wear each other down? A: Attrition
Q: What is it called when rocks are dissolved by water? A: Corrosion
Q: What is it called when a moving force wears down a material? A: Erosion
Q: What are ‘alternative fuels’ an alternative to? A: Fossil fuels
Q: What are fuels we take from the ground called? A: Fossil fuels
Q: What kind of energy uses steam in a volcanic region? A: Geothermal
Q: What kind of energy is generated by water? A: Hydroelectric
Q: What kind of energy is generated by the sun? A: Solar
Q: How many years of oil are we estimated to have left? A: 50 years
Q: How many years of gas are we estimated to have left? A: 70 years
Q: How many years of coal are we estimated to have left? A: 250 years
Q: What does ‘antinatalism’ refer to? A: Birth control
Q: What is encouraging reproduction called? A: Pro-natalism
Q: What the term for limiting a population through birth control? A: Antinatalism
Q: What the term for a layer of water under a layer of rock? A: Aquifer
Q: What kind of rock allows water to pass through it? A: Permeable
Q: What kind of rock can water not pass through? A: Impermeable
Q: What is the upper part of the earth’s mantle called? A: Asthenosphere
Q: What is the layer between a planet’s crust and its core? A: Mantle
Q: What is a ‘terrestrial’ planet mainly composed of? A: Rocks
Q: What kind of planet is mainly composed of rocks? A: Terrestrial
Q: What is the term for using machines instead of people? A: Automation
Q: What are the living parts of the Earth called? A: Biosphere
Q: What does the ‘biosphere’ refer to? A: Plants & animals
Q: What is it called when acidic water degrades a coral reef? A: Bleaching
Q: What is the theory that a growing population will meet its needs? A: Boserupian Theory
Q: What is the theory that population growth causes societies to collapse? A: Malthusian Theory
Q: What do we call land that used to be for industrial purposes? A: Brownfield
Q: What is the land left behind after buildings are demolished? A: Derelict
Q: What kind of area is a city? A: Urban
Q: What kind of area is between a city and the countryside? A: Suburban
Q: What kind of area is the countryside? A: Rural
Q: What is rainfall otherwise known as? A: Precipitation
Q: What does ‘precipitation’ refer to? A: Rain
Q: What is the term for when water rises up to form clouds? A: Evaporation
Q: What is the removal of trees otherwise known as? A: Deforestation
Q: What is the term for moving INTO one country from another? A: Immigration
Q: What is the term for moving OUT of one country for another? A: Emigration
Q: What level of occupation involves farming or mining materials? A: Primary
Q: What level of occupation involves making products? A: Secondary
Q: What level of occupation involves selling products? A: Tertiary
Q: What is it called when water loses its oxygen? A: Eutrophication
Q: What is the point at which 2 rivers join called? A: Confluence
Q: What is a small river that joins a larger one called? A: Tributary
Q: What is a river called where its mouth meets the sea? A: Estuary
Q: What does ‘fauna’ refer to? A: Animal life
Q: What is animal life otherwise known as? A: Fauna
Q: What is plant life otherwise known as? A: Flora
Q: What does ‘flora’ refer to? A: Plant life
Q: What does ‘GDP’ stand for? A: Gross Domestic Product
Q: What does ‘GNI’ stand for? A: Gross National Income
Q: What is ‘geology’ the study of? A: Rocks
Q: What kind of region is ‘glacial’? A: Ice
Q: What kind of region has high temperatures but little rain? A: Arid
Q: What kind of land has never been built on before? A: Greenfield
Q: What kind of gas increases the temperature of the atmosphere? A: Greenhouse
Q: What is an animal or plant’s natural home called? A: Habitat
Q: What is the term for part of a coast that protrudes into the sea? A: Headland
Q: What is the term for when water soaks into soil and rocks? A: Infiltration
Q: What is the term for burying waste underground? A: Landfill
Q: What measures a location north or south of the Equator? A: Latitude
Q: What measures a location east or west on the Earth? A: Longitude
Q: What is the imaginary line that divides the Earth called? A: Equator
Q: What is the area north of the Equator called? A: Northern hemisphere
Q: What is the area south of the Equator called? A: Southern hemisphere
Q: What is the gradient of a river from its source to its mouth? A: Long profile
Q: What part of a river is close to the mouth? A: Lower course
Q: What are the bends in a river called? A: Meanders
Q: What are the sand and pebbles deposited by a river called? A: Sediment
Q: What is the term for when soggy soil slides down frozen ground? A: Soilfluction
Q: Which part of a cave rises up from the ground? A: Stalagmite
Q: Which part of a cave hangs down from the ceiling? A: Stalactite
Q: Which type of rock is made by extreme heat and pressure? A: Metamorphic
Q: Which type of rock is made from cool volcanic lava? A: Igneous
Q: Which type of rock is made up of deposited material? A: Sedimentary
Q: What is the capital of Argentina? A: Buenos Aires
Q: What is the capital of Australia? A: Canberra
Q: What is the capital of Austria? A: Vienna
Q: What is the capital of Belgium? A: Brussels
Q: What is the capital of Brazil? A: Brasilia
Q: What is the capital of Bulgaria? A: Sofia
Q: What is the capital of Canada? A: Ottawa
Q: What is the capital of China? A: Beijing
Q: What is the capital of the Czech Republic? A: Prague
Q: What is the capital of Denmark? A: Copenhagen
Q: What is the capital of Egypt? A: Cairo
Q: What is the capital of England? A: London
Q: What is the capital of Ethiopia? A: Addis Ababa
Q: What is the capital of France? A: Paris
Q: What is the capital of Germany? A: Berlin
Q: What is the capital of Greece? A: Athens
Q: What is the capital of India? A: New Dehli
Q: What is the capital of Iran? A: Tehran
Q: What is the capital of Iraq? A: Baghdad
Q: What is the capital of Israel? A: Jerusalem
Q: What is the capital of Italy? A: Rome
Q: What is the capital of Japan? A: Tokyo
Q: What is the capital of Kenya? A: Nairobi
Q: What is the capital of Libya? A: Tripoli
Q: What is the capital of Luxembourg? A: Luxembourg
Q: What is the capital of Malaysia? A: Kuala Lumpur
Q: What is the capital of Mexico? A: Mexico City
Q: What is the capital of the Netherlands? A: Amsterdam
Q: What is the capital of New Zealand? A: Wellington
Q: What is the capital of North Korea? A: Pyongyang
Q: What is the capital of Norway? A: Oslo
Q: What is the capital of Pakistan? A: Islamabad
Q: What is the capital of Poland? A: Warsaw
Q: What is the capital of Portugal? A: Lisbon
Q: What is the capital of Romania? A: Bucharest
Q: What is the capital of Russia? A: Moscow
Q: What is the capital of Samoa? A: Apia
Q: What is the capital of Saudi Arabia? A: Riyadh
Q: What is the capital of South Korea? A: Seoul
Q: What is the capital of Spain? A: Madrid
Q: What is the capital of Sweden? A: Stockholm
Q: What is the capital of Switzerland? A: Bern
Q: What is the capital of Thailand? A: Bangkok
Q: What is the capital of the Ukraine? A: Kiev
Q: What is the capital of the USA? A: Washington
Q: What is the capital of Vietnam? A: Hanoi
Q: What is the capital of Zambia? A: Lusaka
Q: Where would you expect to find ‘Sephardic’ Jews? A: Southern Europe
Q: Where would you expect to find ‘Ashkenazi’ Jews? A: Eastern Europe
Q: What is the largest country in the world? A: Russia
Q: What is the smallest country in the world? A: Vatican
Q: What is the tallest mountain in the world? A: Mount Everest
Q: What is the population of China? A: 1.3 billion
Q: What is the population of the USA? A: 320 million
Q: In which continent would you find New Zealand? A: Australasia
Q: What is the Gross Domestic Product of the USA? A: $16 trillion
Q: What is the term for erosion caused by stones in a river? A: Abrasion
Q: What is the term for erosion caused by stones in a river? A: Abrasion
Q: What is it called when particles in a river wear each other down? A: Attrition
Q: What is it called when rocks are dissolved by water? A: Corrosion
Q: What is it called when a moving force wears down a material? A: Erosion
Q: What are ‘alternative fuels’ an alternative to? A: Fossil fuels
Q: What are fuels we take from the ground called? A: Fossil fuels
Q: What kind of energy uses steam in a volcanic region? A: Geothermal
Q: What kind of energy is generated by water? A: Hydroelectric
Q: What kind of energy is generated by the sun? A: Solar
Q: How many years of oil are we estimated to have left? A: 50 years
Q: How many years of gas are we estimated to have left? A: 70 years
Q: How many years of coal are we estimated to have left? A: 250 years
Q: What does ‘antinatalism’ refer to? A: Birth control
Q: What is encouraging reproduction called? A: Pro-natalism
Q: What the term for limiting a population through birth control? A: Antinatalism
Q: What the term for a layer of water under a layer of rock? A: Aquifer
Q: What kind of rock allows water to pass through it? A: Permeable
Q: What kind of rock can water not pass through? A: Impermeable
Q: What is the upper part of the earth’s mantle called? A: Asthenosphere
Q: What is the layer between a planet’s crust and its core? A: Mantle
Q: What is a ‘terrestrial’ planet mainly composed of? A: Rocks
Q: What kind of planet is mainly composed of rocks? A: Terrestrial
Q: What is the term for using machines instead of people? A: Automation
Q: What are the living parts of the Earth called? A: Biosphere
Q: What does the ‘biosphere’ refer to? A: Plants & animals
Q: What is it called when acidic water degrades a coral reef? A: Bleaching
Q: What is the theory that a growing population will meet its needs? A: Boserupian Theory
Q: What is the theory that population growth causes societies to collapse? A: Malthusian Theory
Q: What do we call land that used to be for industrial purposes? A: Brownfield
Q: What is the land left behind after buildings are demolished? A: Derelict
Q: What kind of area is a city? A: Urban
Q: What kind of area is between a city and the countryside? A: Suburban
Q: What kind of area is the countryside? A: Rural
Q: What is rainfall otherwise known as? A: Precipitation
Q: What does ‘precipitation’ refer to? A: Rain
Q: What is the term for when water rises up to form clouds? A: Evaporation
Q: What is the removal of trees otherwise known as? A: Deforestation
Q: What is the term for moving INTO one country from another? A: Immigration
Q: What is the term for moving OUT of one country for another? A: Emigration
Q: What level of occupation involves farming or mining materials? A: Primary
Q: What level of occupation involves making products? A: Secondary
Q: What level of occupation involves selling products? A: Tertiary
Q: What is it called when water loses its oxygen? A: Eutrophication
Q: What is the point at which 2 rivers join called? A: Confluence
Q: What is a small river that joins a larger one called? A: Tributary
Q: What is a river called where its mouth meets the sea? A: Estuary
Q: What does ‘fauna’ refer to? A: Animal life
Q: What is animal life otherwise known as? A: Fauna
Q: What is plant life otherwise known as? A: Flora
Q: What does ‘flora’ refer to? A: Plant life
Q: What does ‘GDP’ stand for? A: Gross Domestic Product
Q: What does ‘GNI’ stand for? A: Gross National Income
Q: What is ‘geology’ the study of? A: Rocks
Q: What kind of region is ‘glacial’? A: Ice
Q: What kind of region has high temperatures but little rain? A: Arid
Q: What kind of land has never been built on before? A: Greenfield
Q: What kind of gas increases the temperature of the atmosphere? A: Greenhouse
Q: What is an animal or plant’s natural home called? A: Habitat
Q: What is the term for part of a coast that protrudes into the sea? A: Headland
Q: What is the term for when water soaks into soil and rocks? A: Infiltration
Q: What is the term for burying waste underground? A: Landfill
Q: What measures a location north or south of the Equator? A: Latitude
Q: What measures a location east or west on the Earth? A: Longitude
Q: What is the imaginary line that divides the Earth called? A: Equator
Q: What is the area north of the Equator called? A: Northern hemisphere
Q: What is the area south of the Equator called? A: Southern hemisphere
Q: What is the gradient of a river from its source to its mouth? A: Long profile
Q: What part of a river is close to the mouth? A: Lower course
Q: What are the bends in a river called? A: Meanders
Q: What are the sand and pebbles deposited by a river called? A: Sediment
Q: What is the term for when soggy soil slides down frozen ground? A: Soilfluction
Q: Which part of a cave rises up from the ground? A: Stalagmite
Q: Which part of a cave hangs down from the ceiling? A: Stalactite
Q: Which type of rock is made by extreme heat and pressure? A: Metamorphic
Q: Which type of rock is made from cool volcanic lava? A: Igneous
Q: Which type of rock is made up of deposited material? A: Sedimentary
Q: What is the capital of Argentina? A: Buenos Aires
Q: What is the capital of Australia? A: Canberra
Q: What is the capital of Austria? A: Vienna
Q: What is the capital of Belgium? A: Brussels
Q: What is the capital of Brazil? A: Brasilia
Q: What is the capital of Bulgaria? A: Sofia
Q: What is the capital of Canada? A: Ottawa
Q: What is the capital of China? A: Beijing
Q: What is the capital of the Czech Republic? A: Prague
Q: What is the capital of Denmark? A: Copenhagen
Q: What is the capital of Egypt? A: Cairo
Q: What is the capital of England? A: London
Q: What is the capital of Ethiopia? A: Addis Ababa
Q: What is the capital of France? A: Paris
Q: What is the capital of Germany? A: Berlin
Q: What is the capital of Greece? A: Athens
Q: What is the capital of India? A: New Dehli
Q: What is the capital of Iran? A: Tehran
Q: What is the capital of Iraq? A: Baghdad
Q: What is the capital of Israel? A: Jerusalem
Q: What is the capital of Italy? A: Rome
Q: What is the capital of Japan? A: Tokyo
Q: What is the capital of Kenya? A: Nairobi
Q: What is the capital of Libya? A: Tripoli
Q: What is the capital of Luxembourg? A: Luxembourg
Q: What is the capital of Malaysia? A: Kuala Lumpur
Q: What is the capital of Mexico? A: Mexico City
Q: What is the capital of the Netherlands? A: Amsterdam
Q: What is the capital of New Zealand? A: Wellington
Q: What is the capital of North Korea? A: Pyongyang
Q: What is the capital of Norway? A: Oslo
Q: What is the capital of Pakistan? A: Islamabad
Q: What is the capital of Poland? A: Warsaw
Q: What is the capital of Portugal? A: Lisbon
Q: What is the capital of Romania? A: Bucharest
Q: What is the capital of Russia? A: Moscow
Q: What is the capital of Samoa? A: Apia
Q: What is the capital of Saudi Arabia? A: Riyadh
Q: What is the capital of South Korea? A: Seoul
Q: What is the capital of Spain? A: Madrid
Q: What is the capital of Sweden? A: Stockholm
Q: What is the capital of Switzerland? A: Bern
Q: What is the capital of Thailand? A: Bangkok
Q: What is the capital of the Ukraine? A: Kiev
Q: What is the capital of the USA? A: Washington
Q: What is the capital of Vietnam? A: Hanoi
Q: What is the capital of Zambia? A: Lusaka
Q: Where would you expect to find ‘Sephardic’ Jews? A: Southern Europe
Q: Where would you expect to find ‘Ashkenazi’ Jews? A: Eastern Europe
Q: What is the largest country in the world? A: Russia
Q: What is the smallest country in the world? A: Vatican
Q: What is the tallest mountain in the world? A: Mount Everest
Geography (2)
Q: What is the longest river in the world? A: Nile
Q: What is the largest ocean in the world? A: Pacific
Q: What is the largest desert in the world? A: Antarctic
Q: What is the largest ocean in the world? A: Pacific
Q: What is the largest desert in the world? A: Antarctic
History (1)
Q: How long ago did the ‘Paleozoic’ era begin? A: 500 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Paleozoic’ era end? A: 250 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Mesozoic’ era begin? A: 250 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Mesozoic’ era end? A: 66 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Cenozoic’ era begin? A: 65 million years
Q: Which geological era are we currently living in? A: Cenozoic Era
Q: How long ago did the ‘Permian’ era begin? A: 300 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Permian’ era end? A: 250 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Triassic’ period begin? A: 250 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Triassic’ period end? A: 200 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Jurassic’ period begin? A: 200 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Jurassic’ period end? A: 145 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Cretaceous’ period begin? A: 145 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Cretaceous’ period end? A: 66 million years
Q: Approximately how long did the ‘Stone Age’ last? A: 3.4 million years
Q: When did the ‘Stone Age’ end? A: 6000 BC
Q: When did the ‘Bronze Age’ begin? A: 3300 BC
Q: When did the ‘Bronze Age’ end? A: 1200 BC
Q: When did the ‘Iron Age’ begin? A: 1200 BC
Q: When was slavery abolished in the British Empire? A: 1833
Q: Who was the first female Prime Minister of the UK? A: Margaret Thatcher
Q: When did Margaret Thatcher become Prime Minister of the UK? A: 1979
Q: When was Elizabeth II coronated as Queen of England? A: 1953
Q: When was Elizabeth I coronated as Queen of England? A: 1559
Q: When did the French Revolution begin? A: 1789
Q: When was the Battle of Waterloo? A: 1815
Q: Who led the French army during the Battle of Waterloo? A: Napoleon Bonaparte
Q: Who led the British army during the Battle of Waterloo? A: Duke of Wellington
Q: When did World War I begin? A: 1914
Q: When did World War I end? A: 1918
Q: When did World War II begin? A: 1939
Q: When did World War II end? A: 1945
Q: When was the United Nations formed? A: 1945
Q: When did the Communist Party assume power in China? A: 1949
Q: When did the Chinese ‘Cultural Revolution’ begin? A: 1966
Q: Who was the founding father of the People’s Republic of China? A: Mao Zedong
Q: When did the UK transfer Hong Kong back to China? A: 1997
Q: When was the ‘Berlin Wall’ demolished? A: 1990
Q: Which country did the ‘Berlin Wall’ divide? A: Germany
Q: Who was the leader of Nazi Germany during World War II? A: Adolf Hitler
Q: When did Adolf Hitler die? A: 1945
Q: How did Adolf Hitler die? A: Suicide
Q: When did Adolf Hitler become leader of Nazi Germany? A: 1934
Q: How many Jews were killed during the Holocaust? A: 6 million
Q: How much did Germany have to pay in reparations after World War I? A: 132 billion gold marks
Q: Which treaty required Germany to pay reparations after World War I? A: Treaty of Versailles
Q: When was the ‘Treaty of Versailles’ signed? A: 1919
Q: What is it called when people from one country take over another? A: Colonization
Q: What is it called when a nation extends its power by taking over others? A: Imperialism
Q: What is it called when many countries are governed by one authority? A: Empire
Q: What is the term for governing without any outside interference? A: Sovereignty
Q: What is a supreme ruler otherwise known as? A: Sovereign
Q: Who was the 1st President of the USA? A: George Washington
Q: When did John F. Kennedy become President of the USA? A: 1961
Q: When did Ronald Reagan become President of the USA? A: 1981
Q: When did Bill Clinton become President of the USA? A: 1993
Q: When did Barack Obama become President of the USA? A: 2009
Q: When did Richard Nixon become President of the USA? A: 1969
Q: Who was the 43rd President of the USA? A: George Bush
Q: Who was the 35th President of the USA? A: John F. Kennedy
Q: When was the ‘Declaration of Independence’ in the USA? A: 1776
Q: When did Protestants separate from the Catholic Church? A: 16th Century
Q: What was it called when Protestants separated from the Catholic Church? A: The Reformation
Q: What is the name of the movement that separated from the Catholic Church? A: Protestant
Q: Who instigated the Protestant movement? A: Martin Luther
Q: When did Christianity divide into Eastern and Western? A: 1054 AD
Q: What was it called when Christianity divided into East and West? A: The Great Schism
Q: What do the letters ‘AD’ stand for? A: Anno Domini
Q: What do the letters ‘BC’ stand for? A: Before Christ
Q: What do the letters ‘BCE’ stand for? A: Before Common Era
Q: What does the name ‘Mahatma’ mean? A: Great Soul
Q: What was Gandhi’s term for non-violent resistance? A: Satyagraha
Q: What does the word ‘Satyagraha’ refer to? A: Truth Force
Q: What did Gandhi protest against in South Africa in 1906? A: Registration cards
Q: How did Gandhi protest against registration cards in South Africa? A: Burnt them
Q: Who was president of the Indian National Congress in 1919? A: Mahatma Gandhi
Q: What was the name of the movement where Indians stopped trading British goods? A: Hartal Movement
Q: How did Indians protest against the Rowlatt Act in 1919? A: Boycotted British goods
Q: What did the British forbid Indians to make in 1930? A: Salt
Q: How did Gandhi protest against British rule in 1943? A: Hunger strike
Q: When did India become independent from British rule? A: 1947
Q: When did Pakistan separate from India? A: 1947
Q: How did Gandhi protest against the war between Hindus and Muslims? A: Fasting
Q: In which year did Gandhi die? A: 1948
Q: What were Gandhi’s last words? A: ‘Oh God’
Q: What was Gandhi’s full name? A: Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
Q: Who was Martin Luther King inspired by? A: Mahatma Gandhi
Q: When was racial segregation in American schools declared illegal? A: 1954
Q: Which child pursued a legal case to attend a white school in 1954? A: Linda Brown
Q: Who was the 1st black student to win a place at Mississippi University in 1962? A: James Meredith
Q: When did James Meredith need security to attend Mississippi University? A: 1962
Q: When did Rosa Parks refuse to give her seat to a white person? A: 1955
Q: Who famously refused to give their seat to a white person? A: Rosa Parks
Q: Who stopped racial segregation on public transport? A: Robert Kennedy
Q: How many people marched on Washington DC in 1963? A: 250,000
Q: When did Martin Luther King give his ‘I have a dream’ speech? A: 1963
Q: When was Martin Luther King assassinated? A: 1968
Q: When did Martin Luther King win the Nobel Peace Prize? A: 1964
Q: When was the ‘Civil Rights Act’ passed? A: 1964
Q: Who led the ‘Million Man March’? A: Louis Farrakhan
Q: When was the ‘Million Man March’? A: 1995
Q: When was the ‘Million Woman March’? A: 1997
Q: When did the ‘Harlem Riot’ take place? A: 1964
Q: When was Malcolm X assassinated? A: 1965
Q: When was Malcolm X’s birth name? A: Malcolm Little
Q: Approximately when was the Prophet Muhammad born? A: 570 AD
Q: Approximately when did the Prophet Muhammad die? A: 632 AD
Q: When did the Prophet Muhammad have his 1st revelation? A: 600 AD
Q: Approximately when was the ‘Battle of Badr’? A: 624 AD
Q: Approximately when was the ‘Battle of Uhud’? A: 625 AD
Q: When did Muslims emigrate from Mecca to Medina? A: 622 AD
Q: When did Muslims take control of Mecca? A: 630 AD
Q: When was the House of Israel invaded by the Assyrians? A: 722 BC
Q: When was the House of Judah invaded by the Babylonians? A: 605 BC
Q: Approximately when did the Kingdom of Israel split? A: 1000 BC
Q: When was the 1st Jewish temple destroyed by the Babylonians? A: 586 BC
Q: When was the Jewish temple destroyed by the Romans? A: 70 AD
Q: When was the state of Israel created? A: 1948 AD
Q: When was the Jewish ‘Mishnah’ put down in writing? A: 200 AD
Q: How long ago did the ‘Paleozoic’ era end? A: 250 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Mesozoic’ era begin? A: 250 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Mesozoic’ era end? A: 66 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Cenozoic’ era begin? A: 65 million years
Q: Which geological era are we currently living in? A: Cenozoic Era
Q: How long ago did the ‘Permian’ era begin? A: 300 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Permian’ era end? A: 250 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Triassic’ period begin? A: 250 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Triassic’ period end? A: 200 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Jurassic’ period begin? A: 200 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Jurassic’ period end? A: 145 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Cretaceous’ period begin? A: 145 million years
Q: How long ago did the ‘Cretaceous’ period end? A: 66 million years
Q: Approximately how long did the ‘Stone Age’ last? A: 3.4 million years
Q: When did the ‘Stone Age’ end? A: 6000 BC
Q: When did the ‘Bronze Age’ begin? A: 3300 BC
Q: When did the ‘Bronze Age’ end? A: 1200 BC
Q: When did the ‘Iron Age’ begin? A: 1200 BC
Q: When was slavery abolished in the British Empire? A: 1833
Q: Who was the first female Prime Minister of the UK? A: Margaret Thatcher
Q: When did Margaret Thatcher become Prime Minister of the UK? A: 1979
Q: When was Elizabeth II coronated as Queen of England? A: 1953
Q: When was Elizabeth I coronated as Queen of England? A: 1559
Q: When did the French Revolution begin? A: 1789
Q: When was the Battle of Waterloo? A: 1815
Q: Who led the French army during the Battle of Waterloo? A: Napoleon Bonaparte
Q: Who led the British army during the Battle of Waterloo? A: Duke of Wellington
Q: When did World War I begin? A: 1914
Q: When did World War I end? A: 1918
Q: When did World War II begin? A: 1939
Q: When did World War II end? A: 1945
Q: When was the United Nations formed? A: 1945
Q: When did the Communist Party assume power in China? A: 1949
Q: When did the Chinese ‘Cultural Revolution’ begin? A: 1966
Q: Who was the founding father of the People’s Republic of China? A: Mao Zedong
Q: When did the UK transfer Hong Kong back to China? A: 1997
Q: When was the ‘Berlin Wall’ demolished? A: 1990
Q: Which country did the ‘Berlin Wall’ divide? A: Germany
Q: Who was the leader of Nazi Germany during World War II? A: Adolf Hitler
Q: When did Adolf Hitler die? A: 1945
Q: How did Adolf Hitler die? A: Suicide
Q: When did Adolf Hitler become leader of Nazi Germany? A: 1934
Q: How many Jews were killed during the Holocaust? A: 6 million
Q: How much did Germany have to pay in reparations after World War I? A: 132 billion gold marks
Q: Which treaty required Germany to pay reparations after World War I? A: Treaty of Versailles
Q: When was the ‘Treaty of Versailles’ signed? A: 1919
Q: What is it called when people from one country take over another? A: Colonization
Q: What is it called when a nation extends its power by taking over others? A: Imperialism
Q: What is it called when many countries are governed by one authority? A: Empire
Q: What is the term for governing without any outside interference? A: Sovereignty
Q: What is a supreme ruler otherwise known as? A: Sovereign
Q: Who was the 1st President of the USA? A: George Washington
Q: When did John F. Kennedy become President of the USA? A: 1961
Q: When did Ronald Reagan become President of the USA? A: 1981
Q: When did Bill Clinton become President of the USA? A: 1993
Q: When did Barack Obama become President of the USA? A: 2009
Q: When did Richard Nixon become President of the USA? A: 1969
Q: Who was the 43rd President of the USA? A: George Bush
Q: Who was the 35th President of the USA? A: John F. Kennedy
Q: When was the ‘Declaration of Independence’ in the USA? A: 1776
Q: When did Protestants separate from the Catholic Church? A: 16th Century
Q: What was it called when Protestants separated from the Catholic Church? A: The Reformation
Q: What is the name of the movement that separated from the Catholic Church? A: Protestant
Q: Who instigated the Protestant movement? A: Martin Luther
Q: When did Christianity divide into Eastern and Western? A: 1054 AD
Q: What was it called when Christianity divided into East and West? A: The Great Schism
Q: What do the letters ‘AD’ stand for? A: Anno Domini
Q: What do the letters ‘BC’ stand for? A: Before Christ
Q: What do the letters ‘BCE’ stand for? A: Before Common Era
Q: What does the name ‘Mahatma’ mean? A: Great Soul
Q: What was Gandhi’s term for non-violent resistance? A: Satyagraha
Q: What does the word ‘Satyagraha’ refer to? A: Truth Force
Q: What did Gandhi protest against in South Africa in 1906? A: Registration cards
Q: How did Gandhi protest against registration cards in South Africa? A: Burnt them
Q: Who was president of the Indian National Congress in 1919? A: Mahatma Gandhi
Q: What was the name of the movement where Indians stopped trading British goods? A: Hartal Movement
Q: How did Indians protest against the Rowlatt Act in 1919? A: Boycotted British goods
Q: What did the British forbid Indians to make in 1930? A: Salt
Q: How did Gandhi protest against British rule in 1943? A: Hunger strike
Q: When did India become independent from British rule? A: 1947
Q: When did Pakistan separate from India? A: 1947
Q: How did Gandhi protest against the war between Hindus and Muslims? A: Fasting
Q: In which year did Gandhi die? A: 1948
Q: What were Gandhi’s last words? A: ‘Oh God’
Q: What was Gandhi’s full name? A: Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi
Q: Who was Martin Luther King inspired by? A: Mahatma Gandhi
Q: When was racial segregation in American schools declared illegal? A: 1954
Q: Which child pursued a legal case to attend a white school in 1954? A: Linda Brown
Q: Who was the 1st black student to win a place at Mississippi University in 1962? A: James Meredith
Q: When did James Meredith need security to attend Mississippi University? A: 1962
Q: When did Rosa Parks refuse to give her seat to a white person? A: 1955
Q: Who famously refused to give their seat to a white person? A: Rosa Parks
Q: Who stopped racial segregation on public transport? A: Robert Kennedy
Q: How many people marched on Washington DC in 1963? A: 250,000
Q: When did Martin Luther King give his ‘I have a dream’ speech? A: 1963
Q: When was Martin Luther King assassinated? A: 1968
Q: When did Martin Luther King win the Nobel Peace Prize? A: 1964
Q: When was the ‘Civil Rights Act’ passed? A: 1964
Q: Who led the ‘Million Man March’? A: Louis Farrakhan
Q: When was the ‘Million Man March’? A: 1995
Q: When was the ‘Million Woman March’? A: 1997
Q: When did the ‘Harlem Riot’ take place? A: 1964
Q: When was Malcolm X assassinated? A: 1965
Q: When was Malcolm X’s birth name? A: Malcolm Little
Q: Approximately when was the Prophet Muhammad born? A: 570 AD
Q: Approximately when did the Prophet Muhammad die? A: 632 AD
Q: When did the Prophet Muhammad have his 1st revelation? A: 600 AD
Q: Approximately when was the ‘Battle of Badr’? A: 624 AD
Q: Approximately when was the ‘Battle of Uhud’? A: 625 AD
Q: When did Muslims emigrate from Mecca to Medina? A: 622 AD
Q: When did Muslims take control of Mecca? A: 630 AD
Q: When was the House of Israel invaded by the Assyrians? A: 722 BC
Q: When was the House of Judah invaded by the Babylonians? A: 605 BC
Q: Approximately when did the Kingdom of Israel split? A: 1000 BC
Q: When was the 1st Jewish temple destroyed by the Babylonians? A: 586 BC
Q: When was the Jewish temple destroyed by the Romans? A: 70 AD
Q: When was the state of Israel created? A: 1948 AD
Q: When was the Jewish ‘Mishnah’ put down in writing? A: 200 AD
History (2)
English (1)
Q: What is the term for when the beginning of words rhyme? A: Alliteration
Q: What is the term for when the middle of words rhyme? A: Assonance
Q: What does ‘copacetic’ mean? A: Satisfactory
Q: What does ‘redoubtable’ mean? A: Formidable
Q: What kind of person is a ‘milquetoast’? A: Timid
Q: What does ‘reactionary’ mean? A: Opposed to change
Q: What kind of word describes something? A: Adjective
Q: What kind of word is an action? A: Verb
Q: What kind of word describes an action? A: Adverb
Q: What kind of word is a person, place or thing? A: Noun
Q: What kind of word implies one thing is better than other? A: Superlative
Q: What is another term for informal language? A: Colloquial
Q: What is the term for when the meaning is not clear? A: Ambiguous
Q: What does ‘ambivalent’ mean? A: Uncertain
Q: What kind of comparison implies one thing is ‘like’ another? A: Similie
Q: What kind of comparison implies one thing ‘is’ another? A: Metaphor
Q: What is the term for when a word sounds like its meaning? A: Onomatapoeia
Q: What is the term for using short, sharp sentences? A: Parataxis
Q: What is the term for using more words than necessary? A: Verbose
Q: What does ‘hyperbole’ mean? A: Exaggerated
Q: How do we describe a book someone writes about themselves? A: Autobiography
Q: How do we describe a book one person writes about another? A: Biography
Q: What does the term ‘aural’ refer to? A: Sounds
Q: What is a revelation at the end of a story called? A: Denouement
Q: What is the term for setting the scene in a story? A: Exposition
Q: What is the beginning of a book called? A: Prologue
Q: What is the last part of a book called? A: Epilogue
Q: How many syllables are there in iambic pentameter? A: 10
Q: What is the term for when a character speaks alone? A: Monologue
Q: What is the term for when two characters converse? A: Dialogue
Q: Who is the voice that tells a story? A: Narrator
Q: What is the term for giving something human qualities? A: Personify
Q: What kind of letters are A, E, I, O, U? A: Vowels
Q: Who is a ‘soliloquy’ aimed at? A: The audience
Q: What are the sections of a poem called? A: Stanzas
Q: What is the term for using the wrong word? A: Malaprop
Q: What is the term for regular text that doesn’t rhyme? A: Prose
Q: What kind of word has the same meaning as another? A: Synonym
Q: What kind of word has the opposite meaning of another? A: Antonym
Q: Which word seems the same as another but has a different meaning? A: Homonym
Q: Which word looks the same as another despite being different? A: Homograph
Q: Which word sounds the same as another despite being different? A: Homophone
Q: What is it called when words only sound right in a certain order? A: Collocation
Q: What kind of word is made from the letters of other words? A: Acronym
Q: What kind of word is made from parts of other words? A: Portmanteau
Q: What is the term for when a word has several similar meanings? A: Polysemy
Q: What does ‘etymology’ refer to? A: Origin of words
Q: What kind of word is the same forwards or backwards? A: Palindrome
Q: What kind of word looks the same upside down? A: Ambigram
Q: What kind of poem spells out a word with each line? A: Acrostic
Q: What is the term for something that helps you remember? A: Mnemonic
Q: What is a more polite way of saying something controversial? A: Euphemism
Q: What kind of word could also be the opposite of itself? A: Antagonym
Q: What kind of phrase becomes meaningless when used too often? A: Cliche
Q: Who wrote ‘Pride & Prejudice’? A: Jane Austen
Q: Who wrote ‘A Clockwork Orange’? A: Anthony Burgess
Q: Who wrote ‘Jane Eyre’? A: Charlotte Bronte
Q: Who wrote ‘Captain Corelli’s Mandolin’? A: Louis De Bernieres
Q: Who wrote ‘Captain Corelli’s Mandolin’? A: Louis De Bernieres
Q: Who wrote ‘My Family and Other Animals’? A: Gerald Durrell
Q: Who wrote ‘The Virgin Suicides’? A: Jeffrey Eugenides
Q: Who wrote ‘The Beach’? A: Alex Garland
Q: Who wrote ‘Lord Of The Flies’? A: William Golding
Q: Who wrote ‘To Kill A Mockingbird’? A: Harper Lee
Q: Who wrote ‘1984’? A: George Orwell
Q: Who wrote ‘Brave New World’? A: Aldous Huxley
Q: Who wrote ‘Paradise Lost’? A: John Milton
Q: Who wrote ‘The Catcher In The Rye’? A: JD Salinger
Q: Who wrote ‘Of Mice And Men’? A: John Steinbeck
Q: Who wrote ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’? A: Tennessee Williams
Q: Who wrote ‘War and Peace’? A: Leo Tolstoy
Q: Who wrote ‘Anna Karenina’? A: Leo Tolstoy
Q: Who wrote ‘The Brothers Karamazov’? A: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Q: Who wrote ‘Crime and Punishment’? A: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Q: Who wrote ‘The History Boys’? A: Alan Bennett
Q: Who wrote ‘The Rivals’? A: Richard Sheridan
Q: Who wrote ‘The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn’? A: Mark Twain
Q: Who wrote ‘Canterbury Tales’? A: Geoffrey Chaucer
Q: Who wrote ‘The Divine Comedy’? A: Dante Alighieri
Q: Who wrote ‘Faust’? A: Johann Wolfgang
Q: Who wrote ‘Great Expectations’? A: Charles Dickens
Q: Who wrote ‘Hard Times’? A: Charles Dickens
Q: Who wrote ‘A Christmas Carol’? A: Charles Dickens
Q: Who wrote ‘Oliver Twist’? A: Charles Dickens
Q: Who wrote ‘Gulliver’s Travels’? A: Jonathan Swift
Q: Who wrote ‘Hamlet’? A: William Shakespeare
Q: Who wrote ‘Twelfth Night’? A: William Shakespeare
Q: Who wrote ‘Much Ado About Nothing’? A: William Shakespeare
Q: Who wrote ‘Othello’? A: William Shakespeare
Q: Who wrote ‘The Iliad’? A: Homer
Q: Who wrote ‘The Odyssey’? A: Homer
Q: Who wrote ‘Lolita’? A: Vladimir Nabokov
Q: Who wrote ‘Moby ♥♥♥♥’? A: Herman Melville
Q: Who wrote ‘Ulysses’? A: James Joyce
Q: Who wrote ‘Wuthering Heights’? A: Emily Bronte
Q: Who wrote ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf’? A: Edward Albee
Q: Who wrote ‘Journey To The Center Of The Earth’? A: Jules Verne
Q: Who wrote ‘Treasure Island’? A: Robert Louis Stevenson
Q: What is the term for a word that looks like what it is? A: Calligram
Q: What is the term for reversing the word order of a phrase? A: Antimetabole
Q: What is the term for repeating the root of a word? A: Polyptoton
Q: What is the term for beginning a sentence with the same word that ended the previous one? A: Anadiplosis
Q: What is the term for beginning each sentence with the same word or phrase? A: Anaphora
Q: What is the term for repeating the same word or phrase? A: Epizeuxis
Q: What is the term for beginning and ending a sentence with the same word? A: Epanalepsis
Q: What is the term for contrasting two opposing ideas in the same sentence? A: Antithesis
Q: What is the term for removing conjunctions from a sentence? A: Asyndeton
Q: What is the term for using words in the wrong order? A: Anastrophe
Q: What is the term for a sentence with no verbs? A: Scesis Onomaton
Q: What is the term for a sentence of just 3 words? A: Tricolon
Q: What is the term for when the middle of words rhyme? A: Assonance
Q: What does ‘copacetic’ mean? A: Satisfactory
Q: What does ‘redoubtable’ mean? A: Formidable
Q: What kind of person is a ‘milquetoast’? A: Timid
Q: What does ‘reactionary’ mean? A: Opposed to change
Q: What kind of word describes something? A: Adjective
Q: What kind of word is an action? A: Verb
Q: What kind of word describes an action? A: Adverb
Q: What kind of word is a person, place or thing? A: Noun
Q: What kind of word implies one thing is better than other? A: Superlative
Q: What is another term for informal language? A: Colloquial
Q: What is the term for when the meaning is not clear? A: Ambiguous
Q: What does ‘ambivalent’ mean? A: Uncertain
Q: What kind of comparison implies one thing is ‘like’ another? A: Similie
Q: What kind of comparison implies one thing ‘is’ another? A: Metaphor
Q: What is the term for when a word sounds like its meaning? A: Onomatapoeia
Q: What is the term for using short, sharp sentences? A: Parataxis
Q: What is the term for using more words than necessary? A: Verbose
Q: What does ‘hyperbole’ mean? A: Exaggerated
Q: How do we describe a book someone writes about themselves? A: Autobiography
Q: How do we describe a book one person writes about another? A: Biography
Q: What does the term ‘aural’ refer to? A: Sounds
Q: What is a revelation at the end of a story called? A: Denouement
Q: What is the term for setting the scene in a story? A: Exposition
Q: What is the beginning of a book called? A: Prologue
Q: What is the last part of a book called? A: Epilogue
Q: How many syllables are there in iambic pentameter? A: 10
Q: What is the term for when a character speaks alone? A: Monologue
Q: What is the term for when two characters converse? A: Dialogue
Q: Who is the voice that tells a story? A: Narrator
Q: What is the term for giving something human qualities? A: Personify
Q: What kind of letters are A, E, I, O, U? A: Vowels
Q: Who is a ‘soliloquy’ aimed at? A: The audience
Q: What are the sections of a poem called? A: Stanzas
Q: What is the term for using the wrong word? A: Malaprop
Q: What is the term for regular text that doesn’t rhyme? A: Prose
Q: What kind of word has the same meaning as another? A: Synonym
Q: What kind of word has the opposite meaning of another? A: Antonym
Q: Which word seems the same as another but has a different meaning? A: Homonym
Q: Which word looks the same as another despite being different? A: Homograph
Q: Which word sounds the same as another despite being different? A: Homophone
Q: What is it called when words only sound right in a certain order? A: Collocation
Q: What kind of word is made from the letters of other words? A: Acronym
Q: What kind of word is made from parts of other words? A: Portmanteau
Q: What is the term for when a word has several similar meanings? A: Polysemy
Q: What does ‘etymology’ refer to? A: Origin of words
Q: What kind of word is the same forwards or backwards? A: Palindrome
Q: What kind of word looks the same upside down? A: Ambigram
Q: What kind of poem spells out a word with each line? A: Acrostic
Q: What is the term for something that helps you remember? A: Mnemonic
Q: What is a more polite way of saying something controversial? A: Euphemism
Q: What kind of word could also be the opposite of itself? A: Antagonym
Q: What kind of phrase becomes meaningless when used too often? A: Cliche
Q: Who wrote ‘Pride & Prejudice’? A: Jane Austen
Q: Who wrote ‘A Clockwork Orange’? A: Anthony Burgess
Q: Who wrote ‘Jane Eyre’? A: Charlotte Bronte
Q: Who wrote ‘Captain Corelli’s Mandolin’? A: Louis De Bernieres
Q: Who wrote ‘Captain Corelli’s Mandolin’? A: Louis De Bernieres
Q: Who wrote ‘My Family and Other Animals’? A: Gerald Durrell
Q: Who wrote ‘The Virgin Suicides’? A: Jeffrey Eugenides
Q: Who wrote ‘The Beach’? A: Alex Garland
Q: Who wrote ‘Lord Of The Flies’? A: William Golding
Q: Who wrote ‘To Kill A Mockingbird’? A: Harper Lee
Q: Who wrote ‘1984’? A: George Orwell
Q: Who wrote ‘Brave New World’? A: Aldous Huxley
Q: Who wrote ‘Paradise Lost’? A: John Milton
Q: Who wrote ‘The Catcher In The Rye’? A: JD Salinger
Q: Who wrote ‘Of Mice And Men’? A: John Steinbeck
Q: Who wrote ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’? A: Tennessee Williams
Q: Who wrote ‘War and Peace’? A: Leo Tolstoy
Q: Who wrote ‘Anna Karenina’? A: Leo Tolstoy
Q: Who wrote ‘The Brothers Karamazov’? A: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Q: Who wrote ‘Crime and Punishment’? A: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Q: Who wrote ‘The History Boys’? A: Alan Bennett
Q: Who wrote ‘The Rivals’? A: Richard Sheridan
Q: Who wrote ‘The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn’? A: Mark Twain
Q: Who wrote ‘Canterbury Tales’? A: Geoffrey Chaucer
Q: Who wrote ‘The Divine Comedy’? A: Dante Alighieri
Q: Who wrote ‘Faust’? A: Johann Wolfgang
Q: Who wrote ‘Great Expectations’? A: Charles Dickens
Q: Who wrote ‘Hard Times’? A: Charles Dickens
Q: Who wrote ‘A Christmas Carol’? A: Charles Dickens
Q: Who wrote ‘Oliver Twist’? A: Charles Dickens
Q: Who wrote ‘Gulliver’s Travels’? A: Jonathan Swift
Q: Who wrote ‘Hamlet’? A: William Shakespeare
Q: Who wrote ‘Twelfth Night’? A: William Shakespeare
Q: Who wrote ‘Much Ado About Nothing’? A: William Shakespeare
Q: Who wrote ‘Othello’? A: William Shakespeare
Q: Who wrote ‘The Iliad’? A: Homer
Q: Who wrote ‘The Odyssey’? A: Homer
Q: Who wrote ‘Lolita’? A: Vladimir Nabokov
Q: Who wrote ‘Moby ♥♥♥♥’? A: Herman Melville
Q: Who wrote ‘Ulysses’? A: James Joyce
Q: Who wrote ‘Wuthering Heights’? A: Emily Bronte
Q: Who wrote ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf’? A: Edward Albee
Q: Who wrote ‘Journey To The Center Of The Earth’? A: Jules Verne
Q: Who wrote ‘Treasure Island’? A: Robert Louis Stevenson
Q: What is the term for a word that looks like what it is? A: Calligram
Q: What is the term for reversing the word order of a phrase? A: Antimetabole
Q: What is the term for repeating the root of a word? A: Polyptoton
Q: What is the term for beginning a sentence with the same word that ended the previous one? A: Anadiplosis
Q: What is the term for beginning each sentence with the same word or phrase? A: Anaphora
Q: What is the term for repeating the same word or phrase? A: Epizeuxis
Q: What is the term for beginning and ending a sentence with the same word? A: Epanalepsis
Q: What is the term for contrasting two opposing ideas in the same sentence? A: Antithesis
Q: What is the term for removing conjunctions from a sentence? A: Asyndeton
Q: What is the term for using words in the wrong order? A: Anastrophe
Q: What is the term for a sentence with no verbs? A: Scesis Onomaton
Q: What is the term for a sentence of just 3 words? A: Tricolon
English (2)
Science (1)
Q: What is the chemical symbol for gold? A: Au
Q: What is the chemical symbol for tungsten? A: W
Q: What is the chemical symbol for lead? A: Pb
Q: What is the upper left number on a chemical symbol? A: Nucleons
Q: What is the lower left number on a chemical symbol? A: Protons
Q: What is the upper right number on a chemical symbol? A: Ionization
Q: What is the lower right number on a chemical symbol? A: Number of atoms
Q: What does a dot to the right of a chemical symbol mean? A: Radical
Q: What measures a solution’s ability to neutralize acid? A: Alkalinity
Q: Above what level on the pH scale is a solution considered ‘alkaline’? A: 7
Q: Below what level on the pH scale is a solution considered ‘acidic’? A: 7
Q: Below what is the pH number of water? A: 7
Q: What is the term for a solution made in water? A: Aqueous
Q: What is the term for the liquid a substance is dissolved in? A: Solvent
Q: What is the term for a substance that is dissolved in liquid? A: Solute
Q: What is a mixture of different metals called? A: Alloy
Q: What is the smallest particle that can be identified as an element? A: Atom
Q: Which part of an atom has a positive charge? A: Proton
Q: Which part of an atom has a negative charge? A: Electron
Q: Which part of an atom has no charge? A: Neutron
Q: Which part of an atom has the largest mass? A: Neutron
Q: What is the centre of an atom called? A: Nucleus
Q: What is the boiling point of water? A: 100 degrees (C)
Q: What is an atom where electrons are not equal to protons? A: Ion
Q: What kind of ion has a net positive charge? A: Cation
Q: What kind of ion has a net negative charge? A: Anion
Q: What kind of bond holds 2 opposite ions together? A: Ionic
Q: What kind of bond has 2 atoms sharing a pair of electrons? A: Covalent
Q: What kind of bond is formed by delocalized electrons? A: Metallic
Q: What is the term for a group of atoms? A: Molecule
Q: What is the term for when particles spread out? A: Diffusion
Q: Which gas could turn limewater milky white? A: Carbon dioxide
Q: What colour would Carbon Dioxide change limewater to? A: White
Q: Which gas is produced by burning carbon in the air? A: Carbon dioxide
Q: Which gas is produced by burning fuel with no air? A: Carbon monoxide
Q: What does a ‘catalytic converter’ turn Nitrogen Oxide into? A: Nitrogen
Q: What does a ‘catalytic converter’ turn Carbon Monoxide into? A: Carbon dioxide
Q: What is the term for when new substances come from a change? A: Chemical reaction
Q: What is the term for separating coloured materials? A: Chromatography
Q: What is another term for burning fuel? A: Combustion
Q: What kind of substance is made up of different atoms? A: Compound
Q: What is the term for when a substance breaks down into several others? A: Decomposition
Q: What is mass divided by volume otherwise known as? A: Density
Q: What is the term for separating a liquid from its solution? A: Distillation
Q: What kind of change passes electricity through a substance? A: Electrolysis
Q: What is a substance composed of only one type of atom? A: Element
Q: What is the term for removing solids from a liquid? A: Filtration
Q: What is the freezing point of water? A: 0 degrees (C)
Q: Which state of matter has particles far apart? A: Gas
Q: Which state of matter has particles tight together? A: Solid
Q: What colour would litmus turn in acid? A: Red
Q: What colour would litmus turn in alkali? A: Blue
Q: What colour would phenolphthalein turn in alkali? A: Pink
Q: What is a substance that can be used to make metal called? A: Ore
Q: What kind of substance only has hydrogen and carbon atoms? A: Alkane
Q: What is it called when oxygen is added to a substance? A: Oxidation
Q: What is the term for removing oxygen from a substance? A: Reduction
Q: What did mercury used to be known as? A: Quicksilver
Q: What happens when iron is exposed to water and oxygen? A: Rust
Q: What is the term for turning base metals into gold? A: Alchemy
Q: What is a metal that is resistant to corrosion called? A: Noble metal
Q: What is a common and inexpensive metal called? A: Base metal
Q: What is water in the form of a gas known as? A: Vapour
Q: What is ‘plasma’ made of? A: Ions
Q: What is the term for breathing in and out? A: Respiration
Q: What does respiration turn oxygen into? A: Carbon dioxide
Q: What kind of respiration requires oxygen? A: Aerobic
Q: What kind of respiration does not use oxygen? A: Anaerobic
Q: What is a rock made from the remains of an animal called? A: Fossil
Q: What is it called when plants turn carbon dioxide into oxygen? A: Photosynthesis
Q: What does ‘photosynthesis’ turn Carbon Dioxide into? A: Oxygen
Q: What does ‘photosynthesis’ turn water into? A: Glucose
Q: What is the term for when the body sweats out fluids? A: Perspiration
Q: What is the term for water entering the body through skin? A: Osmosis
Q: What is the term for maintaining water levels in blood? A: Osmoregulation
Q: What is the term for when the body maintains itself? A: Homeostasis
Q: What is the process of moving particles from low concentration to high? A: Active transport
Q: What is the term for when an organism changes to suit its environment? A: Adaptation
Q: What is the term for when an organism changes to suit its environment? A: Adaptation
Q: What is a life form made up of different parts called? A: Organism
Q: What is the part of a cell that contains DNA called? A: Chromosome
Q: How many pairs of chromosomes does a human have? A: 23
Q: What is a segment of DNA known as? A: Gene
Q: What does ‘DNA’ stand for? A: Deoxyribo Nucleic Acid
Q: What is the process whereby 1 cell divides into 2? A: Mitosis
Q: What is a cell that fuses with another to create new life? A: Gamete
Q: What kind of reproduction does not require gametes? A: Asexual
Q: What is the male ‘gamete’ otherwise known as? A: Sperm
Q: What is a female egg otherwise known as? A: Ovum
Q: What is the cell formed at the moment of fertilization? A: Zygote
Q: What is a baby called before it is born? A: Foetus
Q: What is a developing baby called in the early stages? A: Embryo
Q: What are different versions of the same gene known as? A: Alleles
Q: What a cell called when it has 2 identical alleles? A: Homozygous
Q: What a cell called when it has 2 different alleles? A: Heterozygous
Q: What is the term for an allele that always shows? A: Dominant
Q: What kind of allele only shows when there are 2 copies of it? A: Recessive
Q: What is the complete genetic information of an organism known as? A: Genome
Q: What is a drug that removes pain known as? A: Anaesthetic
Q: What is a drug that removes pain known as? A: Anaesthetic
Q: What is a nerve cell otherwise known as? A: Neurone
Q: What is the connection between 2 neurones called? A: Synapse
Q: What is the term for when 2 species need each other to survive? A: Symbiosis
Q: What is a species that benefits at the expense of another? A: Parasite
Q: What is a thin blood vessel called? A: Capillary
Q: Which blood vessels carry blood away from the heart? A: Artery
Q: What is a small artery known as? A: Arteriole
Q: What is a small vein known as? A: Venule
Q: What kind of cell has 2 copies of each chromosome? A: Diploid
Q: What is a living organism known as? A: Biotic
Q: What is a non-living environment known as? A: Abiotic
Q: What is the term for when waste matter is expelled from the anus? A: Egestion
Q: What is the term for when waste matter leaves the body? A: Excretion
Q: What are the chemical transformations that sustain life? A: Metabolism
Q: What is a substance that speeds up a chemical reaction? A: Catalyst
Q: What is a substance that speeds up a biological process? A: Enzyme
Q: What are molecules known as before an enzyme converts them? A: Substrates
Q: What is the term for when part of the body wastes away? A: Atrophy
Q: What is it called when an environment produces abundant life? A: Eutrophy
Q: What are contractions in the intestines called? A: Peristalsis
Q: What is the male part of a plant called? A: Anther
Q: What is the chemical symbol for tungsten? A: W
Q: What is the chemical symbol for lead? A: Pb
Q: What is the upper left number on a chemical symbol? A: Nucleons
Q: What is the lower left number on a chemical symbol? A: Protons
Q: What is the upper right number on a chemical symbol? A: Ionization
Q: What is the lower right number on a chemical symbol? A: Number of atoms
Q: What does a dot to the right of a chemical symbol mean? A: Radical
Q: What measures a solution’s ability to neutralize acid? A: Alkalinity
Q: Above what level on the pH scale is a solution considered ‘alkaline’? A: 7
Q: Below what level on the pH scale is a solution considered ‘acidic’? A: 7
Q: Below what is the pH number of water? A: 7
Q: What is the term for a solution made in water? A: Aqueous
Q: What is the term for the liquid a substance is dissolved in? A: Solvent
Q: What is the term for a substance that is dissolved in liquid? A: Solute
Q: What is a mixture of different metals called? A: Alloy
Q: What is the smallest particle that can be identified as an element? A: Atom
Q: Which part of an atom has a positive charge? A: Proton
Q: Which part of an atom has a negative charge? A: Electron
Q: Which part of an atom has no charge? A: Neutron
Q: Which part of an atom has the largest mass? A: Neutron
Q: What is the centre of an atom called? A: Nucleus
Q: What is the boiling point of water? A: 100 degrees (C)
Q: What is an atom where electrons are not equal to protons? A: Ion
Q: What kind of ion has a net positive charge? A: Cation
Q: What kind of ion has a net negative charge? A: Anion
Q: What kind of bond holds 2 opposite ions together? A: Ionic
Q: What kind of bond has 2 atoms sharing a pair of electrons? A: Covalent
Q: What kind of bond is formed by delocalized electrons? A: Metallic
Q: What is the term for a group of atoms? A: Molecule
Q: What is the term for when particles spread out? A: Diffusion
Q: Which gas could turn limewater milky white? A: Carbon dioxide
Q: What colour would Carbon Dioxide change limewater to? A: White
Q: Which gas is produced by burning carbon in the air? A: Carbon dioxide
Q: Which gas is produced by burning fuel with no air? A: Carbon monoxide
Q: What does a ‘catalytic converter’ turn Nitrogen Oxide into? A: Nitrogen
Q: What does a ‘catalytic converter’ turn Carbon Monoxide into? A: Carbon dioxide
Q: What is the term for when new substances come from a change? A: Chemical reaction
Q: What is the term for separating coloured materials? A: Chromatography
Q: What is another term for burning fuel? A: Combustion
Q: What kind of substance is made up of different atoms? A: Compound
Q: What is the term for when a substance breaks down into several others? A: Decomposition
Q: What is mass divided by volume otherwise known as? A: Density
Q: What is the term for separating a liquid from its solution? A: Distillation
Q: What kind of change passes electricity through a substance? A: Electrolysis
Q: What is a substance composed of only one type of atom? A: Element
Q: What is the term for removing solids from a liquid? A: Filtration
Q: What is the freezing point of water? A: 0 degrees (C)
Q: Which state of matter has particles far apart? A: Gas
Q: Which state of matter has particles tight together? A: Solid
Q: What colour would litmus turn in acid? A: Red
Q: What colour would litmus turn in alkali? A: Blue
Q: What colour would phenolphthalein turn in alkali? A: Pink
Q: What is a substance that can be used to make metal called? A: Ore
Q: What kind of substance only has hydrogen and carbon atoms? A: Alkane
Q: What is it called when oxygen is added to a substance? A: Oxidation
Q: What is the term for removing oxygen from a substance? A: Reduction
Q: What did mercury used to be known as? A: Quicksilver
Q: What happens when iron is exposed to water and oxygen? A: Rust
Q: What is the term for turning base metals into gold? A: Alchemy
Q: What is a metal that is resistant to corrosion called? A: Noble metal
Q: What is a common and inexpensive metal called? A: Base metal
Q: What is water in the form of a gas known as? A: Vapour
Q: What is ‘plasma’ made of? A: Ions
Q: What is the term for breathing in and out? A: Respiration
Q: What does respiration turn oxygen into? A: Carbon dioxide
Q: What kind of respiration requires oxygen? A: Aerobic
Q: What kind of respiration does not use oxygen? A: Anaerobic
Q: What is a rock made from the remains of an animal called? A: Fossil
Q: What is it called when plants turn carbon dioxide into oxygen? A: Photosynthesis
Q: What does ‘photosynthesis’ turn Carbon Dioxide into? A: Oxygen
Q: What does ‘photosynthesis’ turn water into? A: Glucose
Q: What is the term for when the body sweats out fluids? A: Perspiration
Q: What is the term for water entering the body through skin? A: Osmosis
Q: What is the term for maintaining water levels in blood? A: Osmoregulation
Q: What is the term for when the body maintains itself? A: Homeostasis
Q: What is the process of moving particles from low concentration to high? A: Active transport
Q: What is the term for when an organism changes to suit its environment? A: Adaptation
Q: What is the term for when an organism changes to suit its environment? A: Adaptation
Q: What is a life form made up of different parts called? A: Organism
Q: What is the part of a cell that contains DNA called? A: Chromosome
Q: How many pairs of chromosomes does a human have? A: 23
Q: What is a segment of DNA known as? A: Gene
Q: What does ‘DNA’ stand for? A: Deoxyribo Nucleic Acid
Q: What is the process whereby 1 cell divides into 2? A: Mitosis
Q: What is a cell that fuses with another to create new life? A: Gamete
Q: What kind of reproduction does not require gametes? A: Asexual
Q: What is the male ‘gamete’ otherwise known as? A: Sperm
Q: What is a female egg otherwise known as? A: Ovum
Q: What is the cell formed at the moment of fertilization? A: Zygote
Q: What is a baby called before it is born? A: Foetus
Q: What is a developing baby called in the early stages? A: Embryo
Q: What are different versions of the same gene known as? A: Alleles
Q: What a cell called when it has 2 identical alleles? A: Homozygous
Q: What a cell called when it has 2 different alleles? A: Heterozygous
Q: What is the term for an allele that always shows? A: Dominant
Q: What kind of allele only shows when there are 2 copies of it? A: Recessive
Q: What is the complete genetic information of an organism known as? A: Genome
Q: What is a drug that removes pain known as? A: Anaesthetic
Q: What is a drug that removes pain known as? A: Anaesthetic
Q: What is a nerve cell otherwise known as? A: Neurone
Q: What is the connection between 2 neurones called? A: Synapse
Q: What is the term for when 2 species need each other to survive? A: Symbiosis
Q: What is a species that benefits at the expense of another? A: Parasite
Q: What is a thin blood vessel called? A: Capillary
Q: Which blood vessels carry blood away from the heart? A: Artery
Q: What is a small artery known as? A: Arteriole
Q: What is a small vein known as? A: Venule
Q: What kind of cell has 2 copies of each chromosome? A: Diploid
Q: What is a living organism known as? A: Biotic
Q: What is a non-living environment known as? A: Abiotic
Q: What is the term for when waste matter is expelled from the anus? A: Egestion
Q: What is the term for when waste matter leaves the body? A: Excretion
Q: What are the chemical transformations that sustain life? A: Metabolism
Q: What is a substance that speeds up a chemical reaction? A: Catalyst
Q: What is a substance that speeds up a biological process? A: Enzyme
Q: What are molecules known as before an enzyme converts them? A: Substrates
Q: What is the term for when part of the body wastes away? A: Atrophy
Q: What is it called when an environment produces abundant life? A: Eutrophy
Q: What are contractions in the intestines called? A: Peristalsis
Q: What is the male part of a plant called? A: Anther
Science (2)
Q: What is the female part of a plant called? A: Stigma
Q: What are a group of similar organisms otherwise known as? A: Species
Q: What are cells that work together to perform a specific function? A: Tissue
Q: What are the pores on a leaf otherwise known as? A: Stomata
Q: What is it called when water leaves a plant? A: Transpiration
Q: At which temperature would atoms stop vibrating? A: Absolute zero
Q: What is the term for increasing speed? A: Acceleration
Q: What is the term for decreasing speed? A: Deceleration
Q: What is the term for movement in a particular direction? A: Displacement
Q: Which device is used to measure electrical current? A: Ammeter
Q: Which device is used to measure electromotive force? A: Voltmeter
Q: What is the flow of electricity called? A: Current
Q: What is electrical current measured in? A: Amperes
Q: What is electrical charge measured in? A: Coulombs
Q: What is the gas and dust around a comet called? A: Coma
Q: What is the term for something electricity can flow through? A: Conductor
Q: What is the term for something electricity cannot flow through? A: Insulator
Q: What is a pattern of stars called? A: Constellation
Q: What is the term for splitting an atom? A: Fission
Q: What is it called when nuclei join to form a larger nucleus? A: Fusion
Q: What is it called when 2 surfaces rub against each other? A: Friction
Q: What is frequency measured in? A: Hertz
Q: How many times does a frequency of 44,100Hz occur per second? A: 44,100
Q: How much energy is in a kilowatt-hour? A: 3.6 megajoules
Q: What is the distance travelled in a year at the speed of light? A: Light year
Q: How is the amount of matter in an object measured? A: Mass
Q: What is the name of the galaxy Earth belongs to? A: Milky Way
Q: Roughly how many stars are in the Milky Way? A: 100 billion
Q: What kind of force can be attractive or repulsive? A: Magnetism
Q: What is force measured in? A: Newton
Q: How much force is required to move 1kg 1m/s/s? A: 1 N
Q: What is electrical resistance measured in? A: Ohms
Q: What is the formula for measuring voltage? A: Amps x Ohms
Q: What does Amps x Ohms measure? A: Voltage
Q: What is electrical power measured in? A: Watts
Q: What is the amount of energy transferred per second known as? A: Power
Q: What is the term for one thing that orbits another? A: Satellite
Q: What is the formula for measuring speed? A: Distance / Time
Q: What does Distance / Time measure? A: Speed
Q: What is the term for speed in a specific direction? A: Velocity
Q: What does Displacement / Time measure? A: Velocity
Q: What is the force of gravity on a mass otherwise known as? A: Weight
Q: What is the formula for measuring weight? A: Mass x Gravity
Q: What is the term for when a force makes something move? A: Work
Q: What are a group of similar organisms otherwise known as? A: Species
Q: What are cells that work together to perform a specific function? A: Tissue
Q: What are the pores on a leaf otherwise known as? A: Stomata
Q: What is it called when water leaves a plant? A: Transpiration
Q: At which temperature would atoms stop vibrating? A: Absolute zero
Q: What is the term for increasing speed? A: Acceleration
Q: What is the term for decreasing speed? A: Deceleration
Q: What is the term for movement in a particular direction? A: Displacement
Q: Which device is used to measure electrical current? A: Ammeter
Q: Which device is used to measure electromotive force? A: Voltmeter
Q: What is the flow of electricity called? A: Current
Q: What is electrical current measured in? A: Amperes
Q: What is electrical charge measured in? A: Coulombs
Q: What is the gas and dust around a comet called? A: Coma
Q: What is the term for something electricity can flow through? A: Conductor
Q: What is the term for something electricity cannot flow through? A: Insulator
Q: What is a pattern of stars called? A: Constellation
Q: What is the term for splitting an atom? A: Fission
Q: What is it called when nuclei join to form a larger nucleus? A: Fusion
Q: What is it called when 2 surfaces rub against each other? A: Friction
Q: What is frequency measured in? A: Hertz
Q: How many times does a frequency of 44,100Hz occur per second? A: 44,100
Q: How much energy is in a kilowatt-hour? A: 3.6 megajoules
Q: What is the distance travelled in a year at the speed of light? A: Light year
Q: How is the amount of matter in an object measured? A: Mass
Q: What is the name of the galaxy Earth belongs to? A: Milky Way
Q: Roughly how many stars are in the Milky Way? A: 100 billion
Q: What kind of force can be attractive or repulsive? A: Magnetism
Q: What is force measured in? A: Newton
Q: How much force is required to move 1kg 1m/s/s? A: 1 N
Q: What is electrical resistance measured in? A: Ohms
Q: What is the formula for measuring voltage? A: Amps x Ohms
Q: What does Amps x Ohms measure? A: Voltage
Q: What is electrical power measured in? A: Watts
Q: What is the amount of energy transferred per second known as? A: Power
Q: What is the term for one thing that orbits another? A: Satellite
Q: What is the formula for measuring speed? A: Distance / Time
Q: What does Distance / Time measure? A: Speed
Q: What is the term for speed in a specific direction? A: Velocity
Q: What does Displacement / Time measure? A: Velocity
Q: What is the force of gravity on a mass otherwise known as? A: Weight
Q: What is the formula for measuring weight? A: Mass x Gravity
Q: What is the term for when a force makes something move? A: Work
And that wraps up our share on Old School: Answers Cheat Sheet. If you have any additional insights or tips to contribute, don’t hesitate to drop a comment below. For a more in-depth read, you can refer to the original article here by GamingMaster, who deserves all the credit. Happy gaming!