Can you name the countries of the world that have the greatest number of venomous species that are reported to cause serious injury or death to humans.
Ovid is retelling some Greek legends in this part of the Met., and in this story he refers to "Tritonia", an obscure-ish epithet for Athena. So yeah, it's a Greek legend.
the story of arachne is Greek and even if you were to claim it is roman you would have to put Minerva instead of Athena as Minerva is the Roman form of Athena. It is a Greek story however as you claimed that the source is Roman, the original is Greek while the Roman source is the well known one because of Romans influence
As an Australian, I always find it kind of hilarious to hear the ancient Egyptians considered the ibis to be sacred. Here we have a name for them: bin chickens.
Yeah. I remember in primary school in Australia, we'd sit down for lunch and a bin chook would just unnervingly stare at us as we were eating. They didn't seem all that sacred then.
Would you consider accepting "albatros", with just one S? That is how it is spelled in many languages (including French, German...). It was my first guess, but it didn't occur to me to add an extra "S", especially since alternative spellings are often accepted, even when there's no linguistic reason for it. Many thanks!
Fun fact. People in the Middle ages actually didn't confuse unicorn horn for a narwhal tusk. They knew very well they are from different animals. "Unicornu verum" was a relatively cheap narwhal tusk, "unicornu fossile" was much more expensive and rare, a horn of an actual unicorn.
Another fun fact. Yes, unicorns were actually a real animal. It's scientifical name is "Elasmotherium sibiricum" and it's a type of an ice age rhino. It is not known when it went extinct, there is even a script from an arabian explorer from 921AD that mention it being still alive. Even if you don't believe that, there is no doubt people met it and passed stories and legends about it for generations. And they were also finding it's bones and horns and using them as medicine all throught the Middle ages. The "horse with a narwhal tusk" misconception only came to be in 1558 in a book "Historia animalium" from Conrad Gessner.
This is what happens when you trust clickbait articles for information about unicorns. This entire explanation is way off and makes totally unfounded assertions.
I’m pretty sure your assertion about the prehistoric rhino is entirely lifted from a goodhousekeeping article called “Yes, Unicorns were Real”, and that article certainly doesn’t suggest that the unicorn from Ancient Greek literature is based on this animal. In conclusion, I feel confident saying that these are fun fictions, not fun facts.
"Hoax" is a little strong for the Kluge Hans entry. Hans' owner was giving him clues through his body language, but he did so unknowingly. Maybe call it a "sham" instead.
Silkworms are the caterpillars of the silk moth, so I tried various caterpillar- and moth-answers, with and without silk. Would be nice to see this reflected in the type-ins.
Woah! I was just normally putting in the answers, had two left, and the time suddenly ran out! Was I dawdling way too much, or is the time short on this one? No one else seems to be complaining :(
Nice quiz, although I expected to have to name famous animals, like Copenhagen, Laika, Dolly... it was much easier this way.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arachne
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/bested
Another fun fact. Yes, unicorns were actually a real animal. It's scientifical name is "Elasmotherium sibiricum" and it's a type of an ice age rhino. It is not known when it went extinct, there is even a script from an arabian explorer from 921AD that mention it being still alive. Even if you don't believe that, there is no doubt people met it and passed stories and legends about it for generations. And they were also finding it's bones and horns and using them as medicine all throught the Middle ages. The "horse with a narwhal tusk" misconception only came to be in 1558 in a book "Historia animalium" from Conrad Gessner.
I’m pretty sure your assertion about the prehistoric rhino is entirely lifted from a goodhousekeeping article called “Yes, Unicorns were Real”, and that article certainly doesn’t suggest that the unicorn from Ancient Greek literature is based on this animal. In conclusion, I feel confident saying that these are fun fictions, not fun facts.
If I translate from my native language those are the first entries, and they're definitely correct.
So... could you add either?
Nice quiz, although I expected to have to name famous animals, like Copenhagen, Laika, Dolly... it was much easier this way.