Question
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Answer
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What character was created by Bram Stoker?
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Dracula
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What sporting event was held for the first time in over 1,600 years?
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Olympic Games
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What nickname has been given to the decade?
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Gay Nineties
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What style of dance was invented in Argentina and Uruguay?
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Tango
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What nation did the United States declare war on after the sinking of the USS Maine?
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Spain
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What Christmas ballet was written by Pyotr Tchaikovsky?
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The Nutcracker
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What writer was convicted of sodomy and sentenced to hard labor?
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Oscar Wilde
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What type of baskets were originally used in basketball?
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Peach Baskets
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What Massachusetts woman was accused of killing her parents with an axe?
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Lizzie Borden
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What term referred to a wealthy American industrialist?
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Robber Baron
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What famous hotel in Paris opened? (The only reason not to stay there was if you couldn't afford it)
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Hôtel Ritz
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What was the French term for an impoverished, unconventional, artistic person?
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Bohémien
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What future President led a group of soldiers called the Rough Riders?
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Theodore Roosevelt
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What style of sensationalist journalism was practiced by William Randolph Hearst?
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Yellow Journalism
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To what Pacific island did Paul Gauguin move?
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Tahiti
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What composer wrote his most famous march, "The Stars and Stripes Forever"?
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John Philip Sousa
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Who wrote "The Jungle Book"?
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Rudyard Kipling
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What type of radiation was discovered by Wilhelm Röntgen?
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X-Rays
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What crime was Alfred Dreyfus accused of committing?
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Espionage
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What gold rush happened in Canada?
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Klondike Gold Rush
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Most of the time, it refers to an establishment that rents out rooms by the night --- exactly like it does in English.
Where it becomes a false cognate is when it's being used to designate an important official building --- e.g.: hôtel de ville = city hall, hôtel de police = police headquarters, etc. L'Hôtel des Invalides was constructed as a hospital and home for old soldiers, but the project blossomed into a complex campus of tangentially related buildings and functions.
He soon figured out that cutting out the bottom of the basket saved a lot of time.
It's called trivia: if you don't know, then you unfortunately get one wrong. Don't get all up in arms over getting one wrong, ok? It really doesn't matter in the grand scheme of things.
The Snake's Pass (1890)
Seven Golden Buttons (1891)
The Watter's Mou' (1895)
The Shoulder of Shasta (1895)
Dracula (1897)
Miss Betty (1898)
The Mystery of the Sea (1902)
The Jewel of Seven Stars (1903)
The Man (a.k.a. The Gates of Life) (1905)
Lady Athlyne (1908)
The Lady of the Shroud (1909)
The Lair of the White Worm (a.k.a. The Garden of Evil) (1911)
The last one is literally the only other Stoker novel I've ever heard of.