I had a teacher in high school who insisted Pike's Pike was the tallest mountain in the lower 48. Even as a 15 year old I knew that was nonsense. #publicschools
I grew up thinking it was the highest mountain not only in Colorado, but in the whole Rocky Mountain range (and possibly the whole lower 48 states). Don't know why, or if anyone officially told me that. But I definitely remember people making a big deal about it. I guess it's really prominent or has really good views or something.
I love the topics that come up in these with which I'm not familiar. Now I get to decide how the clue about a jewel baron is false. I could look it up, but that's less fun.
Daddy Musk only owned "a stake" that later went under. But Musk also said a report saying his dad was pig rich from owning half a Zambian emerald mine was "accurate". It's actually hard to know what's true and not when dealing with two generations of pathological liars.
I hate these quizzes. Either I know the answer is wrong so it pains me to type it, or, worse, I thought it was right and I'm upset to find it isn't. Happy April, though.
I tried bicycle first. In the UK the stereotypical Frenchman is riding a bicycle, wearing a blue and white striped top and a beret and with a string of garlic and/or onions round his neck :)
Fun fact - those actually existed! They were the "Onion Johnnies" - young men from Brittany, around Roscoff, who would go to England and Wales to sell their pink onions.
This stereotype is, however and therefore, mainly known in England and Wales...
You can read more about them here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onion_Johnny
I don't get the one about Frenchmen. Surely it's a bicycle (wearing a beret and with a string of onions round the neck. - The Frenchman, that is, not the bike wearing a beret etc)
Fun fact - those actually existed! They were the "Onion Johnnies" - young men from Brittany, around Roscoff, who would go to England and Wales to sell their pink onions.
This stereotype is, however and therefore, mainly known in England and Wales...
You can read more about them here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onion_Johnny
- The Pantheon dome was not named after Pan and Pan wasn't worshipped there
- Mayans did not disappear, they're still around as a minority group in Guatemala and Mexico
- Viet Cong was a western nickname. They called themselves Viet Minh and also were largely South Vietnamese
- It's called Hadrian's Wall and it is much further south than the scottish-english border
- Only one member of Guns and Roses had Rose as his last name, none had Gunn
- It's called Sanskrit not Sandscript
- Gladiator is based on the story of a slave who became a general
- Elon Musks father did own an emerald mine, but Elon did not inherit a lot of money from it. Elon got his initial wealth because his small startup was bought by Paypal
- Reagan classified everything as a vegetable that had a certain percentage of vegetable components, not specifically ketchup
He did have a hockey goalie mask from the third film on, but not in the first two, and never had a chainsaw. His signature weapon was always a machete. People often conflate Jason in Friday the 13th with Leatherface in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, who of course did use a chainsaw. The latter directly influenced numerous other slasher films including Friday the 13th. However, none of the most successful ones outside the TCM franchise tend to feature a chainsaw. (No, John Kramer "Jigsaw" from the Saw films doesn't use one either. That's not how he got his nickame).
Surprised at the low score for allspice! (or maybe people thought that was true so they deliberately didn't type it and were looking for something else?)
I was clueless about sandscript, never heard of it so was guessing deserty places. Only when the answer came I got the joke. I guess that one works better when told and not written, hmm wait maybe not haha (cause then it is hard to hear which of the words they actually spoke). I guess the other way around doesn't work either (that india is in the question and sandscript the answer)
In 1981 there were proposed changes to USDA regulations that may or may not have allowed ketchup to be classified as a vegetable for the purposes of school lunch nutrition standards. Ketchup wasn't actually mentioned in the regulations. But the popular narrative was that ketchup was being reclassified to save the government money at the expense of kids' nutrition. The change never went into effect and it's probably fair to say Reagan did not personally intend to reclassify ketchup as a vegetable.
Mayans never disappeared. They are still around these days. Around the year 1000 a.D. there was the Classic collapse, which wasn't even a collapse but rather a shift form west to east.
This stereotype is, however and therefore, mainly known in England and Wales...
You can read more about them here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onion_Johnny
(It's obviously bicycle - train - what??)
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/28/47/84/28478432fa1de7fb223c8df3dea3c442.png
This stereotype is, however and therefore, mainly known in England and Wales...
You can read more about them here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onion_Johnny
- The monopoly mascot does not wear a monocle
- The bird was named after the canary islands
- The Pantheon dome was not named after Pan and Pan wasn't worshipped there
- Mayans did not disappear, they're still around as a minority group in Guatemala and Mexico
- Viet Cong was a western nickname. They called themselves Viet Minh and also were largely South Vietnamese
- It's called Hadrian's Wall and it is much further south than the scottish-english border
- Only one member of Guns and Roses had Rose as his last name, none had Gunn
- It's called Sanskrit not Sandscript
- Gladiator is based on the story of a slave who became a general
- Elon Musks father did own an emerald mine, but Elon did not inherit a lot of money from it. Elon got his initial wealth because his small startup was bought by Paypal
- Reagan classified everything as a vegetable that had a certain percentage of vegetable components, not specifically ketchup
- Jason kills his victims with a machete, not a chainsaw
The other ones I don't know about, so feel free to add those if you do
I was clueless about sandscript, never heard of it so was guessing deserty places. Only when the answer came I got the joke. I guess that one works better when told and not written, hmm wait maybe not haha (cause then it is hard to hear which of the words they actually spoke). I guess the other way around doesn't work either (that india is in the question and sandscript the answer)
-The top-hat-and-monocle-wearing board game mascot is actually Lord Chess.
-Pike's Peak is actually a market in Seattle.
-The islands were actually named after the large number of food packaging plants there, and are properly known as the Cannery Islands.
-The Pantheon is actually a temple on a hill in Athens.
-Frenchman do not actually work.
-Cleopatra did not actually exist, but was Marc Antony's "girlfriend who lives in Egypt."
-Hadrian's Wall was actually built in 2002 by Oscar-winning actor Hadrian Brody.
-The Gunn brothers and the Rose brothers actually formed the band The Doobie Brothers.
-Sandscript is actually from the country of Sandorra.
-Scientists actually supported the redefinition of pi. Well, the engineers did.
-The billionaire's name is properly spelled "Xelon Xusx."
-It is actually chihuahuas that are from Mexico, and they are a breed of rat.
-Jason is not actually the villain, as those teenagers were annoying as hell.
In 1981 there were proposed changes to USDA regulations that may or may not have allowed ketchup to be classified as a vegetable for the purposes of school lunch nutrition standards. Ketchup wasn't actually mentioned in the regulations. But the popular narrative was that ketchup was being reclassified to save the government money at the expense of kids' nutrition. The change never went into effect and it's probably fair to say Reagan did not personally intend to reclassify ketchup as a vegetable.
Should be Sanskrit, not Sandscript