Everything looks good, except the punching holiday question. It's not just a British holiday. Traditionally, people punch each other in all Commonwealth countries on that day.
I have to confess, until I was like 28, I thought that Boxing Day was actually to celebrate and honor the sport of pugilism. Then I spent my first Christmas in Canada and felt deeply, deeply stupid.
In Canada, the tradition is to apologise after punching someone, or after being punched. I heard they punch kangaroos in Australia but I've never been.
Well this really was a hard one to answer. British people don't normally wait for public holidays to hit each other, it's traditional in towns every Friday after about 11:30 pm, also on the first day of every month, so many public holidays might coincide.
Now that's another April Fools answer! The southernmost tip of South America is not Cape Horn! See the Cape Horn Wikipedia entry which states Although [Cape Horn is] not the most southerly point of South America (which are the Diego Ramírez Islands)…
I never heard anyone make this mistake, either, but I guess people might confuse Cape Horn, Cape Town, and the Cape of Good Hope. Why not? I don't think it's a common misconception, though. Several of these questions fall into the same category... plausible mistake... but not a common misconception. Which doesn't match with the first 5 installments.
It’s a double April fools’ because neither Cape Horn is in Africa nor the Cape of Good Hope which supposedly people mistake it for is the southernmost point of Africa.
You seem to have a hard time understanding that not everyone sees continent labeling the way the US does. But apparently you seem to have the opinion that the way the US does things is the right way and other ways are wrong.
As a Brit, the first thing I tried that came to mind was "first of the month" haha. It took me ages to figure out it meant boxing day- I didn't realise that was specific to us
It's not, it is observed here in Canada and in other Commonwealth countries too. We used to joke about this as kids but I had no idea anyone could be dumb enough to believe it...
Hey! I represent that remark! But in my defense, and all Americans, we don't generally put away our Christmas decorations that fast. People will go till New Year's Day at least; traditionalists will go through till Epiphany on the 6th. As for me, I take my decorations down by the end of February, whether the tree is dead or not! :-P
We have Boxing Day here in NZ, but I couldn't think of the answer as I don't associate it with boxing! I was thinking of "A pinch and a punch for the first of the month"!
Disturbing also how the media distorts the safety of water in Flint. Water in Flint has improved a lot and is actually safe. People believe what they want to believe though. In fact, I would hazard to guess that most people who read this comment won't click the link or read the article, and instead will continue to see Flint as a place with uniquely unsafe water.
What's really sad is that there are many towns and cities in the US with much higher lead levels than Flint, but they aren't getting the attention (or the bucks to fix it.)
The more I learn about this the more it makes me angry. Here is a study about lead concentration in children in Flint. Despite a slight uptick in recent years, the lead concentration of tested children in Flint has fallen by huge amounts and is almost exactly at the national level. Here is the money chart from the study. Media coverage on this issue is deeply irresponsible.
Octopus is derived from the Latin language. Therefore, the plural of octopus would not be octopi but octopuses. Also, evolution has never been proven, so the question about what apes humans evolve from is arbitrary.
Funny, I thought octopi as a plural would make sense just because it is derived from Latin - that is, when you look at it superficially. Then, of course, you realize that -pus is a separate suffix, the plural of which is not pi - otherwise, people might start complaining how pi is actually Greek...
Etymologist: an expert in etymology, the history of a linguistic form (such as a word) shown by tracing its development since its earliest recorded occurrence in the language where it is found, by tracing its transmission from one language to another, by analyzing it into its component parts, by identifying its cognates in other languages, or by tracing it and its cognates to a common ancestral form in an ancestral.
Did you make some of these up? I never knew anyone to confuse etymology and entomology, or, worse, Transylvania and Tasmania (I assume that's what you were going for?)... I was totally lost for both of those.
And what's with the Mexico question? Is the reason it's on here supposed to be that Mexico is not a part of Central America? Because if you just google Central America map about 20-25% of the results include it. I don't think there's a canonical Central America that specifically and authoritatively excludes Mexico any more than there's a canonical Middle East that includes or excludes Turkey, Cyprus, Egypt, or Armenia. It's a bit open to interpretation.
Wow! Where to start? The Bible doesn't name the wise men and it certainly doesn't give them names. Story is found in Matthew chapter 2. Also, Honolulu is on the island of Oahu--Try Hilo for the island of Hawaii. Mexico is generally NOT considered part of Central America. And finally, humans, like other creatures, never evolved from anything else. We were created by God!
I did not get that Transylvania one. I s'pose in retrospect it's a Tasmania thing? Never occurred to me that people might think that. But I wouldn't really be surprised.
Most of these questions feel like insults to me... I've never seen anyone say Transylvania is part of Australia, or that Nepalese people are all Sherpa. I missed the Jack Nicholson question for the same reason, I've never seen that claim online.
I am Canadian and I missed this answer because it has never occurred to me to associate boxing day with the sport of boxing. Facepalm when I saw it.
Kudos, Quizmaster. The April Fools quizzes must be very hard to compose.
an expert of insects is an entomologist
And what's with the Mexico question? Is the reason it's on here supposed to be that Mexico is not a part of Central America? Because if you just google Central America map about 20-25% of the results include it. I don't think there's a canonical Central America that specifically and authoritatively excludes Mexico any more than there's a canonical Middle East that includes or excludes Turkey, Cyprus, Egypt, or Armenia. It's a bit open to interpretation.
At least there are 5 or 6 questions which are totally wrong!! Transylvania instead of Tasmania???
Americas a country??
1. Serbia, as Nikola Tesla invented everything.
2. If there are two of them, hexadecapus. If there are more than that it depends.
3. Crocodiles
4. Foolish men
5. Cambridge Analytica
6. Hanoi
7. Hiroshima and Nagasaki
8. One study I saw lead me to believe it was Loafers Glory, North Carolina.
9. Dynamite
10. Kansas
11. Cape Town
12. Valentine's Day
13. The Andromeda Galaxy
14. Sealand
15. The flamingo
16. Any country where people are supposed to be wurpers but can't be bothered
17. Donald Trump
18. Synchronised diving
19. God
20. A shoe which has been split in half just by you putting your foot into it.
Cape Agulhas is the southernmost point of Africa.
You might want to correct that.
Tasmania belongs to Australia.
Mexico is technically North America - not Central. (NAFTA might be a hint)
People believe this stuff -- Let's not misinform children who take these quizzes.