I've seen trout caught in Scotland by 'noodling', tickling underside with fingers and in the swampy area of the River Murray in Australia I have tickled large Carp (2ft long) on the belly and they love it.
Tickling and noodling are two different things, noodling you wait for the fish to bite you then grab it by the mouth, tickling you make it calm by stoking its belly then try to flip it out of the water.
If they had meant Northern Ireland they would have said Northern Ireland. No one means "Northern Ireland" when they say "Ireland." They either mean the sovereign state or the island.
I've heard plenty of Northern Irish people refer to NI as Ireland in general conversation but agree for the purposes of this quiz it's clear what's being asked for otherwise you would specify NI
If you look up a bandolier on-line, the first several entries are for cell phone holders. I kept typing variations of cell phones and couldn't understand why I wasn't getting credit for the right answer.
bandolier, by definition is a pocketed ammunition holder. Bandolier, by trade name, are those silly things that hold cell phones. But you are right. The trade named item comes up first.
@sciencyguy I took that to mean they were looking it up **after** taking the quiz. I sometimes look up things after learning about them in a Jetpunk quiz. For me, learning more is very much the point of taking a quiz :)
I'd never heard the term noodling until a few years ago. In my neck of the woods it was always called hogging. My brother went fish hogging once and pulled a water moccasin out of the hole instead of a catfish. I use a fishing pole like all sane people. :)
"Okie Noodling" might be the most enjoyable documentary ever made. Mix one part Flaming Lips, one part redneck one part slice of life and you get awesome.
English ist not my first language, so I needed to translate some words - and in several dictionaries I found "milt" as another term for "spleen". Is this not correct?
milt=spleen in Dutch and nearly (if not) all the scandinavian languages
In German it would be Milz.
But TinuvielAelin is correct, spleen particularly of an animal can be called milt too. Though I don't know how common its use is. But is is not marked as obsolete or archaic, so still in use. I personally had not come across it before, but if it is mainly about the animals organ then it's no wonder.
Here's a fun fact...The thylacene is a wild dog species native to Australia as well. It may have went extinct in the 1960s but people still swear that they have seen them. It is also one of if not the only land mammal species that have gone extinct in modern times because of natural selection rather than human interaction as the dingo was the more advanced predator and essentially beat out the thylacene as apex predator on the Australian mainland and Tasmania.
Clearly not what the question is asking for.
In German it would be Milz.
But TinuvielAelin is correct, spleen particularly of an animal can be called milt too. Though I don't know how common its use is. But is is not marked as obsolete or archaic, so still in use. I personally had not come across it before, but if it is mainly about the animals organ then it's no wonder.
According to the Merriam Webster, radiuses is also an acceptable answer for plural of radius.