Can we allow deck for verandah? Where I come from in Queensland, Australia, the word porch is never used. You'd usually just call it a verandah, but it's largely used interchangeably with deck.
Some synonyms from other Englishes would be appreciated, as the meaning of "porch" used here is specific to North American English https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/porch
The suggestion to reverse the question is a neat way to accomplish this!
I went through several veranda synonyms before finding porch - I tried balcony, patio, even overhang. I'd recommend balcony and patio as acceptable answers.
Darn-diddly! I, too, have been told by multiple people, all my life, that veranda and patio are "basically the same thing". Also tried balcony, which, according to Merriam-Webster used to be 1=1(, but is no longer). ...and then there's terrace. Wonder if that was accepted....
I enjoyed this and, like others, had to try a few different things before porch. Was waiting for the next in this general knowledge quiz so this has made it a nice weekend. Thank you.
I typed that in so many times and couldn't figure out why it was wrong. My bad - I know that Hanging Gardens is the correct name - but I agree with you!
Unless people swat up on Harry Potter for the purpose of Jetpunk quizzes, I find it incredible that far more knew that answer than the largest vein in the neck or the capital of Puerto Rico
Harry Potter is a very popular franchise. No one's going to read through 7 books, several of which are over 500 pages long, just to get an extra point on a JetPunk quiz.
It's a rudimentary question about a massively popular franchise. If you've read even one book or seen even one movie (and perhaps if you hadn't), you'd know that answer.
Because, at 500 million books, it's the number one series of books ever sold. There have been 10 movies that have made billions at the box office, and there are more on the way. It's been out for more than 20 years and even has its own theme park. I think it's safe to say it's fair game and isn't going anywhere. Pop culture has value too. Also, last I looked, we're all on a trivia site.
A duchess isn't the equivalent of a duke, at least not in the UK. Women cannot attain that status, it is passed through the male line, so a duchess is the term for the wife of a duke.
Is it just me, or was this one unusually easy? This is the first time I got all correct on the first try on a general knowledge quiz. The currency question was the only difficult one.
Not unusually easy if you've never read a Potter Book or watched a movie.
I think it's fair enough they are included as they are definitely a part of pop culture but those and arts and entertainment questions are always the ones I find hardest - never watched Titanic either and that seems to come up quite often
Technically, the two internal jugular veins are the largest veins in the neck and each are accompanied by a (smaller) external jugular vein. Just a point of order from this pedantic medical student!
anyone else think it feels strange to allow vacum with only one U when the question literally says what word has two Us? not suggesting you remove it as a type-in though
Could Babylon be accepted by itself? It's obvious that it would be meant for that specific prompt since nothing else would even make sense to be guessed as that
That doesn't make sense to me. Babylon existed. It's the particular Wonder that's in question, and it ought to be at least minimally present in order to be a right answer.
The suggestion to reverse the question is a neat way to accomplish this!
I think it's fair enough they are included as they are definitely a part of pop culture but those and arts and entertainment questions are always the ones I find hardest - never watched Titanic either and that seems to come up quite often
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Hudson