It never ceases to amaze me at how little so many know their Bible on this site. Not a criticism, just sad to me. 24% knew that Psalms was the longest book in the Bible. Since it's basically in the middle, it just seems like a no brainer if you've ever opened a Bible.
24% is probably higher than it should be, and I'm not even saying that people should be religiously illiterate. I think it's important to know about this stuff. Actually knowing the Bible is probably the one thing that helps most people become Atheist. But being able to name the longest chapter... not really that important and 24% is probably much much higher than the percentage who would know in general.
Edit: and if I wouldnt spend so much time reading all the comments id probably be at 35 hah. Average 5 mins of quizzing followed by 15'mins of comment reading...
This comment makes me happy :) something personally adressed to me. And a really nice message too!
Funny though that at the time of your comment I had been away for some time (felt over a year but found a comment from me from march I think.. so less long than I thought.) and wasn't back yet if I am not mistaken just here since begin december again. Which is also again near my anniversary :)
Thats cool! out of curiosity has it been 51 consecutive seasons of the same show? I know there have been multiple "doctor who"s but I've never been sure if they were multiple iterations of the same show or if they were separate shows all together
There have technically been two series. The first ran from 1963-1989 and had a total of seven Doctors. Then there was a made-for-TV movie in 1996 with the Eighth Doctor. Finally, they rebooted the series in 2005, which is still running as of now in 2019 and has had five Doctors thus far (well, technically six. Five and a half. It's complicated.)
Both series (and the TV movie) are within the same continuity, so it sort of depends how you look at it. In one way, it's two separate series: one that ran 26 years and one that is currently at 14 years. In another way, it's one series that had a 16-year hiatus. But no, either way it hasn't had 50+ consecutive seasons.
Currently the Amazon is believed to be the longest river in the world. Please at least accept it. There is debate as to whether the Nile or the Amazon is longer, and sometimes changes if they re-measure them. The Nile is (according to Wikipedia) 4258 miles long, but the Amazon is 4345 miles long. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rivers_by_length
I'd agree, the title of the quiz is "World Records" so why not include a world record rather than a US record? The UK prime-time scripted show 'Coronation Street' easily beats the answer here as it's now in its 60th year of continuous transmission.
I know, I also think that would make a more interesting question. When The Phantom of the Opera started the Mousetrap was already the longest-running show ever, I think. And it's still going.
According to WP - 27,500th performance of The Mousetrap took place on 18th Sep 2018 and the show was forced to finally close in March last year due to Covid
Nah, not even close. Crime and Punishment has roughly 200K words. Long, but not absurdly so. For comparison, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix has around 260K words, and George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire books range from 290K to 425K. War and Peace, meanwhile, has around 580K.
To compare another way, the audiobook of Crime and Punishment read by Alan Munro runs about 25 hours. War and Peace read by the same narrator runs nearly 67.
quote bij english wikipedia: The Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) is a mid-ocean ridge, a divergent or constructive plate boundary located along the floor of the Atlantic Ocean, and part of the longest mountain range in the world.
It's a submarine mountain range. It very broadly fits the definition of a mountain range. As suggested by a comment above, mountains can be distinguished by adding terrestrial / submarine before them, but then where do you stop? The question didn't rule out mountain ranges on Mars either?
Among trivia groups like JetPunk, mid-ocean ridge is commonly the answer. I would suggest adding terrestrial, but at the very least, please accept mid-ocean ridge / mid-Atlantic ridge as a type-in.
still sounds a weird way of measuring. In the chess world all champions are counted the same from Steiniz, but those from 1993-2000 where 2 championships where held at the same time during the FIDE-Kasparov war.
Kasparov held the FIDE title for only 7 years 1985-1992 and then he created his own world championship which only disappeared when he lost in 2000.
So: according to FIDE standards, he reigned for 7 years (less than Carlsen or Botvinnik). Counting the PCA years make no sense and still would only make 15 years, not 19 (and it was an unofficial competition anyway).
I'd have Lasker there, everybody considers him as the longest champion (27 years) even though there were no annual tournaments by then.
Yes ! At least more than super. That is the easiest most normal part. Many people would know that when not even knowing the entire word (correctly). I would suggest to At least require "supercali" and maybe even supercalifrag(ilistic)
Once The Simpsons is gone from prime time, WWE Raw will take over as longest running prime time scripted tv show as they've been around for 30 years by the start of 2023
Please change the wording of: "Reigned 19 years as chess #1, since 1950".
This basically indicates that the player would have been the chess champion from 1950-1969, which has not happened (there were three different World champions during that period of time).
Suggestion: put "Reigned 19 years as chess #1. After the 1950s".
It also doesn't make someone religious if he knows that fact, maybe only because he spends too much time on jetpunk like we do :D
Edit: and if I wouldnt spend so much time reading all the comments id probably be at 35 hah. Average 5 mins of quizzing followed by 15'mins of comment reading...
Funny though that at the time of your comment I had been away for some time (felt over a year but found a comment from me from march I think.. so less long than I thought.) and wasn't back yet if I am not mistaken just here since begin december again. Which is also again near my anniversary :)
All the best to you :)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longest_word_in_English
Both series (and the TV movie) are within the same continuity, so it sort of depends how you look at it. In one way, it's two separate series: one that ran 26 years and one that is currently at 14 years. In another way, it's one series that had a 16-year hiatus. But no, either way it hasn't had 50+ consecutive seasons.
https://www.chess.com/article/view/27-years-as-world-champion
I'm pretty sure voyager 2 was sent out before voyager 1 though.
Who thought the badly scripted wwe could make it this far
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
To compare another way, the audiobook of Crime and Punishment read by Alan Munro runs about 25 hours. War and Peace read by the same narrator runs nearly 67.
quote bij english wikipedia: The Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) is a mid-ocean ridge, a divergent or constructive plate boundary located along the floor of the Atlantic Ocean, and part of the longest mountain range in the world.
Kasparov held the FIDE title for only 7 years 1985-1992 and then he created his own world championship which only disappeared when he lost in 2000.
So: according to FIDE standards, he reigned for 7 years (less than Carlsen or Botvinnik). Counting the PCA years make no sense and still would only make 15 years, not 19 (and it was an unofficial competition anyway).
I'd have Lasker there, everybody considers him as the longest champion (27 years) even though there were no annual tournaments by then.
This basically indicates that the player would have been the chess champion from 1950-1969, which has not happened (there were three different World champions during that period of time).
Suggestion: put "Reigned 19 years as chess #1. After the 1950s".