someone2018, me too. It seems that the one question in this quiz that requires no knowledge, that can just be calculated by simple maths, is the one most badly answered. Sadly it suggests that jetpunkers are good at cramming their heads with facts but perhaps less able when it comes to other aspects of intelligence, do you think?
Actually, you do not really need the to know the formula. You just need to know that it is a 3D object, so you have to cube the proportionality factor. It would have been the same answer for characteristic lengths of any other 3D object, e.g. if 1 and 100 were side lengths of a cube.
You can also just think of the units - length in metres, volume in cubic metres. That makes it obvious that you have to cube somewhere in the process to get from length to volume, even if you don't know the formula.
Google Translate is accurate according to the link you provided. Three of four speakers say Nice almost exactly like the Google Translate, although the first says it like neice-uh. Not sure why. Could be a regional dialect.
Kind of like how many English speakers say More-EESS with a metric ton of stress on the 2nd syllable for Maurice when it actually sounds closer to the regular old English version Morris, as in the cat.
"...a metric ton". I am guessing you are really annoyed by how people stress the last syllable based on that portion of your comment. As annoying as it may be to you, that is the common pronunciation in the US.
I'm wondering this as well! I kept repeating the words niece and knees out loud and I think they're 100 % the same. Managed to get it right by just randomly choosing the right one :/
English does this thing of voicing terminal consonants when they are normally voiced. Some other languages (like Dutch) never do, and for mother tongue speakers of those languages it seems to be very hard to hear the difference.
Compare:
Cab - Cap
Kid - Kit
Dig - Dick
Live - Life
And indeed..
Knees - Niece
Although of course the spelling in English is nonsense.
I have to disagree with you about the quiz being easy, however.
Going from radius to volume is cubing the scale factor, not squaring
Whether it should be a word... Probably/possibly in English yes...
That said, my French pronunciation isn't great so I changed the question to "most similar" to remove all possible doubt.
Although I shouldn't complain, I hear virtually no difference between knees and niece.
Didn't know the soccer question though:(
BTW, I've got some good Dutch quizzes.
Compare:
Cab - Cap
Kid - Kit
Dig - Dick
Live - Life
And indeed..
Knees - Niece
Although of course the spelling in English is nonsense.