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Question
Answer
What type of mountains are sung about in "America the Beautiful"?
Purple Mountains
What did Oprah famously give to all 276 members of her studio audience on September 13, 2004?
a Car
What former first lady is the namesake of a rehab center for substance abuse disorder?
Betty Ford
What first name was shared by Wright and Redenbacher?
Orville
What, stereotypically, do people say when handing someone a subpoena?
You've been served
Who was traded from the Oilers to the Kings in 1988?
Wayne Gretzky
What type of degree would you be most likely to earn at Wharton?
MBA
What was the profession of TV's "Columbo"?
Detective
Who did Anne Sullivan teach by spelling words on her palm?
Helen Keller
Charleston is a city in South Carolina. But what is THE Charleston?
a Dance
The U.S. Constitution famously counted slaves as only 3/5ths of a person for the purposes of congressional allocation. What group of people weren't counted at all?
Indians, not taxed
What comic strip appeared on wrappers of Bazooka bubble gum until 2012?
Bazooka Joe
What type of engine allows the ships in "Star Trek" to travel faster than the speed of light?
Warp Drive
Ted Williams missed nearly five seasons of baseball serving as a fighter pilot in two different wars. One was WWII. What was the other?
Korean War
What word, meaning inseparable, comes before the words "with liberty and justice for all"?
Indivisible
Who was the only President from the Federalist Party?
John Adams
What did the G in the magazine GQ originally stand for?
Gentlemen's
What was the term for the period of time between the 18th and 21st amendments?
Prohibition
In Mexico, it's called the Río Bravo. What is it called in the United States?
The Columbo question should probably also allow "police detective" and "homicide detective". "Detective" by itself seems too general, while technically correct.
For my whole life (in U.S.) I pronounced "clique" as a homonym of "click", but somewhere along the way I heard that it's properly pronounced CLEEK. Maybe through common mispronunciation the short-"i" version has become acceptable, but I think I have to agree with OfficerDibble.
Being a French word, it should of course be pronounce cleek, but, hey, you do what you want with the awesome language we graciously provide you with! Also, I think the question is fine as is.
Sad that more people don't remember Bazooka Joe, his eyepatch, and his friend Mort who always had his turtleneck sweater pulled up over his mouth. I used to save up Bazooka Joe comics to send in for free (cheap) merchandise.
No, I don't. The original language said "Indians, not taxed". Nor is the term "Indians" offensive. In fact, many tribes explicitly refer to themselves as Indians, and there is an entire part of the U.S. government called the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Chill, OP didn't say it was offensive. They're synonyms but by saying native or indigenous Americans you avoid the supreme idiocy of Christopher Columbus and his sordid legacy.
Why is Wayne Gretzky, THE quintessential Canadian icon, the focus of a question in a quiz about US knowledge? At least it was one of the few questions to which I knew the answer ...
U.S. native here, living on the west coast. I hear people say "click" and "cleek" with about the same frequency. Ditto for "nitch" and "neesh," as it happens. I think the question/answer is still valid.
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/clique
At best it's ambiguous for Americans and wrong for everyone else.