Thanks Nicco.....Yes I agree (I'm actually AB+) ........ the answer column has stopped me putting +, so I've entered (pos) for positive.... this is now waiting to be edited.
I tried "land on the moon", "moon landing", "flew to the moon", "went to the moon" before I decided it must be something else. I think at least one of them should work...
Hi Joey, featured in my 'Mal's General Knowledge 23'....... the original question was " 1) How many men have walked on the Moon?" ....... ....... and the answer was '12'
Judges don't use gavels, at least not in America. They may have at one point, but I have practiced law in many different jurisdictions, both state and federal, and I have never once seen a judge with a gavel.
Wikipedia:.......The gavel is used in courts of law in the United States and, by metonymy, is used there to represent the entire judiciary system, especially of judgeship. On the other hand, in the Commonwealth of Nations, gavels have never been used by judges, despite many American-influenced TV programmes depicting them.
They don't use gavels in Germany, either (to my knowledge, this extends to continental Europe, but I admit I have not been in too many court rooms outside of Germany). I did think of that answer, though. My translation failes, as we only use one word for both "gavel" and "hammer". Incidentally, that word is "Hammer" :-)
I hope you weren't expecting this as a type-in. To hundreds of millions of people, Los Angeles is known as LA. That would still never be an acceptable answer though (except in the two-letter word quiz), because "la" is just a regular word in many languages.
Too little time, didnt get around to the last 3. No need for the time to be tight, it is not like it is a countries in europe quiz, where you can just try untill you reach the right answer, for most of these mindless guessing would not get you anywhere.
The 'origin' of the word 'namaste' was not required in this question........ e.g. if you were asked "What language uses the word 'Telephone' the answer would be 'English' not ......' comes from the Greek words for sound (phon) and far away (tele)".
Fair enough. I guess I shouldn't have said 'originates/derived', but said: "used in Sanskrit, prior to being used in Hindi". Ignore my 'originates' argument.
Why the answer HINDI doesn't hold good here is because: English uses "Telephone". Greek uses "τηλέφωνο (tiléfono)".
Whereas, Sanskrit uses "नमस्ते (Namaste)". Hindi and Nepali use the exact same word (and script) "नमस्ते (Namaste)" millenniums AFTER it was used in Sanskrit.
So, when you ask where does the word Namaste "Come From", the answer is SANSKRIT. And was later used in Hindi and Nepali.
Where is the footage of all of these lunar pedestrians? Why does it look like it was filmed with a potato? Why is not a single star or constellation visible when the moon has basically no atmosphere?
It was 1969! Cameras weren't great. More facts, the entire computing power of Mission Control was the same as two laptops during all the moon missions, and the onboard computer of the lunar landers was as strong as one cellphone these days. Seems pretty rude to ask for star pictures from the moon, when they had actually got there with such low technology.
1972 was last claimed moonwalk. Cameras were great, and certainly good enough to detect stars in the sky. Giant computers were not necessary to expose light to film. Have you ever seen the Wizard of Oz? Filmed in 1938-39 my friend. Plain reality is that constellations were too hard to fake, because had to perfect.
Why the answer HINDI doesn't hold good here is because: English uses "Telephone". Greek uses "τηλέφωνο (tiléfono)".
Whereas, Sanskrit uses "नमस्ते (Namaste)". Hindi and Nepali use the exact same word (and script) "नमस्ते (Namaste)" millenniums AFTER it was used in Sanskrit.
So, when you ask where does the word Namaste "Come From", the answer is SANSKRIT. And was later used in Hindi and Nepali.