I'll whine again, but you could say Tunis - Tunisia are very similar too, so I don't think the clue for Algiers - Algeria is very good. Also the plural of city is cities. "City's" is the genitive. (Capital of Angola clue.)
That's not the point. I figured out that it was Algiers because it starts with A, but Tunis would otherwise be a better answer for that clue. It would be like if I made a clue "Largest city in the United States" and in the next column specified that the answer starts with L. New York is the correct answer, but you'd have no trouble figuring out that the answer on the quiz is Los Angeles. The second best answer shouldn't be the correct answer just because the quiz maker made it possible to figure out that he/she was going to accept the second best answer as the answer.
And no, there is no question that Tunis is the correct answer for that clue. Tunis becomes Tunisia with no change to the original spelling, whereas you have to modify Algiers to get Algeria. Tunis + ia = Tunisia. Alg - i + er - s + ia = Algeria. Which seems closer to you?
@sumguy yeah sure, except that Los Angeles is NOT the largest city in the US, which makes your example clue completely wrong. So I don’t see what you are trying to tell us. Algiers doubtlessly sounds similar to Algeria (even if not as strongly bonded as Tunis and Tunisia). Besides, it’s really hard to find an original clue for Algiers, unless the fact that it is the capital of Algeria and on the Mediterranean...
I think it's pretty obvious when the starting letter is A. As has been said, making a US quiz and saying Los Angeles was the largest city would just be wrong, whereas it is not wrong to say that the word Algiers is very similar to Algeria.
In French, Algiers is Alger ( pronounciation Al-Jay) so it's a good clue in French but not in English. Alger is to Algeria that Tunis is to Tunisia ( Algérie and Tunisie in the French language )
In this case, the answer isn't a superlative. There can be more than one answer, and there is (Algiers and Tunis). The example of the largest city in the United States isn't comparable because there's only one answer, which isn't Los Angeles, which argued. Algiers and Tunis can both be similar to their countries (Algeria and Tunisia), and it isn't mutually exclusive. The letter makes the answer less ambiguous as well.
Djibouti and Djibouti are not similar, but the same. Nevertheless it was the first thing which I thought of :) Doesn't make it the answer we're looking for.
Please tell us. Why are you doing this? Why are you arguing for something that is clearly not correct and you must know it? Is it just to feel like being intelectually superior or something? Please, no hard feelings, I'm actually interested.
I think some people are only (and rightly, in my view) pointing out that it would be ideal if each clue could only lead to one city, and the letters were to help rather than actually being part of the clue.
If you were to ask someone this question in a pub, you'd say "What's an African capital, starting with A, whose name is similar to its country's name?" All of the information in that question is in the quiz question. There *is* only one answer to the question.
Arusha also has the headquarters of the East African Community - in case you want a clue that's less tourist-centric. (And anyway, the airport that almost all such tourists fly to is a very long way from Arusha - it's closer to Moshi, and doesn't have Arusha in its name.)
I knew about Zanzibar thanks to the ''History of the World, I guess'' video (Bill Wurtz). ''The Sultan of Oman lives in Zanzibar now [(jingly sound)]. That's just where he lives''.
Tried Kisumu for the Lake Victoria question (which, in any case, must be smaller than Mwanza). Although the answer is correct, Kisumu is very much a lake town, whereas Kampala has expanded to the lake - and feels about as focused on the lake as Rome does on the Mediterranean.
There is a small error in the quiz, Cape Town is not the southernmost city in Africa. Port Elizabeth (recently renamed Gqerberha) is. This is a very common mistake. Cape Town is 33.55 degrees south, PE is 33.96 degrees south. Generally only South Africans know this, but perhaps replace the Cape Town question with "the oldest African city founded by the Dutch" or "the city closest to the Cape of Good Hope?" Nice quiz, good to see Africa in the spotlight. Thanks
I just want JP technology to advance to the point where we can have people use audio answers, and hear non-South Africans try to pronounce "Gqeberha" (hint: it's got an alveolar click and a guttural /x/ sound).
Even Moroni is slightly similar to Comoros.
But yeah, none other than Algiers starts with A.
Ancient Egyptian capital *ormerly* known as "Thebes"