QBFOD 2010 Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
| Question | Answer |
| With Aphrodite, fathered Aeneas | Anchises |
| First Prime Minister of Israel | David Ben-Gurion |
| Opera that tells the story of the 3 Magi | Menotti's "Amahl and the Night Visitors" |
| First Stuart monarch of England. He wrote "The True Law of Free Monarchs" | James I of England/James VI of Scotland |
| Author who served as ambassador to Spain, inspiring his "The Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada" and "The Alhambra" | Washington Irving |
| British philosopher who coined the term "Naturalistic Fallacy" in his book "Principia Ethica" | G.E. Moore |
| Landscape architect who designed New York's Central Park | Frederick Law Olmstead |
| Virgini Gautreau is the subject of this painting | John Singer Sargent's "Portrait of Madame X" |
| This work's first section, "The Present Dilemma in Philosophy", discusses the "tender- and tough-minded" | William James' "Pragmatism" |
| Wrote "Diary of a Superfluous Man" and "A Sportsman's Sketches" | Turgenev |
| Novel about Arkandy Kirsanov and the nihilist Bazarov | Turgenev's "Fathers and Sons" |
| Became president of Georgia in 2004 after helping to topple Eduard Shevardnadze in the Rose Revolution | Mikhail Saakashvili |
| Theo van Doesburg and Piet Mondrian were members of this 20th century Dutch art movement | De Stijl/neoplasticism |
| Italian composer best known for "Pines of Rome", "Fountains of Rome", and "Roman Festival" | Ottorino Respighi |
| Title character of Moliere's "The Misanthrope" | Alceste |
| This conflict began with the Siege of Zara | 4th Crusade |
| The Siege of Zara was led by what two people | Baldwin and Boniface |
| This Venetian Doge supplied ships for the Siege of Zara | Enrico Dandolo |
| For causing Baldur's death, this Norse god is boud while venom drips on him | Loki |
| In 1944, this communist overthrew King Zog I to take control of Albania's government | Enver Hoxha |
| This German geologist coined the term Pangea and was the first to advance the theory of continental drift | Alfred Wegener |
| This Ghana lake is the world's largest man-made lake | Lake Volta |
| This dam created Lake Volta by damming the Volta River | Akosombo Dam |
| When this figure stol mjollnir, he demanded Freya's hand in marriage as ransom. Thor dressed up as Freya and killed him to retrieve it. | Thrym |
| This was Lyndon B. Johnson's domestic policy program | The Great Society |
| The Great Society, LBJ's domestic policy program was introduced in this speech | Ann Arbor Speech |
| The final battle of this war was fought at the Bad Axe River in Wisconsin | Black Hawk War |
| The Black Hawk War was fought by US forces against these two Indian tribes | Sauk and Fox |
| This rule states: "In an alkene reaction, hydrogen adds to carbons with more hydrogens" | Markovnikov's Rule |
| In 1843, he wrote "On the Jewish Question" | Karl Marx |
| The campus of MIT features two buildings by what architect | Eero Saarinen |
| Name the two buildings at MIT's campus that were designed by Eero Saarinen | Kresge Auditorium and MIT Chapel |
| Justinian's general | Belisarius |
| Greek professor Adolphus Cusins is engaged to the title character and Andrew Undershaft is married to Lady Britomart in this play | George Bernard Shaw's Major Barbara |
| "The Cross of the World", "The Voyage of Life", "The Course of Empire", and "The Oxbow" are by this Hudson River School painter | Thomas Cole |
| This first sophist is best known for saying that "man is the measure of all things" | Protagoras |
| This work introduced the concept of the categorical imperative | Immanuel Kant's "Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals" |
| In 1397, this leader united Norway, Sweden, and Denmark into the Kalmar Union | Margaret I |
| In 1397, Margaret I united Norway, Sweden, and Denmark into this union | Kalmar Union |
| This Cuban poet was the founder of the Latin American literary movement "Modernismo" | Jose Marti |
| Carlo Perrier and Emilio Segre discovered this element | Technetium |
| Wrote "Thanatopsis" and "To a Waterfowl" | William Cullen Bryant |
| He attacked Thomas Jefferson with the satirical "The Embargo" | William Cullen Bryant |
| This author of "Spiritual Exercises" founded the Jesuit Order | St. Ignatius of Loyola |
| Julian rides an integrated city bus with his mother to her weight-loss meeting at the YMCA in this short story | Flannery O'Connor's "Everything that Rises Must Converge" |
| Defeated Ibrahim Lodi at the Battle of Panipat in 1526, founding the Mughal Empire | Babur |
| National epic of Argentina; In Pynchon's "Gravity's Rainbow", the characters create a film version | Jose Hernandez's "Martin Fierro" |
| Defeated Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field | Henry VII |
| One half spring constant times displacement squared | starting energy |
| Was convicted for his role in the 1968 My Lai Massacre | Lt. William Calley |
| Cells in phylum Porifera that create water flow through the sponge for feeding and respiration | choanocytes |
| Son of Amram and Jochebed, married Zipporah, the daughter of Jethro. He died on Mt. Nebo | Moses |
| South African doctor who performed the first successful transplant of a human heart | Christian Barnard |
| Defeated Admiral Rozhdestvenski to win the decisive 1905 sea battle of the Russo-Japanese War, Tsushima Straits | Togo |
| The lower left of this painting portrays its painter's future wife, Aline Charigot, playing with a dog | Renoir's "Luncheon of the Boating Party" |
| James Buchanan and John Mason wrote this 1854 work which demanded that the US take Cuba by force | Ostend Manifesto |
| In this work, Mario works at a radio station that plays soap operas written by Pedro Camacho | Vargas-Llosa's "Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter" |
| Joseph K. "without having done anything wrong he was arrested one fine morning" in this novel | Franz Kafka's "The Trial" |
| In this novel, Christian woman Ligia and the Roman Marcus Vinicius fall in love during the reign of Nero | Henryk Sienkiewicz's "Quo Vadis" |
| Period of the Mesozoic Era between the Triassic and Cretaceous Periods; its name comes from a mountain range on the French-Swiss border | Jurassic Period |
| Popeye is a character in this William Faulkner work | "Sanctuary" |
| Written by Carl von Clausewitz, a veteran of the Napoleonic Wars | "On War" |
| Details the murder of the Clutter family of Kansas | Truman Capote's "In Cold Blood" |
| Squirrel who runs up and down the World Tree Yggdrasil in Norse mythology | Ratatosk |
| Alliance of Baltic trading states that was centered in Lubeck, Germany | Hanseatic League |
| John Shade writes a poem that shares its name with this novel he appears in | Vladimir Nabokov's "Pale Fire" |
| His vote acquitted Andrew Johnson after his impeachment for firing Edwin Stanton and violating the Tenure of Office Act | Edmond Ross |
| Studied the Tobriand Islands and wrote "Argonauts of the Western Pacific" and "Magic, Science, and Religion" | Bronislaw Malinowski |
| Law that states that the voltage of a circuit is equal to the product of its current and impedance | Ohm's Law |
| He wrote "To Cole, the Painter, Departing for Europe" about the Hudson River School artist | William Cullen Bryant |
| With Thetis, fathered Achilles; was the King of Aegina and accidentally killed his mother in law, Eurytion | Peleus |
| The monastery of Spanish King Phillip II; was designed by Juan de Herrera | El Escorial |
| This work is set in Red Oak; the title character gets his nickname from John Oakhurst after surviving the birth that kills his mom, Cherokee Sal | Bret Harte's "The Luck of Roaring Camp" |
Created by:
rda
Popular Quiz Bowl sets