-
1. What university did Theresa May, Rachel Riley, Hugh Grant and Bill Clinton all attend?
-
2. What is the Italian word for a knife with a long slender blade and needle-like point?
-
3. The game of polo is typically divided into six periods of play. What are these called?
-
4. What do you get if you breed male donkeys with female horses?
-
5. What is the name of the British Duke who commanded the anglo-allied army which helped defeat Napoleon at Waterloo?
-
6. Football manager Brian Clough managed five clubs in his career: Hartlepools, Nottingham Forest, Leeds, Brighton, and which other club?
-
7. For which film did Russell Crowe win an Academy Award for Best Actor?
-
8. What is the name of Bill and Hilary Clinton's daughter?
-
9. What is the name of the place in Kings Cross Station where Harry Potter and other pupils caught the train to Hogwarts?
-
10. What is the type of dance that former Strictly Come Dancing judge Darcey Bussell is famous for performing?
-
11. What connects the previous 10 answers?
-
1. According to Time Out Magazine in 2020, how many animals did London Zoo have? (total number of animals, not the number of species)
-
1. Name the rodent.
-
2. Name the rodent.
-
3. Name the rodent
-
4. Name the rodent.
-
5. Name the rodent
-
6. Name the rodent.
-
7. Name the rodent.
-
8. Name the rodent.
-
9. Name the rodent.
-
10. Name the rodent.
-
11. Name the rodent.
-
12. Name the rodent.
-
13. Name the rodent.
-
14. Name the rodent.
-
15. Name the rodent.
-
16. Names the rodent.
-
17. Name the rodent.
-
18. Name the rodent
-
19. Name the rodent.
-
20. Name the rodent.
-
21. Name the rodent.
-
22. Name the rodent.
-
23. Name the rodents.
-
1. A famous square in Berlin, about 1km south of the Brandenburg Gate and Reichstag.
-
2. Founded in 1961 and headquartered in Modena, Italy, a company well known for producing football stickers and trading cards.
-
3. In Greek mythology, the first human woman to be created.
-
4. Surname of English political activist, best remembered for organizing the UK suffragette movement and helping women win the right to vote.
-
5. The global spread of a disease.
-
6. Japanese variety of breadcrumbs.
-
7. An Italian dessert whose name when translated into English means ‘cooked cream’.
-
8. An all-female British dance troupe, often seen on Top of the Pops in the late 1960s to the mid-1970s.
-
9. The logo of the WWF since 1961.
-
10. A former temple, and a Catholic Church since the year 609, which can be found in Rome.
-
11. This creature loves ants and termites, and is believed to be the most trafficked animal in the world.
-
12. A chemical element with the symbol K and atomic number 19.
-
13. Nicknamed the ‘Nation’s River’, this river in the USA flows into Chesapeake Bay.
-
14. The French word for ‘drinkable’.
-
15. An abbreviation first used by US telegraphic code operators in the 1890s, for people like Joe, Donald, Barack, George, and Bill.
-
16. A company originally founded in 1918 as a lightbulb socket manufacturer by a man called Konosuke Matsushita.
-
17. A lightly coloured, finely woven hat.
-
18. BBC current affairs programme, first aired in 1963.
-
19. A cheese, commonly found in the Indian sub-continent made from cow or buffalo milk.
-
20. A German tank, whose name when translated into English means ‘armour’.
-
1. The last execution by guillotine in France took place in which year?
-
1. Name the city.
-
2. Name the city.
-
3. Name the City.
-
4. Name the City.
-
5. Name the City
-
6. Name the City.
-
7. Name the City
-
8. Name the City.
-
9. Name the City.
-
10. Name the City.
-
11. Name the City.
-
12. Name the City.
-
13. Name the City.
-
14. Name the City.
-
15. Name the City.
-
16. Name the City.
-
1. According to the Office of National Statistics, how many people declared in 2011 that Cornish was their main language?
-
1. English Homework
-
2. Slippery
-
3. Grubby
-
4. Rot
-
5. High Official
-
6. Longing for someone else's possessions
-
7. A strong or pretentious display of being very interested in things like poetry, drama or painting
-
8. Foe
-
9. Convict on the run
-
10. Too much
-
11. Unwilling to act or speak in a direct or open way
-
12. A television award in the US