[QUOTE=5 time champ]
The greatest movie trivia question of all time: In the movie, Back to the Future To what day did Doc Brown set the flux capacitor; being the day that Doc Brown had invented the flux capacitor and therefore the day that Marty McFly arrived in the past?
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I wanna say Nov 5, 1955?
And Abirode, Russia is considered part of the Asian continent?
[QUOTE=Flander]
And Abirode, Russia is considered part of the Asian continent?
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Siberia, at least. And to me, saying Europe extends even to the Urals is ludicrous: it’s obviously smack dab in the middle of Central Asia. IMO, Europe ends in the middle of the Baltic states and the middle of the Black Sea.
[QUOTE=Robot Arm]
Another one that has generated lots of discussion:
Who is the only person in the world who has two countries named after him?
Simón Bolivar; Bolivia and the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.
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Actually, I would say most adults of, let us say 35, have had at least two countries named after them, but they have had even more that were named before them.
[QUOTE=5 time champ]
The greatest movie trivia question of all time: In the movie, Back to the Future To what day did Doc Brown set the flux capacitor; being the day that Doc Brown had invented the flux capacitor and therefore the day that Marty McFly arrived in the past?
[/QUOTE]
October 26, 1955.
October 26 is my birthday, and my wife was born in '55, so this one’s pretty easy for me to remember.
[QUOTE=Ronald C. Semone]
2. Which is the largest European country?
Most people say “France” or “Poland”, but the correct answer is “Denmark.” Denmark? Yes, because Greenland, which is huge, is legally an integral part of Denmark just the way Hawaii is an integral part of the U.S.A. (Actually, this may no longer be true since I recall reading a few years ago that the status of Greenland had changed.)
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The problem with that is that Greenland is not part of Europe – if anything, it’s part of North America. So, if Denmark including Greenland is a “European country”, then Russia including the part of Russia in Asia (i.e., Siberia plus other territory) is also a “European country”. And, of course, Russia is by far the largest country in the world.
[QUOTE=Interrobang!?]
A few geography ones I’ve written for the pub quiz I host:
What two cities have been among the 10 most populous in America every census from 1790 to 2000?
It’s part of the Arab League and the Francophonie, but one African country does not belong to the African Union. Which one?
For the first half of the civil war, Mesilla, New Mexico, was the capital of what Confederate territory?
Paris is the most populous French-speaking city in the world. Which city comes in second?
What’s the most populous city in the US named after a person who was alive when it was founded?
What’s the longest river in the U.S. that doesn’t share its name with a state?
Which of these is largest in terms of square miles: the drainage basin of the Amazon river, Australia, the Roman Empire at its largest, or the Sahara?
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All guesses, for the most part:
NYC and Philly
CAR?
Arizona territory?
Dakar?
New York? (If the Duke of York counts as a person’s name)
I know 3 cities (there may be more) which were founded as national capitals. That is, before the founding: no city. Immediately after: national capital. What are these?
Name the actors in The Magnificent Seven. (This was appealing to someone of my older generation). Many people can name 5, sometimes 6. But they usually can’t get all 7.
The one everyone missed was Brad Dexter. The other one they sometimes miss was Horst Buchholz