qc_id
stringlengths
14
16
clue_text
stringlengths
3
302
clean_answers
sequencelengths
1
31
orig_qid
stringclasses
300 values
n_clues
int64
1
9
orig_question
stringclasses
300 values
orig_answer_string
stringclasses
300 values
clue_spans
sequencelengths
5
9
metadata
dict
acf-co24-11-7_1
To solve indeterminate equations, Gauss introduced special bracket notation for approximating these expressions.
[ "finite continued fractions", "convergents of continued fractions", "infinite continued fractions", "terminated continued fractions", "continued fractions", "continued fraction" ]
acf-co24-11-7
1
To solve indeterminate equations, Gauss introduced special bracket notation for approximating these expressions. When the private key in RSA is small, it can be exposed using these expressions in Wiener’s attack. The limit of these expressions’ geometric means almost always converges to Khinchin’s constant. A bijection between quadratic surds and the periodic class of these expressions is given by Minkowski’s question-mark function. Loch’s theorem produces asymptotics for these expressions’ convergents, which are subject to Legendre’s theorem in Diophantine approximation. It’s not a decimal expansion, but while there are two of these expressions for every rational number, every irrational number can be written uniquely as an infinite one of these expressions. For 10 points, name these sequences that express a real number in terms of an infinite iteration of sums and reciprocals.
continued fractions [accept finite continued fractions or infinite continued fractions or terminated continued fractions or convergents of continued fractions; prompt on convergents until read by asking “of what objects?”; prompt on fractions]
[ [ 0, 112 ], [ 113, 212 ], [ 213, 308 ], [ 309, 436 ], [ 437, 579 ], [ 580, 770 ], [ 771, 892 ] ]
{ "category": "other-science-(math)", "category_full": "Other Science (Math) - Other Science (Math)", "category_main": "other-science-(math)", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 55, 15 ], [ 59, -5 ], [ 74, 15 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-science-(math)" ] }
acf-co24-11-7_2
When the private key in RSA is small, it can be exposed using these expressions in Wiener’s attack.
[ "finite continued fractions", "convergents of continued fractions", "infinite continued fractions", "terminated continued fractions", "continued fractions", "continued fraction" ]
acf-co24-11-7
2
To solve indeterminate equations, Gauss introduced special bracket notation for approximating these expressions. When the private key in RSA is small, it can be exposed using these expressions in Wiener’s attack. The limit of these expressions’ geometric means almost always converges to Khinchin’s constant. A bijection between quadratic surds and the periodic class of these expressions is given by Minkowski’s question-mark function. Loch’s theorem produces asymptotics for these expressions’ convergents, which are subject to Legendre’s theorem in Diophantine approximation. It’s not a decimal expansion, but while there are two of these expressions for every rational number, every irrational number can be written uniquely as an infinite one of these expressions. For 10 points, name these sequences that express a real number in terms of an infinite iteration of sums and reciprocals.
continued fractions [accept finite continued fractions or infinite continued fractions or terminated continued fractions or convergents of continued fractions; prompt on convergents until read by asking “of what objects?”; prompt on fractions]
[ [ 0, 112 ], [ 113, 212 ], [ 213, 308 ], [ 309, 436 ], [ 437, 579 ], [ 580, 770 ], [ 771, 892 ] ]
{ "category": "other-science-(math)", "category_full": "Other Science (Math) - Other Science (Math)", "category_main": "other-science-(math)", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 55, 15 ], [ 59, -5 ], [ 74, 15 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-science-(math)" ] }
acf-co24-11-7_3
The limit of these expressions’ geometric means almost always converges to Khinchin’s constant.
[ "finite continued fractions", "convergents of continued fractions", "infinite continued fractions", "terminated continued fractions", "continued fractions", "continued fraction" ]
acf-co24-11-7
3
To solve indeterminate equations, Gauss introduced special bracket notation for approximating these expressions. When the private key in RSA is small, it can be exposed using these expressions in Wiener’s attack. The limit of these expressions’ geometric means almost always converges to Khinchin’s constant. A bijection between quadratic surds and the periodic class of these expressions is given by Minkowski’s question-mark function. Loch’s theorem produces asymptotics for these expressions’ convergents, which are subject to Legendre’s theorem in Diophantine approximation. It’s not a decimal expansion, but while there are two of these expressions for every rational number, every irrational number can be written uniquely as an infinite one of these expressions. For 10 points, name these sequences that express a real number in terms of an infinite iteration of sums and reciprocals.
continued fractions [accept finite continued fractions or infinite continued fractions or terminated continued fractions or convergents of continued fractions; prompt on convergents until read by asking “of what objects?”; prompt on fractions]
[ [ 0, 112 ], [ 113, 212 ], [ 213, 308 ], [ 309, 436 ], [ 437, 579 ], [ 580, 770 ], [ 771, 892 ] ]
{ "category": "other-science-(math)", "category_full": "Other Science (Math) - Other Science (Math)", "category_main": "other-science-(math)", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 55, 15 ], [ 59, -5 ], [ 74, 15 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-science-(math)" ] }
acf-co24-11-7_4
A bijection between quadratic surds and the periodic class of these expressions is given by Minkowski’s question-mark function.
[ "finite continued fractions", "convergents of continued fractions", "infinite continued fractions", "terminated continued fractions", "continued fractions", "continued fraction" ]
acf-co24-11-7
4
To solve indeterminate equations, Gauss introduced special bracket notation for approximating these expressions. When the private key in RSA is small, it can be exposed using these expressions in Wiener’s attack. The limit of these expressions’ geometric means almost always converges to Khinchin’s constant. A bijection between quadratic surds and the periodic class of these expressions is given by Minkowski’s question-mark function. Loch’s theorem produces asymptotics for these expressions’ convergents, which are subject to Legendre’s theorem in Diophantine approximation. It’s not a decimal expansion, but while there are two of these expressions for every rational number, every irrational number can be written uniquely as an infinite one of these expressions. For 10 points, name these sequences that express a real number in terms of an infinite iteration of sums and reciprocals.
continued fractions [accept finite continued fractions or infinite continued fractions or terminated continued fractions or convergents of continued fractions; prompt on convergents until read by asking “of what objects?”; prompt on fractions]
[ [ 0, 112 ], [ 113, 212 ], [ 213, 308 ], [ 309, 436 ], [ 437, 579 ], [ 580, 770 ], [ 771, 892 ] ]
{ "category": "other-science-(math)", "category_full": "Other Science (Math) - Other Science (Math)", "category_main": "other-science-(math)", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 55, 15 ], [ 59, -5 ], [ 74, 15 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-science-(math)" ] }
acf-co24-11-7_5
Loch’s theorem produces asymptotics for these expressions’ convergents, which are subject to Legendre’s theorem in Diophantine approximation.
[ "finite continued fractions", "convergents of continued fractions", "infinite continued fractions", "terminated continued fractions", "continued fractions", "continued fraction" ]
acf-co24-11-7
5
To solve indeterminate equations, Gauss introduced special bracket notation for approximating these expressions. When the private key in RSA is small, it can be exposed using these expressions in Wiener’s attack. The limit of these expressions’ geometric means almost always converges to Khinchin’s constant. A bijection between quadratic surds and the periodic class of these expressions is given by Minkowski’s question-mark function. Loch’s theorem produces asymptotics for these expressions’ convergents, which are subject to Legendre’s theorem in Diophantine approximation. It’s not a decimal expansion, but while there are two of these expressions for every rational number, every irrational number can be written uniquely as an infinite one of these expressions. For 10 points, name these sequences that express a real number in terms of an infinite iteration of sums and reciprocals.
continued fractions [accept finite continued fractions or infinite continued fractions or terminated continued fractions or convergents of continued fractions; prompt on convergents until read by asking “of what objects?”; prompt on fractions]
[ [ 0, 112 ], [ 113, 212 ], [ 213, 308 ], [ 309, 436 ], [ 437, 579 ], [ 580, 770 ], [ 771, 892 ] ]
{ "category": "other-science-(math)", "category_full": "Other Science (Math) - Other Science (Math)", "category_main": "other-science-(math)", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 55, 15 ], [ 59, -5 ], [ 74, 15 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-science-(math)" ] }
acf-co24-11-7_6
It’s not a decimal expansion, but while there are two of these expressions for every rational number, every irrational number can be written uniquely as an infinite one of these expressions.
[ "finite continued fractions", "convergents of continued fractions", "infinite continued fractions", "terminated continued fractions", "continued fractions", "continued fraction" ]
acf-co24-11-7
6
To solve indeterminate equations, Gauss introduced special bracket notation for approximating these expressions. When the private key in RSA is small, it can be exposed using these expressions in Wiener’s attack. The limit of these expressions’ geometric means almost always converges to Khinchin’s constant. A bijection between quadratic surds and the periodic class of these expressions is given by Minkowski’s question-mark function. Loch’s theorem produces asymptotics for these expressions’ convergents, which are subject to Legendre’s theorem in Diophantine approximation. It’s not a decimal expansion, but while there are two of these expressions for every rational number, every irrational number can be written uniquely as an infinite one of these expressions. For 10 points, name these sequences that express a real number in terms of an infinite iteration of sums and reciprocals.
continued fractions [accept finite continued fractions or infinite continued fractions or terminated continued fractions or convergents of continued fractions; prompt on convergents until read by asking “of what objects?”; prompt on fractions]
[ [ 0, 112 ], [ 113, 212 ], [ 213, 308 ], [ 309, 436 ], [ 437, 579 ], [ 580, 770 ], [ 771, 892 ] ]
{ "category": "other-science-(math)", "category_full": "Other Science (Math) - Other Science (Math)", "category_main": "other-science-(math)", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 55, 15 ], [ 59, -5 ], [ 74, 15 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-science-(math)" ] }
acf-co24-11-7_7
For 10 points, name these sequences that express a real number in terms of an infinite iteration of sums and reciprocals.
[ "finite continued fractions", "convergents of continued fractions", "infinite continued fractions", "terminated continued fractions", "continued fractions", "continued fraction" ]
acf-co24-11-7
7
To solve indeterminate equations, Gauss introduced special bracket notation for approximating these expressions. When the private key in RSA is small, it can be exposed using these expressions in Wiener’s attack. The limit of these expressions’ geometric means almost always converges to Khinchin’s constant. A bijection between quadratic surds and the periodic class of these expressions is given by Minkowski’s question-mark function. Loch’s theorem produces asymptotics for these expressions’ convergents, which are subject to Legendre’s theorem in Diophantine approximation. It’s not a decimal expansion, but while there are two of these expressions for every rational number, every irrational number can be written uniquely as an infinite one of these expressions. For 10 points, name these sequences that express a real number in terms of an infinite iteration of sums and reciprocals.
continued fractions [accept finite continued fractions or infinite continued fractions or terminated continued fractions or convergents of continued fractions; prompt on convergents until read by asking “of what objects?”; prompt on fractions]
[ [ 0, 112 ], [ 113, 212 ], [ 213, 308 ], [ 309, 436 ], [ 437, 579 ], [ 580, 770 ], [ 771, 892 ] ]
{ "category": "other-science-(math)", "category_full": "Other Science (Math) - Other Science (Math)", "category_main": "other-science-(math)", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, -5 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 43, 15 ], [ 55, 15 ], [ 59, -5 ], [ 74, 15 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 0 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-science-(math)" ] }
acf-co24-11-8_1
A man with this job is hauled before a king on heresy charges, where he launches into a warning about girdle-wearing followers of Typhon being defeated by the god Agathos Daimon.
[ "Potter", "potter", "Keramikoi", "Kerameikos", "Daimones Keramikoi", "Potter’s Oracle", "Oracle of the Potter", "potters" ]
acf-co24-11-8
1
A man with this job is hauled before a king on heresy charges, where he launches into a warning about girdle-wearing followers of Typhon being defeated by the god Agathos Daimon. Suntrobus, Smaragus, and three other daimones plagued ancient Greeks with this job. This job names an ex eventu oracle text in the tradition of The Admonition of Ipuwer from Hellenistic Egypt. This job’s main tool was installed at the Temple of Esna in an annual festival accompanied by a hymn to a god also invoked on the Famine Stela. A former quarter for people with this job was home to the Sacred Gate used during the procession to Eleusis, as well as ancient Athens’s main cemetery. A god performed this job to create people, whom his frog goddess consort Heqet then gave the breath of life, at his home on Elephantine Island. For 10 points, the Nile god Khnum was often depicted using what job’s “kick” wheels?
potters [accept Oracle of the Potter or Potter’s Oracle; accept Daimones Keramikoi or Kerameikos; prompt on artists or craftsmen]
[ [ 0, 178 ], [ 179, 262 ], [ 263, 371 ], [ 372, 516 ], [ 517, 668 ], [ 669, 812 ], [ 813, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 65, 15 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 134, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 154, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-11-8_2
Suntrobus, Smaragus, and three other daimones plagued ancient Greeks with this job.
[ "Potter", "potter", "Keramikoi", "Kerameikos", "Daimones Keramikoi", "Potter’s Oracle", "Oracle of the Potter", "potters" ]
acf-co24-11-8
2
A man with this job is hauled before a king on heresy charges, where he launches into a warning about girdle-wearing followers of Typhon being defeated by the god Agathos Daimon. Suntrobus, Smaragus, and three other daimones plagued ancient Greeks with this job. This job names an ex eventu oracle text in the tradition of The Admonition of Ipuwer from Hellenistic Egypt. This job’s main tool was installed at the Temple of Esna in an annual festival accompanied by a hymn to a god also invoked on the Famine Stela. A former quarter for people with this job was home to the Sacred Gate used during the procession to Eleusis, as well as ancient Athens’s main cemetery. A god performed this job to create people, whom his frog goddess consort Heqet then gave the breath of life, at his home on Elephantine Island. For 10 points, the Nile god Khnum was often depicted using what job’s “kick” wheels?
potters [accept Oracle of the Potter or Potter’s Oracle; accept Daimones Keramikoi or Kerameikos; prompt on artists or craftsmen]
[ [ 0, 178 ], [ 179, 262 ], [ 263, 371 ], [ 372, 516 ], [ 517, 668 ], [ 669, 812 ], [ 813, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 65, 15 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 134, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 154, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-11-8_3
This job names an ex eventu oracle text in the tradition of The Admonition of Ipuwer from Hellenistic Egypt.
[ "Potter", "potter", "Keramikoi", "Kerameikos", "Daimones Keramikoi", "Potter’s Oracle", "Oracle of the Potter", "potters" ]
acf-co24-11-8
3
A man with this job is hauled before a king on heresy charges, where he launches into a warning about girdle-wearing followers of Typhon being defeated by the god Agathos Daimon. Suntrobus, Smaragus, and three other daimones plagued ancient Greeks with this job. This job names an ex eventu oracle text in the tradition of The Admonition of Ipuwer from Hellenistic Egypt. This job’s main tool was installed at the Temple of Esna in an annual festival accompanied by a hymn to a god also invoked on the Famine Stela. A former quarter for people with this job was home to the Sacred Gate used during the procession to Eleusis, as well as ancient Athens’s main cemetery. A god performed this job to create people, whom his frog goddess consort Heqet then gave the breath of life, at his home on Elephantine Island. For 10 points, the Nile god Khnum was often depicted using what job’s “kick” wheels?
potters [accept Oracle of the Potter or Potter’s Oracle; accept Daimones Keramikoi or Kerameikos; prompt on artists or craftsmen]
[ [ 0, 178 ], [ 179, 262 ], [ 263, 371 ], [ 372, 516 ], [ 517, 668 ], [ 669, 812 ], [ 813, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 65, 15 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 134, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 154, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-11-8_4
This job’s main tool was installed at the Temple of Esna in an annual festival accompanied by a hymn to a god also invoked on the Famine Stela.
[ "Potter", "potter", "Keramikoi", "Kerameikos", "Daimones Keramikoi", "Potter’s Oracle", "Oracle of the Potter", "potters" ]
acf-co24-11-8
4
A man with this job is hauled before a king on heresy charges, where he launches into a warning about girdle-wearing followers of Typhon being defeated by the god Agathos Daimon. Suntrobus, Smaragus, and three other daimones plagued ancient Greeks with this job. This job names an ex eventu oracle text in the tradition of The Admonition of Ipuwer from Hellenistic Egypt. This job’s main tool was installed at the Temple of Esna in an annual festival accompanied by a hymn to a god also invoked on the Famine Stela. A former quarter for people with this job was home to the Sacred Gate used during the procession to Eleusis, as well as ancient Athens’s main cemetery. A god performed this job to create people, whom his frog goddess consort Heqet then gave the breath of life, at his home on Elephantine Island. For 10 points, the Nile god Khnum was often depicted using what job’s “kick” wheels?
potters [accept Oracle of the Potter or Potter’s Oracle; accept Daimones Keramikoi or Kerameikos; prompt on artists or craftsmen]
[ [ 0, 178 ], [ 179, 262 ], [ 263, 371 ], [ 372, 516 ], [ 517, 668 ], [ 669, 812 ], [ 813, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 65, 15 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 134, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 154, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-11-8_5
A former quarter for people with this job was home to the Sacred Gate used during the procession to Eleusis, as well as ancient Athens’s main cemetery.
[ "Potter", "potter", "Keramikoi", "Kerameikos", "Daimones Keramikoi", "Potter’s Oracle", "Oracle of the Potter", "potters" ]
acf-co24-11-8
5
A man with this job is hauled before a king on heresy charges, where he launches into a warning about girdle-wearing followers of Typhon being defeated by the god Agathos Daimon. Suntrobus, Smaragus, and three other daimones plagued ancient Greeks with this job. This job names an ex eventu oracle text in the tradition of The Admonition of Ipuwer from Hellenistic Egypt. This job’s main tool was installed at the Temple of Esna in an annual festival accompanied by a hymn to a god also invoked on the Famine Stela. A former quarter for people with this job was home to the Sacred Gate used during the procession to Eleusis, as well as ancient Athens’s main cemetery. A god performed this job to create people, whom his frog goddess consort Heqet then gave the breath of life, at his home on Elephantine Island. For 10 points, the Nile god Khnum was often depicted using what job’s “kick” wheels?
potters [accept Oracle of the Potter or Potter’s Oracle; accept Daimones Keramikoi or Kerameikos; prompt on artists or craftsmen]
[ [ 0, 178 ], [ 179, 262 ], [ 263, 371 ], [ 372, 516 ], [ 517, 668 ], [ 669, 812 ], [ 813, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 65, 15 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 134, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 154, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-11-8_6
A god performed this job to create people, whom his frog goddess consort Heqet then gave the breath of life, at his home on Elephantine Island.
[ "Potter", "potter", "Keramikoi", "Kerameikos", "Daimones Keramikoi", "Potter’s Oracle", "Oracle of the Potter", "potters" ]
acf-co24-11-8
6
A man with this job is hauled before a king on heresy charges, where he launches into a warning about girdle-wearing followers of Typhon being defeated by the god Agathos Daimon. Suntrobus, Smaragus, and three other daimones plagued ancient Greeks with this job. This job names an ex eventu oracle text in the tradition of The Admonition of Ipuwer from Hellenistic Egypt. This job’s main tool was installed at the Temple of Esna in an annual festival accompanied by a hymn to a god also invoked on the Famine Stela. A former quarter for people with this job was home to the Sacred Gate used during the procession to Eleusis, as well as ancient Athens’s main cemetery. A god performed this job to create people, whom his frog goddess consort Heqet then gave the breath of life, at his home on Elephantine Island. For 10 points, the Nile god Khnum was often depicted using what job’s “kick” wheels?
potters [accept Oracle of the Potter or Potter’s Oracle; accept Daimones Keramikoi or Kerameikos; prompt on artists or craftsmen]
[ [ 0, 178 ], [ 179, 262 ], [ 263, 371 ], [ 372, 516 ], [ 517, 668 ], [ 669, 812 ], [ 813, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 65, 15 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 134, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 154, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-11-8_7
For 10 points, the Nile god Khnum was often depicted using what job’s “kick” wheels?
[ "Potter", "potter", "Keramikoi", "Kerameikos", "Daimones Keramikoi", "Potter’s Oracle", "Oracle of the Potter", "potters" ]
acf-co24-11-8
7
A man with this job is hauled before a king on heresy charges, where he launches into a warning about girdle-wearing followers of Typhon being defeated by the god Agathos Daimon. Suntrobus, Smaragus, and three other daimones plagued ancient Greeks with this job. This job names an ex eventu oracle text in the tradition of The Admonition of Ipuwer from Hellenistic Egypt. This job’s main tool was installed at the Temple of Esna in an annual festival accompanied by a hymn to a god also invoked on the Famine Stela. A former quarter for people with this job was home to the Sacred Gate used during the procession to Eleusis, as well as ancient Athens’s main cemetery. A god performed this job to create people, whom his frog goddess consort Heqet then gave the breath of life, at his home on Elephantine Island. For 10 points, the Nile god Khnum was often depicted using what job’s “kick” wheels?
potters [accept Oracle of the Potter or Potter’s Oracle; accept Daimones Keramikoi or Kerameikos; prompt on artists or craftsmen]
[ [ 0, 178 ], [ 179, 262 ], [ 263, 371 ], [ 372, 516 ], [ 517, 668 ], [ 669, 812 ], [ 813, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 65, 15 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 134, -5 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 154, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ], [ 158, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-11-9_1
It’s not Amharic, but the term for double meanings in this language’s poetry is analogized to “putting feather on our words” in Brandy McDougall’s books.
[ "Hawaiian", "‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i", "Hawai‘i", "Hawaiian language" ]
acf-co24-11-9
1
It’s not Amharic, but the term for double meanings in this language’s poetry is analogized to “putting feather on our words” in Brandy McDougall’s books. A poet of many “name songs” in this language wrote a poem addressed to a lawn sprinkler while under house arrest. Slam poet Jamaica Osorio titled her most famous piece after this language’s “creation chant,” whose 16 “eras” begin with the “slime which established the earth,” proceed through fish and birds, and end with a royal genealogy. This language’s word for sugar cane and the Japanese word for song, bushi, name a folk genre collected by Harry Urata. The epic Kumulipo was translated from this language by a 19th-century monarch whose prolific output as a composer and poet in this language includes a song that repeats “Farewell to thee, farewell to thee.” For 10 points, name this language used by Lili‘uokalani.
Hawaiian language [or ‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i] (The word in the first sentence is kaona. The genre is Holehole bushi. The song is “Aloha ‘Oe.”)
[ [ 0, 153 ], [ 154, 267 ], [ 268, 494 ], [ 495, 613 ], [ 614, 820 ], [ 821, 877 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 67, 15 ], [ 69, 15 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-9_2
A poet of many “name songs” in this language wrote a poem addressed to a lawn sprinkler while under house arrest.
[ "Hawaiian", "‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i", "Hawai‘i", "Hawaiian language" ]
acf-co24-11-9
2
It’s not Amharic, but the term for double meanings in this language’s poetry is analogized to “putting feather on our words” in Brandy McDougall’s books. A poet of many “name songs” in this language wrote a poem addressed to a lawn sprinkler while under house arrest. Slam poet Jamaica Osorio titled her most famous piece after this language’s “creation chant,” whose 16 “eras” begin with the “slime which established the earth,” proceed through fish and birds, and end with a royal genealogy. This language’s word for sugar cane and the Japanese word for song, bushi, name a folk genre collected by Harry Urata. The epic Kumulipo was translated from this language by a 19th-century monarch whose prolific output as a composer and poet in this language includes a song that repeats “Farewell to thee, farewell to thee.” For 10 points, name this language used by Lili‘uokalani.
Hawaiian language [or ‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i] (The word in the first sentence is kaona. The genre is Holehole bushi. The song is “Aloha ‘Oe.”)
[ [ 0, 153 ], [ 154, 267 ], [ 268, 494 ], [ 495, 613 ], [ 614, 820 ], [ 821, 877 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 67, 15 ], [ 69, 15 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-9_3
Slam poet Jamaica Osorio titled her most famous piece after this language’s “creation chant,” whose 16 “eras” begin with the “slime which established the earth,” proceed through fish and birds, and end with a royal genealogy.
[ "Hawaiian", "‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i", "Hawai‘i", "Hawaiian language" ]
acf-co24-11-9
3
It’s not Amharic, but the term for double meanings in this language’s poetry is analogized to “putting feather on our words” in Brandy McDougall’s books. A poet of many “name songs” in this language wrote a poem addressed to a lawn sprinkler while under house arrest. Slam poet Jamaica Osorio titled her most famous piece after this language’s “creation chant,” whose 16 “eras” begin with the “slime which established the earth,” proceed through fish and birds, and end with a royal genealogy. This language’s word for sugar cane and the Japanese word for song, bushi, name a folk genre collected by Harry Urata. The epic Kumulipo was translated from this language by a 19th-century monarch whose prolific output as a composer and poet in this language includes a song that repeats “Farewell to thee, farewell to thee.” For 10 points, name this language used by Lili‘uokalani.
Hawaiian language [or ‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i] (The word in the first sentence is kaona. The genre is Holehole bushi. The song is “Aloha ‘Oe.”)
[ [ 0, 153 ], [ 154, 267 ], [ 268, 494 ], [ 495, 613 ], [ 614, 820 ], [ 821, 877 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 67, 15 ], [ 69, 15 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-9_4
This language’s word for sugar cane and the Japanese word for song, bushi, name a folk genre collected by Harry Urata.
[ "Hawaiian", "‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i", "Hawai‘i", "Hawaiian language" ]
acf-co24-11-9
4
It’s not Amharic, but the term for double meanings in this language’s poetry is analogized to “putting feather on our words” in Brandy McDougall’s books. A poet of many “name songs” in this language wrote a poem addressed to a lawn sprinkler while under house arrest. Slam poet Jamaica Osorio titled her most famous piece after this language’s “creation chant,” whose 16 “eras” begin with the “slime which established the earth,” proceed through fish and birds, and end with a royal genealogy. This language’s word for sugar cane and the Japanese word for song, bushi, name a folk genre collected by Harry Urata. The epic Kumulipo was translated from this language by a 19th-century monarch whose prolific output as a composer and poet in this language includes a song that repeats “Farewell to thee, farewell to thee.” For 10 points, name this language used by Lili‘uokalani.
Hawaiian language [or ‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i] (The word in the first sentence is kaona. The genre is Holehole bushi. The song is “Aloha ‘Oe.”)
[ [ 0, 153 ], [ 154, 267 ], [ 268, 494 ], [ 495, 613 ], [ 614, 820 ], [ 821, 877 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 67, 15 ], [ 69, 15 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-9_5
The epic Kumulipo was translated from this language by a 19th-century monarch whose prolific output as a composer and poet in this language includes a song that repeats “Farewell to thee, farewell to thee.”
[ "Hawaiian", "‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i", "Hawai‘i", "Hawaiian language" ]
acf-co24-11-9
5
It’s not Amharic, but the term for double meanings in this language’s poetry is analogized to “putting feather on our words” in Brandy McDougall’s books. A poet of many “name songs” in this language wrote a poem addressed to a lawn sprinkler while under house arrest. Slam poet Jamaica Osorio titled her most famous piece after this language’s “creation chant,” whose 16 “eras” begin with the “slime which established the earth,” proceed through fish and birds, and end with a royal genealogy. This language’s word for sugar cane and the Japanese word for song, bushi, name a folk genre collected by Harry Urata. The epic Kumulipo was translated from this language by a 19th-century monarch whose prolific output as a composer and poet in this language includes a song that repeats “Farewell to thee, farewell to thee.” For 10 points, name this language used by Lili‘uokalani.
Hawaiian language [or ‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i] (The word in the first sentence is kaona. The genre is Holehole bushi. The song is “Aloha ‘Oe.”)
[ [ 0, 153 ], [ 154, 267 ], [ 268, 494 ], [ 495, 613 ], [ 614, 820 ], [ 821, 877 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 67, 15 ], [ 69, 15 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-9_6
For 10 points, name this language used by Lili‘uokalani.
[ "Hawaiian", "‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i", "Hawai‘i", "Hawaiian language" ]
acf-co24-11-9
6
It’s not Amharic, but the term for double meanings in this language’s poetry is analogized to “putting feather on our words” in Brandy McDougall’s books. A poet of many “name songs” in this language wrote a poem addressed to a lawn sprinkler while under house arrest. Slam poet Jamaica Osorio titled her most famous piece after this language’s “creation chant,” whose 16 “eras” begin with the “slime which established the earth,” proceed through fish and birds, and end with a royal genealogy. This language’s word for sugar cane and the Japanese word for song, bushi, name a folk genre collected by Harry Urata. The epic Kumulipo was translated from this language by a 19th-century monarch whose prolific output as a composer and poet in this language includes a song that repeats “Farewell to thee, farewell to thee.” For 10 points, name this language used by Lili‘uokalani.
Hawaiian language [or ‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i] (The word in the first sentence is kaona. The genre is Holehole bushi. The song is “Aloha ‘Oe.”)
[ [ 0, 153 ], [ 154, 267 ], [ 268, 494 ], [ 495, 613 ], [ 614, 820 ], [ 821, 877 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 67, 15 ], [ 69, 15 ], [ 71, 15 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-10_1
To correct data gathered from this process, the ASTM recommends using the Dickinson extrapolation method over the Regnault–Pfaundler method.
[ "burning", "combustion analysis", "combustion", "burn" ]
acf-co24-11-10
1
To correct data gathered from this process, the ASTM recommends using the Dickinson extrapolation method over the Regnault–Pfaundler method. This process is used to remove organic material in a “wet” method that uses perchloric and nitric acids, or a “dry” method performed in a “muffle” instrument. This process is done within a controlled jacket in model 6200 and 6400 isoperibol instruments. To calibrate this process, the Parr Instrument Company sells one gram pellets of benzoic acid. This process leads to rapid changes in sample mass in evolved gas analysis methods such as TGA. The composition of a sample is determined by undergoing this process, followed by gas chromatography, in CHNS/O analysis. This process is done to completion in a crucible in ashing. For 10 points, name this exothermic process whose internal energy change is measured in bomb calorimetry.
combustion [accept combustion analysis; accept burning; prompt on bomb calorimetry or ashing or elemental analysis until read by asking “what type of reaction is involved?”; prompt on oxidation; prompt on heating by asking “what type of reaction produces the heat?”; reject “fire” or “flames”]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 299 ], [ 300, 394 ], [ 395, 490 ], [ 491, 586 ], [ 587, 708 ], [ 709, 768 ], [ 769, 874 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, -5 ], [ 60, 15 ], [ 63, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-11-10_2
This process is used to remove organic material in a “wet” method that uses perchloric and nitric acids, or a “dry” method performed in a “muffle” instrument.
[ "burning", "combustion analysis", "combustion", "burn" ]
acf-co24-11-10
2
To correct data gathered from this process, the ASTM recommends using the Dickinson extrapolation method over the Regnault–Pfaundler method. This process is used to remove organic material in a “wet” method that uses perchloric and nitric acids, or a “dry” method performed in a “muffle” instrument. This process is done within a controlled jacket in model 6200 and 6400 isoperibol instruments. To calibrate this process, the Parr Instrument Company sells one gram pellets of benzoic acid. This process leads to rapid changes in sample mass in evolved gas analysis methods such as TGA. The composition of a sample is determined by undergoing this process, followed by gas chromatography, in CHNS/O analysis. This process is done to completion in a crucible in ashing. For 10 points, name this exothermic process whose internal energy change is measured in bomb calorimetry.
combustion [accept combustion analysis; accept burning; prompt on bomb calorimetry or ashing or elemental analysis until read by asking “what type of reaction is involved?”; prompt on oxidation; prompt on heating by asking “what type of reaction produces the heat?”; reject “fire” or “flames”]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 299 ], [ 300, 394 ], [ 395, 490 ], [ 491, 586 ], [ 587, 708 ], [ 709, 768 ], [ 769, 874 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, -5 ], [ 60, 15 ], [ 63, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-11-10_3
This process is done within a controlled jacket in model 6200 and 6400 isoperibol instruments.
[ "burning", "combustion analysis", "combustion", "burn" ]
acf-co24-11-10
3
To correct data gathered from this process, the ASTM recommends using the Dickinson extrapolation method over the Regnault–Pfaundler method. This process is used to remove organic material in a “wet” method that uses perchloric and nitric acids, or a “dry” method performed in a “muffle” instrument. This process is done within a controlled jacket in model 6200 and 6400 isoperibol instruments. To calibrate this process, the Parr Instrument Company sells one gram pellets of benzoic acid. This process leads to rapid changes in sample mass in evolved gas analysis methods such as TGA. The composition of a sample is determined by undergoing this process, followed by gas chromatography, in CHNS/O analysis. This process is done to completion in a crucible in ashing. For 10 points, name this exothermic process whose internal energy change is measured in bomb calorimetry.
combustion [accept combustion analysis; accept burning; prompt on bomb calorimetry or ashing or elemental analysis until read by asking “what type of reaction is involved?”; prompt on oxidation; prompt on heating by asking “what type of reaction produces the heat?”; reject “fire” or “flames”]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 299 ], [ 300, 394 ], [ 395, 490 ], [ 491, 586 ], [ 587, 708 ], [ 709, 768 ], [ 769, 874 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, -5 ], [ 60, 15 ], [ 63, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-11-10_4
To calibrate this process, the Parr Instrument Company sells one gram pellets of benzoic acid.
[ "burning", "combustion analysis", "combustion", "burn" ]
acf-co24-11-10
4
To correct data gathered from this process, the ASTM recommends using the Dickinson extrapolation method over the Regnault–Pfaundler method. This process is used to remove organic material in a “wet” method that uses perchloric and nitric acids, or a “dry” method performed in a “muffle” instrument. This process is done within a controlled jacket in model 6200 and 6400 isoperibol instruments. To calibrate this process, the Parr Instrument Company sells one gram pellets of benzoic acid. This process leads to rapid changes in sample mass in evolved gas analysis methods such as TGA. The composition of a sample is determined by undergoing this process, followed by gas chromatography, in CHNS/O analysis. This process is done to completion in a crucible in ashing. For 10 points, name this exothermic process whose internal energy change is measured in bomb calorimetry.
combustion [accept combustion analysis; accept burning; prompt on bomb calorimetry or ashing or elemental analysis until read by asking “what type of reaction is involved?”; prompt on oxidation; prompt on heating by asking “what type of reaction produces the heat?”; reject “fire” or “flames”]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 299 ], [ 300, 394 ], [ 395, 490 ], [ 491, 586 ], [ 587, 708 ], [ 709, 768 ], [ 769, 874 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, -5 ], [ 60, 15 ], [ 63, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-11-10_5
This process leads to rapid changes in sample mass in evolved gas analysis methods such as TGA.
[ "burning", "combustion analysis", "combustion", "burn" ]
acf-co24-11-10
5
To correct data gathered from this process, the ASTM recommends using the Dickinson extrapolation method over the Regnault–Pfaundler method. This process is used to remove organic material in a “wet” method that uses perchloric and nitric acids, or a “dry” method performed in a “muffle” instrument. This process is done within a controlled jacket in model 6200 and 6400 isoperibol instruments. To calibrate this process, the Parr Instrument Company sells one gram pellets of benzoic acid. This process leads to rapid changes in sample mass in evolved gas analysis methods such as TGA. The composition of a sample is determined by undergoing this process, followed by gas chromatography, in CHNS/O analysis. This process is done to completion in a crucible in ashing. For 10 points, name this exothermic process whose internal energy change is measured in bomb calorimetry.
combustion [accept combustion analysis; accept burning; prompt on bomb calorimetry or ashing or elemental analysis until read by asking “what type of reaction is involved?”; prompt on oxidation; prompt on heating by asking “what type of reaction produces the heat?”; reject “fire” or “flames”]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 299 ], [ 300, 394 ], [ 395, 490 ], [ 491, 586 ], [ 587, 708 ], [ 709, 768 ], [ 769, 874 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, -5 ], [ 60, 15 ], [ 63, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-11-10_6
The composition of a sample is determined by undergoing this process, followed by gas chromatography, in CHNS/O analysis.
[ "burning", "combustion analysis", "combustion", "burn" ]
acf-co24-11-10
6
To correct data gathered from this process, the ASTM recommends using the Dickinson extrapolation method over the Regnault–Pfaundler method. This process is used to remove organic material in a “wet” method that uses perchloric and nitric acids, or a “dry” method performed in a “muffle” instrument. This process is done within a controlled jacket in model 6200 and 6400 isoperibol instruments. To calibrate this process, the Parr Instrument Company sells one gram pellets of benzoic acid. This process leads to rapid changes in sample mass in evolved gas analysis methods such as TGA. The composition of a sample is determined by undergoing this process, followed by gas chromatography, in CHNS/O analysis. This process is done to completion in a crucible in ashing. For 10 points, name this exothermic process whose internal energy change is measured in bomb calorimetry.
combustion [accept combustion analysis; accept burning; prompt on bomb calorimetry or ashing or elemental analysis until read by asking “what type of reaction is involved?”; prompt on oxidation; prompt on heating by asking “what type of reaction produces the heat?”; reject “fire” or “flames”]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 299 ], [ 300, 394 ], [ 395, 490 ], [ 491, 586 ], [ 587, 708 ], [ 709, 768 ], [ 769, 874 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, -5 ], [ 60, 15 ], [ 63, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-11-10_7
This process is done to completion in a crucible in ashing.
[ "burning", "combustion analysis", "combustion", "burn" ]
acf-co24-11-10
7
To correct data gathered from this process, the ASTM recommends using the Dickinson extrapolation method over the Regnault–Pfaundler method. This process is used to remove organic material in a “wet” method that uses perchloric and nitric acids, or a “dry” method performed in a “muffle” instrument. This process is done within a controlled jacket in model 6200 and 6400 isoperibol instruments. To calibrate this process, the Parr Instrument Company sells one gram pellets of benzoic acid. This process leads to rapid changes in sample mass in evolved gas analysis methods such as TGA. The composition of a sample is determined by undergoing this process, followed by gas chromatography, in CHNS/O analysis. This process is done to completion in a crucible in ashing. For 10 points, name this exothermic process whose internal energy change is measured in bomb calorimetry.
combustion [accept combustion analysis; accept burning; prompt on bomb calorimetry or ashing or elemental analysis until read by asking “what type of reaction is involved?”; prompt on oxidation; prompt on heating by asking “what type of reaction produces the heat?”; reject “fire” or “flames”]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 299 ], [ 300, 394 ], [ 395, 490 ], [ 491, 586 ], [ 587, 708 ], [ 709, 768 ], [ 769, 874 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, -5 ], [ 60, 15 ], [ 63, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-11-10_8
For 10 points, name this exothermic process whose internal energy change is measured in bomb calorimetry.
[ "burning", "combustion analysis", "combustion", "burn" ]
acf-co24-11-10
8
To correct data gathered from this process, the ASTM recommends using the Dickinson extrapolation method over the Regnault–Pfaundler method. This process is used to remove organic material in a “wet” method that uses perchloric and nitric acids, or a “dry” method performed in a “muffle” instrument. This process is done within a controlled jacket in model 6200 and 6400 isoperibol instruments. To calibrate this process, the Parr Instrument Company sells one gram pellets of benzoic acid. This process leads to rapid changes in sample mass in evolved gas analysis methods such as TGA. The composition of a sample is determined by undergoing this process, followed by gas chromatography, in CHNS/O analysis. This process is done to completion in a crucible in ashing. For 10 points, name this exothermic process whose internal energy change is measured in bomb calorimetry.
combustion [accept combustion analysis; accept burning; prompt on bomb calorimetry or ashing or elemental analysis until read by asking “what type of reaction is involved?”; prompt on oxidation; prompt on heating by asking “what type of reaction produces the heat?”; reject “fire” or “flames”]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 299 ], [ 300, 394 ], [ 395, 490 ], [ 491, 586 ], [ 587, 708 ], [ 709, 768 ], [ 769, 874 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, -5 ], [ 60, 15 ], [ 63, 15 ], [ 64, 15 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-11-11_1
For the Walker Art Center, an artist with this surname created an “environmental space” that required viewers to crouch through a black hallway to enter a room dimly lit by green neon lights.
[ "Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana,", "Fontana Fontana", "Fontana", "Fontana Modern Masters" ]
acf-co24-11-11
1
For the Walker Art Center, an artist with this surname created an “environmental space” that required viewers to crouch through a black hallway to enter a room dimly lit by green neon lights. A publishing imprint with this name used jagged, colorful covers designed by John Constable with inspiration from the op art of Oliver Bevan for its pocket guides to “Modern Masters.” An artist with this surname created 33 rough, bronze spheres for the series Nature. This is the surname of a painter who depicted a hairy daughter of Petrus Gonsalvus. An artist with this surname gave titles like Buchi and Tagli to the series of slashed canvases he made as the founder of Spatialism. A mannerist with this surname was trained by her father Prospero in Bologna. For 10 points, give this surname of the Italian artist Lucio and Europe’s first female professional artist, Lavinia.
Fontana [accept Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana, or Fontana Modern Masters]
[ [ 0, 191 ], [ 192, 375 ], [ 376, 459 ], [ 460, 544 ], [ 545, 677 ], [ 678, 754 ], [ 755, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 64, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-11-11_2
A publishing imprint with this name used jagged, colorful covers designed by John Constable with inspiration from the op art of Oliver Bevan for its pocket guides to “Modern Masters.”
[ "Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana,", "Fontana Fontana", "Fontana", "Fontana Modern Masters" ]
acf-co24-11-11
2
For the Walker Art Center, an artist with this surname created an “environmental space” that required viewers to crouch through a black hallway to enter a room dimly lit by green neon lights. A publishing imprint with this name used jagged, colorful covers designed by John Constable with inspiration from the op art of Oliver Bevan for its pocket guides to “Modern Masters.” An artist with this surname created 33 rough, bronze spheres for the series Nature. This is the surname of a painter who depicted a hairy daughter of Petrus Gonsalvus. An artist with this surname gave titles like Buchi and Tagli to the series of slashed canvases he made as the founder of Spatialism. A mannerist with this surname was trained by her father Prospero in Bologna. For 10 points, give this surname of the Italian artist Lucio and Europe’s first female professional artist, Lavinia.
Fontana [accept Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana, or Fontana Modern Masters]
[ [ 0, 191 ], [ 192, 375 ], [ 376, 459 ], [ 460, 544 ], [ 545, 677 ], [ 678, 754 ], [ 755, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 64, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-11-11_3
An artist with this surname created 33 rough, bronze spheres for the series Nature.
[ "Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana,", "Fontana Fontana", "Fontana", "Fontana Modern Masters" ]
acf-co24-11-11
3
For the Walker Art Center, an artist with this surname created an “environmental space” that required viewers to crouch through a black hallway to enter a room dimly lit by green neon lights. A publishing imprint with this name used jagged, colorful covers designed by John Constable with inspiration from the op art of Oliver Bevan for its pocket guides to “Modern Masters.” An artist with this surname created 33 rough, bronze spheres for the series Nature. This is the surname of a painter who depicted a hairy daughter of Petrus Gonsalvus. An artist with this surname gave titles like Buchi and Tagli to the series of slashed canvases he made as the founder of Spatialism. A mannerist with this surname was trained by her father Prospero in Bologna. For 10 points, give this surname of the Italian artist Lucio and Europe’s first female professional artist, Lavinia.
Fontana [accept Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana, or Fontana Modern Masters]
[ [ 0, 191 ], [ 192, 375 ], [ 376, 459 ], [ 460, 544 ], [ 545, 677 ], [ 678, 754 ], [ 755, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 64, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-11-11_4
This is the surname of a painter who depicted a hairy daughter of Petrus Gonsalvus.
[ "Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana,", "Fontana Fontana", "Fontana", "Fontana Modern Masters" ]
acf-co24-11-11
4
For the Walker Art Center, an artist with this surname created an “environmental space” that required viewers to crouch through a black hallway to enter a room dimly lit by green neon lights. A publishing imprint with this name used jagged, colorful covers designed by John Constable with inspiration from the op art of Oliver Bevan for its pocket guides to “Modern Masters.” An artist with this surname created 33 rough, bronze spheres for the series Nature. This is the surname of a painter who depicted a hairy daughter of Petrus Gonsalvus. An artist with this surname gave titles like Buchi and Tagli to the series of slashed canvases he made as the founder of Spatialism. A mannerist with this surname was trained by her father Prospero in Bologna. For 10 points, give this surname of the Italian artist Lucio and Europe’s first female professional artist, Lavinia.
Fontana [accept Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana, or Fontana Modern Masters]
[ [ 0, 191 ], [ 192, 375 ], [ 376, 459 ], [ 460, 544 ], [ 545, 677 ], [ 678, 754 ], [ 755, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 64, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-11-11_5
An artist with this surname gave titles like Buchi and Tagli to the series of slashed canvases he made as the founder of Spatialism.
[ "Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana,", "Fontana Fontana", "Fontana", "Fontana Modern Masters" ]
acf-co24-11-11
5
For the Walker Art Center, an artist with this surname created an “environmental space” that required viewers to crouch through a black hallway to enter a room dimly lit by green neon lights. A publishing imprint with this name used jagged, colorful covers designed by John Constable with inspiration from the op art of Oliver Bevan for its pocket guides to “Modern Masters.” An artist with this surname created 33 rough, bronze spheres for the series Nature. This is the surname of a painter who depicted a hairy daughter of Petrus Gonsalvus. An artist with this surname gave titles like Buchi and Tagli to the series of slashed canvases he made as the founder of Spatialism. A mannerist with this surname was trained by her father Prospero in Bologna. For 10 points, give this surname of the Italian artist Lucio and Europe’s first female professional artist, Lavinia.
Fontana [accept Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana, or Fontana Modern Masters]
[ [ 0, 191 ], [ 192, 375 ], [ 376, 459 ], [ 460, 544 ], [ 545, 677 ], [ 678, 754 ], [ 755, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 64, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-11-11_6
A mannerist with this surname was trained by her father Prospero in Bologna.
[ "Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana,", "Fontana Fontana", "Fontana", "Fontana Modern Masters" ]
acf-co24-11-11
6
For the Walker Art Center, an artist with this surname created an “environmental space” that required viewers to crouch through a black hallway to enter a room dimly lit by green neon lights. A publishing imprint with this name used jagged, colorful covers designed by John Constable with inspiration from the op art of Oliver Bevan for its pocket guides to “Modern Masters.” An artist with this surname created 33 rough, bronze spheres for the series Nature. This is the surname of a painter who depicted a hairy daughter of Petrus Gonsalvus. An artist with this surname gave titles like Buchi and Tagli to the series of slashed canvases he made as the founder of Spatialism. A mannerist with this surname was trained by her father Prospero in Bologna. For 10 points, give this surname of the Italian artist Lucio and Europe’s first female professional artist, Lavinia.
Fontana [accept Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana, or Fontana Modern Masters]
[ [ 0, 191 ], [ 192, 375 ], [ 376, 459 ], [ 460, 544 ], [ 545, 677 ], [ 678, 754 ], [ 755, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 64, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-11-11_7
For 10 points, give this surname of the Italian artist Lucio and Europe’s first female professional artist, Lavinia.
[ "Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana,", "Fontana Fontana", "Fontana", "Fontana Modern Masters" ]
acf-co24-11-11
7
For the Walker Art Center, an artist with this surname created an “environmental space” that required viewers to crouch through a black hallway to enter a room dimly lit by green neon lights. A publishing imprint with this name used jagged, colorful covers designed by John Constable with inspiration from the op art of Oliver Bevan for its pocket guides to “Modern Masters.” An artist with this surname created 33 rough, bronze spheres for the series Nature. This is the surname of a painter who depicted a hairy daughter of Petrus Gonsalvus. An artist with this surname gave titles like Buchi and Tagli to the series of slashed canvases he made as the founder of Spatialism. A mannerist with this surname was trained by her father Prospero in Bologna. For 10 points, give this surname of the Italian artist Lucio and Europe’s first female professional artist, Lavinia.
Fontana [accept Lucio Fontana, Lavinia Fontana, or Fontana Modern Masters]
[ [ 0, 191 ], [ 192, 375 ], [ 376, 459 ], [ 460, 544 ], [ 545, 677 ], [ 678, 754 ], [ 755, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture", "category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 64, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "painting-and-sculpture" ] }
acf-co24-11-12_1
This person held a namesake series of illegal price-fixing “dinners” in New York.
[ "Gary Plan, Gary Works,", "Judge Gary", "Elbert H. Gary", "Gary", "Gary dinners", "Gary Gary" ]
acf-co24-11-12
1
This person held a namesake series of illegal price-fixing “dinners” in New York. Stalin’s plan to “catch and overtake” a place named for this American is documented in a Stephen Kotkin book. This man ineffectively tried to end convict leasing in the Alabama mines he acquired as chairman of a company that merged with TCI to stave off the Panic of 1907. This man names a platoon-based “plan” for “work-study-play” education created by John Dewey’s disciple William Wirt. This former judge’s “federal” company became part of a firm helmed by Charles Schwab after a 1901 merger planned by J. P. Morgan. The Jackson 5’s first record label was based in a “city of the century” named for this man, which inspired the Soviet city of Magnitogorsk before becoming a classic example of urban decay in the Rust Belt. For 10 points, what co-founder of U.S. Steel names a city in northwest Indiana?
Elbert H. Gary [or Judge Gary; accept Gary Plan, Gary Works, or Gary dinners] (The Jackson 5 was signed by Steeltown Records.)
[ [ 0, 81 ], [ 82, 191 ], [ 192, 354 ], [ 355, 471 ], [ 472, 602 ], [ 603, 808 ], [ 809, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 24, 15 ], [ 37, 15 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 152, 0 ], [ 152, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-12_2
Stalin’s plan to “catch and overtake” a place named for this American is documented in a Stephen Kotkin book.
[ "Gary Plan, Gary Works,", "Judge Gary", "Elbert H. Gary", "Gary", "Gary dinners", "Gary Gary" ]
acf-co24-11-12
2
This person held a namesake series of illegal price-fixing “dinners” in New York. Stalin’s plan to “catch and overtake” a place named for this American is documented in a Stephen Kotkin book. This man ineffectively tried to end convict leasing in the Alabama mines he acquired as chairman of a company that merged with TCI to stave off the Panic of 1907. This man names a platoon-based “plan” for “work-study-play” education created by John Dewey’s disciple William Wirt. This former judge’s “federal” company became part of a firm helmed by Charles Schwab after a 1901 merger planned by J. P. Morgan. The Jackson 5’s first record label was based in a “city of the century” named for this man, which inspired the Soviet city of Magnitogorsk before becoming a classic example of urban decay in the Rust Belt. For 10 points, what co-founder of U.S. Steel names a city in northwest Indiana?
Elbert H. Gary [or Judge Gary; accept Gary Plan, Gary Works, or Gary dinners] (The Jackson 5 was signed by Steeltown Records.)
[ [ 0, 81 ], [ 82, 191 ], [ 192, 354 ], [ 355, 471 ], [ 472, 602 ], [ 603, 808 ], [ 809, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 24, 15 ], [ 37, 15 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 152, 0 ], [ 152, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-12_3
This man ineffectively tried to end convict leasing in the Alabama mines he acquired as chairman of a company that merged with TCI to stave off the Panic of 1907.
[ "Gary Plan, Gary Works,", "Judge Gary", "Elbert H. Gary", "Gary", "Gary dinners", "Gary Gary" ]
acf-co24-11-12
3
This person held a namesake series of illegal price-fixing “dinners” in New York. Stalin’s plan to “catch and overtake” a place named for this American is documented in a Stephen Kotkin book. This man ineffectively tried to end convict leasing in the Alabama mines he acquired as chairman of a company that merged with TCI to stave off the Panic of 1907. This man names a platoon-based “plan” for “work-study-play” education created by John Dewey’s disciple William Wirt. This former judge’s “federal” company became part of a firm helmed by Charles Schwab after a 1901 merger planned by J. P. Morgan. The Jackson 5’s first record label was based in a “city of the century” named for this man, which inspired the Soviet city of Magnitogorsk before becoming a classic example of urban decay in the Rust Belt. For 10 points, what co-founder of U.S. Steel names a city in northwest Indiana?
Elbert H. Gary [or Judge Gary; accept Gary Plan, Gary Works, or Gary dinners] (The Jackson 5 was signed by Steeltown Records.)
[ [ 0, 81 ], [ 82, 191 ], [ 192, 354 ], [ 355, 471 ], [ 472, 602 ], [ 603, 808 ], [ 809, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 24, 15 ], [ 37, 15 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 152, 0 ], [ 152, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-12_4
This man names a platoon-based “plan” for “work-study-play” education created by John Dewey’s disciple William Wirt.
[ "Gary Plan, Gary Works,", "Judge Gary", "Elbert H. Gary", "Gary", "Gary dinners", "Gary Gary" ]
acf-co24-11-12
4
This person held a namesake series of illegal price-fixing “dinners” in New York. Stalin’s plan to “catch and overtake” a place named for this American is documented in a Stephen Kotkin book. This man ineffectively tried to end convict leasing in the Alabama mines he acquired as chairman of a company that merged with TCI to stave off the Panic of 1907. This man names a platoon-based “plan” for “work-study-play” education created by John Dewey’s disciple William Wirt. This former judge’s “federal” company became part of a firm helmed by Charles Schwab after a 1901 merger planned by J. P. Morgan. The Jackson 5’s first record label was based in a “city of the century” named for this man, which inspired the Soviet city of Magnitogorsk before becoming a classic example of urban decay in the Rust Belt. For 10 points, what co-founder of U.S. Steel names a city in northwest Indiana?
Elbert H. Gary [or Judge Gary; accept Gary Plan, Gary Works, or Gary dinners] (The Jackson 5 was signed by Steeltown Records.)
[ [ 0, 81 ], [ 82, 191 ], [ 192, 354 ], [ 355, 471 ], [ 472, 602 ], [ 603, 808 ], [ 809, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 24, 15 ], [ 37, 15 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 152, 0 ], [ 152, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-12_5
This former judge’s “federal” company became part of a firm helmed by Charles Schwab after a 1901 merger planned by J. P. Morgan.
[ "Gary Plan, Gary Works,", "Judge Gary", "Elbert H. Gary", "Gary", "Gary dinners", "Gary Gary" ]
acf-co24-11-12
5
This person held a namesake series of illegal price-fixing “dinners” in New York. Stalin’s plan to “catch and overtake” a place named for this American is documented in a Stephen Kotkin book. This man ineffectively tried to end convict leasing in the Alabama mines he acquired as chairman of a company that merged with TCI to stave off the Panic of 1907. This man names a platoon-based “plan” for “work-study-play” education created by John Dewey’s disciple William Wirt. This former judge’s “federal” company became part of a firm helmed by Charles Schwab after a 1901 merger planned by J. P. Morgan. The Jackson 5’s first record label was based in a “city of the century” named for this man, which inspired the Soviet city of Magnitogorsk before becoming a classic example of urban decay in the Rust Belt. For 10 points, what co-founder of U.S. Steel names a city in northwest Indiana?
Elbert H. Gary [or Judge Gary; accept Gary Plan, Gary Works, or Gary dinners] (The Jackson 5 was signed by Steeltown Records.)
[ [ 0, 81 ], [ 82, 191 ], [ 192, 354 ], [ 355, 471 ], [ 472, 602 ], [ 603, 808 ], [ 809, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 24, 15 ], [ 37, 15 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 152, 0 ], [ 152, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-12_6
The Jackson 5’s first record label was based in a “city of the century” named for this man, which inspired the Soviet city of Magnitogorsk before becoming a classic example of urban decay in the Rust Belt.
[ "Gary Plan, Gary Works,", "Judge Gary", "Elbert H. Gary", "Gary", "Gary dinners", "Gary Gary" ]
acf-co24-11-12
6
This person held a namesake series of illegal price-fixing “dinners” in New York. Stalin’s plan to “catch and overtake” a place named for this American is documented in a Stephen Kotkin book. This man ineffectively tried to end convict leasing in the Alabama mines he acquired as chairman of a company that merged with TCI to stave off the Panic of 1907. This man names a platoon-based “plan” for “work-study-play” education created by John Dewey’s disciple William Wirt. This former judge’s “federal” company became part of a firm helmed by Charles Schwab after a 1901 merger planned by J. P. Morgan. The Jackson 5’s first record label was based in a “city of the century” named for this man, which inspired the Soviet city of Magnitogorsk before becoming a classic example of urban decay in the Rust Belt. For 10 points, what co-founder of U.S. Steel names a city in northwest Indiana?
Elbert H. Gary [or Judge Gary; accept Gary Plan, Gary Works, or Gary dinners] (The Jackson 5 was signed by Steeltown Records.)
[ [ 0, 81 ], [ 82, 191 ], [ 192, 354 ], [ 355, 471 ], [ 472, 602 ], [ 603, 808 ], [ 809, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 24, 15 ], [ 37, 15 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 152, 0 ], [ 152, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-12_7
For 10 points, what co-founder of U.S. Steel names a city in northwest Indiana?
[ "Gary Plan, Gary Works,", "Judge Gary", "Elbert H. Gary", "Gary", "Gary dinners", "Gary Gary" ]
acf-co24-11-12
7
This person held a namesake series of illegal price-fixing “dinners” in New York. Stalin’s plan to “catch and overtake” a place named for this American is documented in a Stephen Kotkin book. This man ineffectively tried to end convict leasing in the Alabama mines he acquired as chairman of a company that merged with TCI to stave off the Panic of 1907. This man names a platoon-based “plan” for “work-study-play” education created by John Dewey’s disciple William Wirt. This former judge’s “federal” company became part of a firm helmed by Charles Schwab after a 1901 merger planned by J. P. Morgan. The Jackson 5’s first record label was based in a “city of the century” named for this man, which inspired the Soviet city of Magnitogorsk before becoming a classic example of urban decay in the Rust Belt. For 10 points, what co-founder of U.S. Steel names a city in northwest Indiana?
Elbert H. Gary [or Judge Gary; accept Gary Plan, Gary Works, or Gary dinners] (The Jackson 5 was signed by Steeltown Records.)
[ [ 0, 81 ], [ 82, 191 ], [ 192, 354 ], [ 355, 471 ], [ 472, 602 ], [ 603, 808 ], [ 809, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 24, 15 ], [ 37, 15 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 152, 0 ], [ 152, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-13_1
In a play set in one of these places, a man uses Paul Éluard and Tintin to explain a description given by someone from Shepherd’s Bush.
[ "psych hospital", "mental hospitals", "psychiatric hospitals", "asylum", "mental institution", "Funnyhouse of a Negro", "mental institutions", "psych", "hospital", "mental asylums", "mental hospital", "Funnyhouse", "insane asylums", "psychiatric institutions" ]
acf-co24-11-13
1
In a play set in one of these places, a man uses Paul Éluard and Tintin to explain a description given by someone from Shepherd’s Bush. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which a duchess is among several characters who have tufts of hair fall off while sleeping. Chiwetel Ejiofor debuted the role of Chris in a play set in one of these places that is titled for his description of a bowl of fruit, Joe Penhall’s Blue/Orange. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which Jesus, Queen Victoria, and Patrice Lumumba all appear in Sarah’s apartment, by the Black Arts writer Adrienne Kennedy. While being led to one of these places at the end of a play, a woman is handed a paper lantern and tells a man that “whoever you are – I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” For 10 points, name this type of place where Blanche goes at the end of A Streetcar Named Desire.
mental hospitals [or psychiatric hospitals; accept mental asylums or insane asylums; accept mental institutions or psychiatric institutions; accept Funnyhouse of a Negro; prompt on hospitals, institutions, or houses]
[ [ 0, 135 ], [ 136, 274 ], [ 275, 436 ], [ 437, 609 ], [ 610, 798 ], [ 799, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 79, 15 ], [ 92, 15 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-13_2
A word for this sort of place titles a play in which a duchess is among several characters who have tufts of hair fall off while sleeping.
[ "psych hospital", "mental hospitals", "psychiatric hospitals", "asylum", "mental institution", "Funnyhouse of a Negro", "mental institutions", "psych", "hospital", "mental asylums", "mental hospital", "Funnyhouse", "insane asylums", "psychiatric institutions" ]
acf-co24-11-13
2
In a play set in one of these places, a man uses Paul Éluard and Tintin to explain a description given by someone from Shepherd’s Bush. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which a duchess is among several characters who have tufts of hair fall off while sleeping. Chiwetel Ejiofor debuted the role of Chris in a play set in one of these places that is titled for his description of a bowl of fruit, Joe Penhall’s Blue/Orange. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which Jesus, Queen Victoria, and Patrice Lumumba all appear in Sarah’s apartment, by the Black Arts writer Adrienne Kennedy. While being led to one of these places at the end of a play, a woman is handed a paper lantern and tells a man that “whoever you are – I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” For 10 points, name this type of place where Blanche goes at the end of A Streetcar Named Desire.
mental hospitals [or psychiatric hospitals; accept mental asylums or insane asylums; accept mental institutions or psychiatric institutions; accept Funnyhouse of a Negro; prompt on hospitals, institutions, or houses]
[ [ 0, 135 ], [ 136, 274 ], [ 275, 436 ], [ 437, 609 ], [ 610, 798 ], [ 799, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 79, 15 ], [ 92, 15 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-13_3
Chiwetel Ejiofor debuted the role of Chris in a play set in one of these places that is titled for his description of a bowl of fruit, Joe Penhall’s Blue/Orange.
[ "psych hospital", "mental hospitals", "psychiatric hospitals", "asylum", "mental institution", "Funnyhouse of a Negro", "mental institutions", "psych", "hospital", "mental asylums", "mental hospital", "Funnyhouse", "insane asylums", "psychiatric institutions" ]
acf-co24-11-13
3
In a play set in one of these places, a man uses Paul Éluard and Tintin to explain a description given by someone from Shepherd’s Bush. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which a duchess is among several characters who have tufts of hair fall off while sleeping. Chiwetel Ejiofor debuted the role of Chris in a play set in one of these places that is titled for his description of a bowl of fruit, Joe Penhall’s Blue/Orange. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which Jesus, Queen Victoria, and Patrice Lumumba all appear in Sarah’s apartment, by the Black Arts writer Adrienne Kennedy. While being led to one of these places at the end of a play, a woman is handed a paper lantern and tells a man that “whoever you are – I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” For 10 points, name this type of place where Blanche goes at the end of A Streetcar Named Desire.
mental hospitals [or psychiatric hospitals; accept mental asylums or insane asylums; accept mental institutions or psychiatric institutions; accept Funnyhouse of a Negro; prompt on hospitals, institutions, or houses]
[ [ 0, 135 ], [ 136, 274 ], [ 275, 436 ], [ 437, 609 ], [ 610, 798 ], [ 799, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 79, 15 ], [ 92, 15 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-13_4
A word for this sort of place titles a play in which Jesus, Queen Victoria, and Patrice Lumumba all appear in Sarah’s apartment, by the Black Arts writer Adrienne Kennedy.
[ "psych hospital", "mental hospitals", "psychiatric hospitals", "asylum", "mental institution", "Funnyhouse of a Negro", "mental institutions", "psych", "hospital", "mental asylums", "mental hospital", "Funnyhouse", "insane asylums", "psychiatric institutions" ]
acf-co24-11-13
4
In a play set in one of these places, a man uses Paul Éluard and Tintin to explain a description given by someone from Shepherd’s Bush. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which a duchess is among several characters who have tufts of hair fall off while sleeping. Chiwetel Ejiofor debuted the role of Chris in a play set in one of these places that is titled for his description of a bowl of fruit, Joe Penhall’s Blue/Orange. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which Jesus, Queen Victoria, and Patrice Lumumba all appear in Sarah’s apartment, by the Black Arts writer Adrienne Kennedy. While being led to one of these places at the end of a play, a woman is handed a paper lantern and tells a man that “whoever you are – I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” For 10 points, name this type of place where Blanche goes at the end of A Streetcar Named Desire.
mental hospitals [or psychiatric hospitals; accept mental asylums or insane asylums; accept mental institutions or psychiatric institutions; accept Funnyhouse of a Negro; prompt on hospitals, institutions, or houses]
[ [ 0, 135 ], [ 136, 274 ], [ 275, 436 ], [ 437, 609 ], [ 610, 798 ], [ 799, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 79, 15 ], [ 92, 15 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-13_5
While being led to one of these places at the end of a play, a woman is handed a paper lantern and tells a man that “whoever you are – I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.”
[ "psych hospital", "mental hospitals", "psychiatric hospitals", "asylum", "mental institution", "Funnyhouse of a Negro", "mental institutions", "psych", "hospital", "mental asylums", "mental hospital", "Funnyhouse", "insane asylums", "psychiatric institutions" ]
acf-co24-11-13
5
In a play set in one of these places, a man uses Paul Éluard and Tintin to explain a description given by someone from Shepherd’s Bush. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which a duchess is among several characters who have tufts of hair fall off while sleeping. Chiwetel Ejiofor debuted the role of Chris in a play set in one of these places that is titled for his description of a bowl of fruit, Joe Penhall’s Blue/Orange. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which Jesus, Queen Victoria, and Patrice Lumumba all appear in Sarah’s apartment, by the Black Arts writer Adrienne Kennedy. While being led to one of these places at the end of a play, a woman is handed a paper lantern and tells a man that “whoever you are – I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” For 10 points, name this type of place where Blanche goes at the end of A Streetcar Named Desire.
mental hospitals [or psychiatric hospitals; accept mental asylums or insane asylums; accept mental institutions or psychiatric institutions; accept Funnyhouse of a Negro; prompt on hospitals, institutions, or houses]
[ [ 0, 135 ], [ 136, 274 ], [ 275, 436 ], [ 437, 609 ], [ 610, 798 ], [ 799, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 79, 15 ], [ 92, 15 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-13_6
For 10 points, name this type of place where Blanche goes at the end of A Streetcar Named Desire.
[ "psych hospital", "mental hospitals", "psychiatric hospitals", "asylum", "mental institution", "Funnyhouse of a Negro", "mental institutions", "psych", "hospital", "mental asylums", "mental hospital", "Funnyhouse", "insane asylums", "psychiatric institutions" ]
acf-co24-11-13
6
In a play set in one of these places, a man uses Paul Éluard and Tintin to explain a description given by someone from Shepherd’s Bush. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which a duchess is among several characters who have tufts of hair fall off while sleeping. Chiwetel Ejiofor debuted the role of Chris in a play set in one of these places that is titled for his description of a bowl of fruit, Joe Penhall’s Blue/Orange. A word for this sort of place titles a play in which Jesus, Queen Victoria, and Patrice Lumumba all appear in Sarah’s apartment, by the Black Arts writer Adrienne Kennedy. While being led to one of these places at the end of a play, a woman is handed a paper lantern and tells a man that “whoever you are – I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” For 10 points, name this type of place where Blanche goes at the end of A Streetcar Named Desire.
mental hospitals [or psychiatric hospitals; accept mental asylums or insane asylums; accept mental institutions or psychiatric institutions; accept Funnyhouse of a Negro; prompt on hospitals, institutions, or houses]
[ [ 0, 135 ], [ 136, 274 ], [ 275, 436 ], [ 437, 609 ], [ 610, 798 ], [ 799, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 79, 15 ], [ 92, 15 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-14_1
One instance of this operation is set equal to “negative one times the interaction Hamiltonian” to transform a system into a dressed ground state in the Schrieffer–Wolff transformation.
[ "canonical commutation relations", "commutation", "commutator with the Hamiltonian", "commutator" ]
acf-co24-11-14
1
One instance of this operation is set equal to “negative one times the interaction Hamiltonian” to transform a system into a dressed ground state in the Schrieffer–Wolff transformation. Hadamard’s lemma, which expresses “e-to-the-B times A times e-to-the-negative-B” in terms of a series of this operation, is a special case of the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula. The time evolution of operators in the Heisenberg picture is given by an instance of this operation containing the Hamiltonian. The expectation of “one over 2 i times an instance of this operation” all squared appears in the generalized uncertainty principle. Two variables are canonically conjugate if applying this operation to them yields “i times h-bar.” For 10 points, name this operation that takes “A and B” and returns “A times B minus B times A.”
commutation [or commutator; accept commutator with the Hamiltonian; accept canonical commutation relations]
[ [ 0, 185 ], [ 186, 365 ], [ 366, 494 ], [ 495, 626 ], [ 627, 725 ], [ 726, 822 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, 15 ], [ 48, 15 ], [ 51, -5 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 72, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-11-14_2
Hadamard’s lemma, which expresses “e-to-the-B times A times e-to-the-negative-B” in terms of a series of this operation, is a special case of the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula.
[ "canonical commutation relations", "commutation", "commutator with the Hamiltonian", "commutator" ]
acf-co24-11-14
2
One instance of this operation is set equal to “negative one times the interaction Hamiltonian” to transform a system into a dressed ground state in the Schrieffer–Wolff transformation. Hadamard’s lemma, which expresses “e-to-the-B times A times e-to-the-negative-B” in terms of a series of this operation, is a special case of the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula. The time evolution of operators in the Heisenberg picture is given by an instance of this operation containing the Hamiltonian. The expectation of “one over 2 i times an instance of this operation” all squared appears in the generalized uncertainty principle. Two variables are canonically conjugate if applying this operation to them yields “i times h-bar.” For 10 points, name this operation that takes “A and B” and returns “A times B minus B times A.”
commutation [or commutator; accept commutator with the Hamiltonian; accept canonical commutation relations]
[ [ 0, 185 ], [ 186, 365 ], [ 366, 494 ], [ 495, 626 ], [ 627, 725 ], [ 726, 822 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, 15 ], [ 48, 15 ], [ 51, -5 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 72, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-11-14_3
The time evolution of operators in the Heisenberg picture is given by an instance of this operation containing the Hamiltonian.
[ "canonical commutation relations", "commutation", "commutator with the Hamiltonian", "commutator" ]
acf-co24-11-14
3
One instance of this operation is set equal to “negative one times the interaction Hamiltonian” to transform a system into a dressed ground state in the Schrieffer–Wolff transformation. Hadamard’s lemma, which expresses “e-to-the-B times A times e-to-the-negative-B” in terms of a series of this operation, is a special case of the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula. The time evolution of operators in the Heisenberg picture is given by an instance of this operation containing the Hamiltonian. The expectation of “one over 2 i times an instance of this operation” all squared appears in the generalized uncertainty principle. Two variables are canonically conjugate if applying this operation to them yields “i times h-bar.” For 10 points, name this operation that takes “A and B” and returns “A times B minus B times A.”
commutation [or commutator; accept commutator with the Hamiltonian; accept canonical commutation relations]
[ [ 0, 185 ], [ 186, 365 ], [ 366, 494 ], [ 495, 626 ], [ 627, 725 ], [ 726, 822 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, 15 ], [ 48, 15 ], [ 51, -5 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 72, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-11-14_4
The expectation of “one over 2 i times an instance of this operation” all squared appears in the generalized uncertainty principle.
[ "canonical commutation relations", "commutation", "commutator with the Hamiltonian", "commutator" ]
acf-co24-11-14
4
One instance of this operation is set equal to “negative one times the interaction Hamiltonian” to transform a system into a dressed ground state in the Schrieffer–Wolff transformation. Hadamard’s lemma, which expresses “e-to-the-B times A times e-to-the-negative-B” in terms of a series of this operation, is a special case of the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula. The time evolution of operators in the Heisenberg picture is given by an instance of this operation containing the Hamiltonian. The expectation of “one over 2 i times an instance of this operation” all squared appears in the generalized uncertainty principle. Two variables are canonically conjugate if applying this operation to them yields “i times h-bar.” For 10 points, name this operation that takes “A and B” and returns “A times B minus B times A.”
commutation [or commutator; accept commutator with the Hamiltonian; accept canonical commutation relations]
[ [ 0, 185 ], [ 186, 365 ], [ 366, 494 ], [ 495, 626 ], [ 627, 725 ], [ 726, 822 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, 15 ], [ 48, 15 ], [ 51, -5 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 72, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-11-14_5
Two variables are canonically conjugate if applying this operation to them yields “i times h-bar.”
[ "canonical commutation relations", "commutation", "commutator with the Hamiltonian", "commutator" ]
acf-co24-11-14
5
One instance of this operation is set equal to “negative one times the interaction Hamiltonian” to transform a system into a dressed ground state in the Schrieffer–Wolff transformation. Hadamard’s lemma, which expresses “e-to-the-B times A times e-to-the-negative-B” in terms of a series of this operation, is a special case of the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula. The time evolution of operators in the Heisenberg picture is given by an instance of this operation containing the Hamiltonian. The expectation of “one over 2 i times an instance of this operation” all squared appears in the generalized uncertainty principle. Two variables are canonically conjugate if applying this operation to them yields “i times h-bar.” For 10 points, name this operation that takes “A and B” and returns “A times B minus B times A.”
commutation [or commutator; accept commutator with the Hamiltonian; accept canonical commutation relations]
[ [ 0, 185 ], [ 186, 365 ], [ 366, 494 ], [ 495, 626 ], [ 627, 725 ], [ 726, 822 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, 15 ], [ 48, 15 ], [ 51, -5 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 72, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-11-14_6
For 10 points, name this operation that takes “A and B” and returns “A times B minus B times A.”
[ "canonical commutation relations", "commutation", "commutator with the Hamiltonian", "commutator" ]
acf-co24-11-14
6
One instance of this operation is set equal to “negative one times the interaction Hamiltonian” to transform a system into a dressed ground state in the Schrieffer–Wolff transformation. Hadamard’s lemma, which expresses “e-to-the-B times A times e-to-the-negative-B” in terms of a series of this operation, is a special case of the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff formula. The time evolution of operators in the Heisenberg picture is given by an instance of this operation containing the Hamiltonian. The expectation of “one over 2 i times an instance of this operation” all squared appears in the generalized uncertainty principle. Two variables are canonically conjugate if applying this operation to them yields “i times h-bar.” For 10 points, name this operation that takes “A and B” and returns “A times B minus B times A.”
commutation [or commutator; accept commutator with the Hamiltonian; accept canonical commutation relations]
[ [ 0, 185 ], [ 186, 365 ], [ 366, 494 ], [ 495, 626 ], [ 627, 725 ], [ 726, 822 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 44, 15 ], [ 48, 15 ], [ 51, -5 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 51, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 52, 15 ], [ 72, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 102, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-11-15_1
The theory that this movement was an “antidote for Jacobinism” is known as the “Halévy thesis.”
[ "Wesley", "Methodist", "Methodism", "word forms like Methodist Church", "Methodist revival", "Wesleyanism until Wesley is read" ]
acf-co24-11-15
1
The theory that this movement was an “antidote for Jacobinism” is known as the “Halévy thesis.” This movement is lambasted as a “ritualized form of psychic masturbation” that upheld the status quo by creating a “chiliasm of despair” in E. P. Thompson’s The Making of the English Working Class. In Wales, this movement was based in Howell Harris’s hometown of Trefeca, where it inspired “jumpers” and was sponsored by Selina, Countess of Huntingdon. “Connexions,” or offshoots, of this movement included the Kilhamites. This movement’s use of watch nights, love feasts, band meetings, and itinerant female preachers like Sarah Crosby helped it win popularity in 18th-century rural Britain, as fictionalized by George Eliot in Adam Bede. For 10 points, the Holy Club spawned what evangelical movement led by the hymnist Charles and his brother John Wesley?
Methodism [or word forms like Methodist Church or Methodist revival; accept Wesleyanism until “Wesley” is read; prompt on Christian revivalism; prompt on evangelical Christianity or word forms until “evangelical” is read]
[ [ 0, 95 ], [ 96, 293 ], [ 294, 448 ], [ 449, 519 ], [ 520, 736 ], [ 737, 855 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 40, 15 ], [ 47, 15 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-15_2
This movement is lambasted as a “ritualized form of psychic masturbation” that upheld the status quo by creating a “chiliasm of despair” in E. P. Thompson’s The Making of the English Working Class.
[ "Wesley", "Methodist", "Methodism", "word forms like Methodist Church", "Methodist revival", "Wesleyanism until Wesley is read" ]
acf-co24-11-15
2
The theory that this movement was an “antidote for Jacobinism” is known as the “Halévy thesis.” This movement is lambasted as a “ritualized form of psychic masturbation” that upheld the status quo by creating a “chiliasm of despair” in E. P. Thompson’s The Making of the English Working Class. In Wales, this movement was based in Howell Harris’s hometown of Trefeca, where it inspired “jumpers” and was sponsored by Selina, Countess of Huntingdon. “Connexions,” or offshoots, of this movement included the Kilhamites. This movement’s use of watch nights, love feasts, band meetings, and itinerant female preachers like Sarah Crosby helped it win popularity in 18th-century rural Britain, as fictionalized by George Eliot in Adam Bede. For 10 points, the Holy Club spawned what evangelical movement led by the hymnist Charles and his brother John Wesley?
Methodism [or word forms like Methodist Church or Methodist revival; accept Wesleyanism until “Wesley” is read; prompt on Christian revivalism; prompt on evangelical Christianity or word forms until “evangelical” is read]
[ [ 0, 95 ], [ 96, 293 ], [ 294, 448 ], [ 449, 519 ], [ 520, 736 ], [ 737, 855 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 40, 15 ], [ 47, 15 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-15_3
In Wales, this movement was based in Howell Harris’s hometown of Trefeca, where it inspired “jumpers” and was sponsored by Selina, Countess of Huntingdon.
[ "Wesley", "Methodist", "Methodism", "word forms like Methodist Church", "Methodist revival", "Wesleyanism until Wesley is read" ]
acf-co24-11-15
3
The theory that this movement was an “antidote for Jacobinism” is known as the “Halévy thesis.” This movement is lambasted as a “ritualized form of psychic masturbation” that upheld the status quo by creating a “chiliasm of despair” in E. P. Thompson’s The Making of the English Working Class. In Wales, this movement was based in Howell Harris’s hometown of Trefeca, where it inspired “jumpers” and was sponsored by Selina, Countess of Huntingdon. “Connexions,” or offshoots, of this movement included the Kilhamites. This movement’s use of watch nights, love feasts, band meetings, and itinerant female preachers like Sarah Crosby helped it win popularity in 18th-century rural Britain, as fictionalized by George Eliot in Adam Bede. For 10 points, the Holy Club spawned what evangelical movement led by the hymnist Charles and his brother John Wesley?
Methodism [or word forms like Methodist Church or Methodist revival; accept Wesleyanism until “Wesley” is read; prompt on Christian revivalism; prompt on evangelical Christianity or word forms until “evangelical” is read]
[ [ 0, 95 ], [ 96, 293 ], [ 294, 448 ], [ 449, 519 ], [ 520, 736 ], [ 737, 855 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 40, 15 ], [ 47, 15 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-15_4
“Connexions,” or offshoots, of this movement included the Kilhamites.
[ "Wesley", "Methodist", "Methodism", "word forms like Methodist Church", "Methodist revival", "Wesleyanism until Wesley is read" ]
acf-co24-11-15
4
The theory that this movement was an “antidote for Jacobinism” is known as the “Halévy thesis.” This movement is lambasted as a “ritualized form of psychic masturbation” that upheld the status quo by creating a “chiliasm of despair” in E. P. Thompson’s The Making of the English Working Class. In Wales, this movement was based in Howell Harris’s hometown of Trefeca, where it inspired “jumpers” and was sponsored by Selina, Countess of Huntingdon. “Connexions,” or offshoots, of this movement included the Kilhamites. This movement’s use of watch nights, love feasts, band meetings, and itinerant female preachers like Sarah Crosby helped it win popularity in 18th-century rural Britain, as fictionalized by George Eliot in Adam Bede. For 10 points, the Holy Club spawned what evangelical movement led by the hymnist Charles and his brother John Wesley?
Methodism [or word forms like Methodist Church or Methodist revival; accept Wesleyanism until “Wesley” is read; prompt on Christian revivalism; prompt on evangelical Christianity or word forms until “evangelical” is read]
[ [ 0, 95 ], [ 96, 293 ], [ 294, 448 ], [ 449, 519 ], [ 520, 736 ], [ 737, 855 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 40, 15 ], [ 47, 15 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-15_5
This movement’s use of watch nights, love feasts, band meetings, and itinerant female preachers like Sarah Crosby helped it win popularity in 18th-century rural Britain, as fictionalized by George Eliot in Adam Bede.
[ "Wesley", "Methodist", "Methodism", "word forms like Methodist Church", "Methodist revival", "Wesleyanism until Wesley is read" ]
acf-co24-11-15
5
The theory that this movement was an “antidote for Jacobinism” is known as the “Halévy thesis.” This movement is lambasted as a “ritualized form of psychic masturbation” that upheld the status quo by creating a “chiliasm of despair” in E. P. Thompson’s The Making of the English Working Class. In Wales, this movement was based in Howell Harris’s hometown of Trefeca, where it inspired “jumpers” and was sponsored by Selina, Countess of Huntingdon. “Connexions,” or offshoots, of this movement included the Kilhamites. This movement’s use of watch nights, love feasts, band meetings, and itinerant female preachers like Sarah Crosby helped it win popularity in 18th-century rural Britain, as fictionalized by George Eliot in Adam Bede. For 10 points, the Holy Club spawned what evangelical movement led by the hymnist Charles and his brother John Wesley?
Methodism [or word forms like Methodist Church or Methodist revival; accept Wesleyanism until “Wesley” is read; prompt on Christian revivalism; prompt on evangelical Christianity or word forms until “evangelical” is read]
[ [ 0, 95 ], [ 96, 293 ], [ 294, 448 ], [ 449, 519 ], [ 520, 736 ], [ 737, 855 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 40, 15 ], [ 47, 15 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-15_6
For 10 points, the Holy Club spawned what evangelical movement led by the hymnist Charles and his brother John Wesley?
[ "Wesley", "Methodist", "Methodism", "word forms like Methodist Church", "Methodist revival", "Wesleyanism until Wesley is read" ]
acf-co24-11-15
6
The theory that this movement was an “antidote for Jacobinism” is known as the “Halévy thesis.” This movement is lambasted as a “ritualized form of psychic masturbation” that upheld the status quo by creating a “chiliasm of despair” in E. P. Thompson’s The Making of the English Working Class. In Wales, this movement was based in Howell Harris’s hometown of Trefeca, where it inspired “jumpers” and was sponsored by Selina, Countess of Huntingdon. “Connexions,” or offshoots, of this movement included the Kilhamites. This movement’s use of watch nights, love feasts, band meetings, and itinerant female preachers like Sarah Crosby helped it win popularity in 18th-century rural Britain, as fictionalized by George Eliot in Adam Bede. For 10 points, the Holy Club spawned what evangelical movement led by the hymnist Charles and his brother John Wesley?
Methodism [or word forms like Methodist Church or Methodist revival; accept Wesleyanism until “Wesley” is read; prompt on Christian revivalism; prompt on evangelical Christianity or word forms until “evangelical” is read]
[ [ 0, 95 ], [ 96, 293 ], [ 294, 448 ], [ 449, 519 ], [ 520, 736 ], [ 737, 855 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 40, 15 ], [ 47, 15 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-11-16_1
The central concept of this school of philosophy is defined as “that which is manifest in itself and manifests others.”
[ "Ishraqi", "Illuminationism", "Illumination", "Ishraqiyyun" ]
acf-co24-11-16
1
The central concept of this school of philosophy is defined as “that which is manifest in itself and manifests others.” John Walbridge criticized Henry Corbin for calling this school a “theosophy” in his translation of its core text. This school posited a “world of images” in which souls reside before transmigrating. As leader of a Zoroastrian offshoot of this school, Azar Kayvan composed a set of Ordinances in an invented “heavenly language.” The founder of this school of thought had a “dream-vision” in which Aristotle gave him the doctrine of knowledge by presence. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi wrote a commentary on this school, which began as a critique of Avicenna’s Peripateticism. The founder of this school was executed in Aleppo by Saladin’s son. Mulla Sadra was a “master” of this school founded by Suhrawardi. For 10 points, what Persian school of thought called God the “Light of Lights?”
Illuminationism [or Ishraqiyyun or Ishraqi; prompt on School of Isfahan by asking “members of the School of Isfahan built on what earlier philosophy?”]
[ [ 0, 119 ], [ 120, 233 ], [ 234, 318 ], [ 319, 447 ], [ 448, 574 ], [ 575, 688 ], [ 689, 756 ], [ 757, 821 ], [ 822, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 140, -5 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-11-16_2
John Walbridge criticized Henry Corbin for calling this school a “theosophy” in his translation of its core text.
[ "Ishraqi", "Illuminationism", "Illumination", "Ishraqiyyun" ]
acf-co24-11-16
2
The central concept of this school of philosophy is defined as “that which is manifest in itself and manifests others.” John Walbridge criticized Henry Corbin for calling this school a “theosophy” in his translation of its core text. This school posited a “world of images” in which souls reside before transmigrating. As leader of a Zoroastrian offshoot of this school, Azar Kayvan composed a set of Ordinances in an invented “heavenly language.” The founder of this school of thought had a “dream-vision” in which Aristotle gave him the doctrine of knowledge by presence. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi wrote a commentary on this school, which began as a critique of Avicenna’s Peripateticism. The founder of this school was executed in Aleppo by Saladin’s son. Mulla Sadra was a “master” of this school founded by Suhrawardi. For 10 points, what Persian school of thought called God the “Light of Lights?”
Illuminationism [or Ishraqiyyun or Ishraqi; prompt on School of Isfahan by asking “members of the School of Isfahan built on what earlier philosophy?”]
[ [ 0, 119 ], [ 120, 233 ], [ 234, 318 ], [ 319, 447 ], [ 448, 574 ], [ 575, 688 ], [ 689, 756 ], [ 757, 821 ], [ 822, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 140, -5 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-11-16_3
This school posited a “world of images” in which souls reside before transmigrating.
[ "Ishraqi", "Illuminationism", "Illumination", "Ishraqiyyun" ]
acf-co24-11-16
3
The central concept of this school of philosophy is defined as “that which is manifest in itself and manifests others.” John Walbridge criticized Henry Corbin for calling this school a “theosophy” in his translation of its core text. This school posited a “world of images” in which souls reside before transmigrating. As leader of a Zoroastrian offshoot of this school, Azar Kayvan composed a set of Ordinances in an invented “heavenly language.” The founder of this school of thought had a “dream-vision” in which Aristotle gave him the doctrine of knowledge by presence. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi wrote a commentary on this school, which began as a critique of Avicenna’s Peripateticism. The founder of this school was executed in Aleppo by Saladin’s son. Mulla Sadra was a “master” of this school founded by Suhrawardi. For 10 points, what Persian school of thought called God the “Light of Lights?”
Illuminationism [or Ishraqiyyun or Ishraqi; prompt on School of Isfahan by asking “members of the School of Isfahan built on what earlier philosophy?”]
[ [ 0, 119 ], [ 120, 233 ], [ 234, 318 ], [ 319, 447 ], [ 448, 574 ], [ 575, 688 ], [ 689, 756 ], [ 757, 821 ], [ 822, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 140, -5 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-11-16_4
As leader of a Zoroastrian offshoot of this school, Azar Kayvan composed a set of Ordinances in an invented “heavenly language.”
[ "Ishraqi", "Illuminationism", "Illumination", "Ishraqiyyun" ]
acf-co24-11-16
4
The central concept of this school of philosophy is defined as “that which is manifest in itself and manifests others.” John Walbridge criticized Henry Corbin for calling this school a “theosophy” in his translation of its core text. This school posited a “world of images” in which souls reside before transmigrating. As leader of a Zoroastrian offshoot of this school, Azar Kayvan composed a set of Ordinances in an invented “heavenly language.” The founder of this school of thought had a “dream-vision” in which Aristotle gave him the doctrine of knowledge by presence. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi wrote a commentary on this school, which began as a critique of Avicenna’s Peripateticism. The founder of this school was executed in Aleppo by Saladin’s son. Mulla Sadra was a “master” of this school founded by Suhrawardi. For 10 points, what Persian school of thought called God the “Light of Lights?”
Illuminationism [or Ishraqiyyun or Ishraqi; prompt on School of Isfahan by asking “members of the School of Isfahan built on what earlier philosophy?”]
[ [ 0, 119 ], [ 120, 233 ], [ 234, 318 ], [ 319, 447 ], [ 448, 574 ], [ 575, 688 ], [ 689, 756 ], [ 757, 821 ], [ 822, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 140, -5 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-11-16_5
The founder of this school of thought had a “dream-vision” in which Aristotle gave him the doctrine of knowledge by presence.
[ "Ishraqi", "Illuminationism", "Illumination", "Ishraqiyyun" ]
acf-co24-11-16
5
The central concept of this school of philosophy is defined as “that which is manifest in itself and manifests others.” John Walbridge criticized Henry Corbin for calling this school a “theosophy” in his translation of its core text. This school posited a “world of images” in which souls reside before transmigrating. As leader of a Zoroastrian offshoot of this school, Azar Kayvan composed a set of Ordinances in an invented “heavenly language.” The founder of this school of thought had a “dream-vision” in which Aristotle gave him the doctrine of knowledge by presence. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi wrote a commentary on this school, which began as a critique of Avicenna’s Peripateticism. The founder of this school was executed in Aleppo by Saladin’s son. Mulla Sadra was a “master” of this school founded by Suhrawardi. For 10 points, what Persian school of thought called God the “Light of Lights?”
Illuminationism [or Ishraqiyyun or Ishraqi; prompt on School of Isfahan by asking “members of the School of Isfahan built on what earlier philosophy?”]
[ [ 0, 119 ], [ 120, 233 ], [ 234, 318 ], [ 319, 447 ], [ 448, 574 ], [ 575, 688 ], [ 689, 756 ], [ 757, 821 ], [ 822, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 140, -5 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-11-16_6
Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi wrote a commentary on this school, which began as a critique of Avicenna’s Peripateticism.
[ "Ishraqi", "Illuminationism", "Illumination", "Ishraqiyyun" ]
acf-co24-11-16
6
The central concept of this school of philosophy is defined as “that which is manifest in itself and manifests others.” John Walbridge criticized Henry Corbin for calling this school a “theosophy” in his translation of its core text. This school posited a “world of images” in which souls reside before transmigrating. As leader of a Zoroastrian offshoot of this school, Azar Kayvan composed a set of Ordinances in an invented “heavenly language.” The founder of this school of thought had a “dream-vision” in which Aristotle gave him the doctrine of knowledge by presence. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi wrote a commentary on this school, which began as a critique of Avicenna’s Peripateticism. The founder of this school was executed in Aleppo by Saladin’s son. Mulla Sadra was a “master” of this school founded by Suhrawardi. For 10 points, what Persian school of thought called God the “Light of Lights?”
Illuminationism [or Ishraqiyyun or Ishraqi; prompt on School of Isfahan by asking “members of the School of Isfahan built on what earlier philosophy?”]
[ [ 0, 119 ], [ 120, 233 ], [ 234, 318 ], [ 319, 447 ], [ 448, 574 ], [ 575, 688 ], [ 689, 756 ], [ 757, 821 ], [ 822, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 140, -5 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-11-16_7
The founder of this school was executed in Aleppo by Saladin’s son.
[ "Ishraqi", "Illuminationism", "Illumination", "Ishraqiyyun" ]
acf-co24-11-16
7
The central concept of this school of philosophy is defined as “that which is manifest in itself and manifests others.” John Walbridge criticized Henry Corbin for calling this school a “theosophy” in his translation of its core text. This school posited a “world of images” in which souls reside before transmigrating. As leader of a Zoroastrian offshoot of this school, Azar Kayvan composed a set of Ordinances in an invented “heavenly language.” The founder of this school of thought had a “dream-vision” in which Aristotle gave him the doctrine of knowledge by presence. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi wrote a commentary on this school, which began as a critique of Avicenna’s Peripateticism. The founder of this school was executed in Aleppo by Saladin’s son. Mulla Sadra was a “master” of this school founded by Suhrawardi. For 10 points, what Persian school of thought called God the “Light of Lights?”
Illuminationism [or Ishraqiyyun or Ishraqi; prompt on School of Isfahan by asking “members of the School of Isfahan built on what earlier philosophy?”]
[ [ 0, 119 ], [ 120, 233 ], [ 234, 318 ], [ 319, 447 ], [ 448, 574 ], [ 575, 688 ], [ 689, 756 ], [ 757, 821 ], [ 822, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 140, -5 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-11-16_8
Mulla Sadra was a “master” of this school founded by Suhrawardi.
[ "Ishraqi", "Illuminationism", "Illumination", "Ishraqiyyun" ]
acf-co24-11-16
8
The central concept of this school of philosophy is defined as “that which is manifest in itself and manifests others.” John Walbridge criticized Henry Corbin for calling this school a “theosophy” in his translation of its core text. This school posited a “world of images” in which souls reside before transmigrating. As leader of a Zoroastrian offshoot of this school, Azar Kayvan composed a set of Ordinances in an invented “heavenly language.” The founder of this school of thought had a “dream-vision” in which Aristotle gave him the doctrine of knowledge by presence. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi wrote a commentary on this school, which began as a critique of Avicenna’s Peripateticism. The founder of this school was executed in Aleppo by Saladin’s son. Mulla Sadra was a “master” of this school founded by Suhrawardi. For 10 points, what Persian school of thought called God the “Light of Lights?”
Illuminationism [or Ishraqiyyun or Ishraqi; prompt on School of Isfahan by asking “members of the School of Isfahan built on what earlier philosophy?”]
[ [ 0, 119 ], [ 120, 233 ], [ 234, 318 ], [ 319, 447 ], [ 448, 574 ], [ 575, 688 ], [ 689, 756 ], [ 757, 821 ], [ 822, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 140, -5 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-11-16_9
For 10 points, what Persian school of thought called God the “Light of Lights?”
[ "Ishraqi", "Illuminationism", "Illumination", "Ishraqiyyun" ]
acf-co24-11-16
9
The central concept of this school of philosophy is defined as “that which is manifest in itself and manifests others.” John Walbridge criticized Henry Corbin for calling this school a “theosophy” in his translation of its core text. This school posited a “world of images” in which souls reside before transmigrating. As leader of a Zoroastrian offshoot of this school, Azar Kayvan composed a set of Ordinances in an invented “heavenly language.” The founder of this school of thought had a “dream-vision” in which Aristotle gave him the doctrine of knowledge by presence. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi wrote a commentary on this school, which began as a critique of Avicenna’s Peripateticism. The founder of this school was executed in Aleppo by Saladin’s son. Mulla Sadra was a “master” of this school founded by Suhrawardi. For 10 points, what Persian school of thought called God the “Light of Lights?”
Illuminationism [or Ishraqiyyun or Ishraqi; prompt on School of Isfahan by asking “members of the School of Isfahan built on what earlier philosophy?”]
[ [ 0, 119 ], [ 120, 233 ], [ 234, 318 ], [ 319, 447 ], [ 448, 574 ], [ 575, 688 ], [ 689, 756 ], [ 757, 821 ], [ 822, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 140, -5 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 0 ], [ 147, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-11-17_1
While debating how long they have been engaging in this activity, a woman tells an aspiring clergyman, “Oh! Do not attack me with your watch.”
[ "walking", "stroll", "hiking", "walk", "synonyms like strolling" ]
acf-co24-11-17
1
While debating how long they have been engaging in this activity, a woman tells an aspiring clergyman, “Oh! Do not attack me with your watch.” A character’s love of this activity, which her rivals attribute to “conceited independence, a most country-town indifference to decorum,” is analyzed in a nonfiction book in a chapter titled for that character’s petticoat. A writer’s disregard of the Napoleonic wars is contrasted with her acceptance of the “cult of landscape” in a book on the “history of” this activity by Rebecca Solnit. Miss Hurst cattily says Elizabeth, “has nothing, in short, to recommend her but” her excellence at this activity, which Darcy says has “brightened” her “fine eyes” when she does it after Jane suddenly falls ill. For 10 points, Marianne is caught by a rainstorm while doing what activity favored by Jane Austen’s more free-spirited “genteel country ladies,” the subject of Solnit’s Wanderlust?
walking [accept synonyms like strolling or hiking; prompt on wandering or traveling; reject faster activities like “running”] (The books clued are Mansfield Park, Pride and Prejudice, and Sense and Sensibility.)
[ [ 0, 142 ], [ 143, 365 ], [ 366, 534 ], [ 535, 746 ], [ 747, 927 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 57, 15 ], [ 85, 15 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 140, 0 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-17_2
A character’s love of this activity, which her rivals attribute to “conceited independence, a most country-town indifference to decorum,” is analyzed in a nonfiction book in a chapter titled for that character’s petticoat.
[ "walking", "stroll", "hiking", "walk", "synonyms like strolling" ]
acf-co24-11-17
2
While debating how long they have been engaging in this activity, a woman tells an aspiring clergyman, “Oh! Do not attack me with your watch.” A character’s love of this activity, which her rivals attribute to “conceited independence, a most country-town indifference to decorum,” is analyzed in a nonfiction book in a chapter titled for that character’s petticoat. A writer’s disregard of the Napoleonic wars is contrasted with her acceptance of the “cult of landscape” in a book on the “history of” this activity by Rebecca Solnit. Miss Hurst cattily says Elizabeth, “has nothing, in short, to recommend her but” her excellence at this activity, which Darcy says has “brightened” her “fine eyes” when she does it after Jane suddenly falls ill. For 10 points, Marianne is caught by a rainstorm while doing what activity favored by Jane Austen’s more free-spirited “genteel country ladies,” the subject of Solnit’s Wanderlust?
walking [accept synonyms like strolling or hiking; prompt on wandering or traveling; reject faster activities like “running”] (The books clued are Mansfield Park, Pride and Prejudice, and Sense and Sensibility.)
[ [ 0, 142 ], [ 143, 365 ], [ 366, 534 ], [ 535, 746 ], [ 747, 927 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 57, 15 ], [ 85, 15 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 140, 0 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-17_3
A writer’s disregard of the Napoleonic wars is contrasted with her acceptance of the “cult of landscape” in a book on the “history of” this activity by Rebecca Solnit.
[ "walking", "stroll", "hiking", "walk", "synonyms like strolling" ]
acf-co24-11-17
3
While debating how long they have been engaging in this activity, a woman tells an aspiring clergyman, “Oh! Do not attack me with your watch.” A character’s love of this activity, which her rivals attribute to “conceited independence, a most country-town indifference to decorum,” is analyzed in a nonfiction book in a chapter titled for that character’s petticoat. A writer’s disregard of the Napoleonic wars is contrasted with her acceptance of the “cult of landscape” in a book on the “history of” this activity by Rebecca Solnit. Miss Hurst cattily says Elizabeth, “has nothing, in short, to recommend her but” her excellence at this activity, which Darcy says has “brightened” her “fine eyes” when she does it after Jane suddenly falls ill. For 10 points, Marianne is caught by a rainstorm while doing what activity favored by Jane Austen’s more free-spirited “genteel country ladies,” the subject of Solnit’s Wanderlust?
walking [accept synonyms like strolling or hiking; prompt on wandering or traveling; reject faster activities like “running”] (The books clued are Mansfield Park, Pride and Prejudice, and Sense and Sensibility.)
[ [ 0, 142 ], [ 143, 365 ], [ 366, 534 ], [ 535, 746 ], [ 747, 927 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 57, 15 ], [ 85, 15 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 140, 0 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-17_4
Miss Hurst cattily says Elizabeth, “has nothing, in short, to recommend her but” her excellence at this activity, which Darcy says has “brightened” her “fine eyes” when she does it after Jane suddenly falls ill.
[ "walking", "stroll", "hiking", "walk", "synonyms like strolling" ]
acf-co24-11-17
4
While debating how long they have been engaging in this activity, a woman tells an aspiring clergyman, “Oh! Do not attack me with your watch.” A character’s love of this activity, which her rivals attribute to “conceited independence, a most country-town indifference to decorum,” is analyzed in a nonfiction book in a chapter titled for that character’s petticoat. A writer’s disregard of the Napoleonic wars is contrasted with her acceptance of the “cult of landscape” in a book on the “history of” this activity by Rebecca Solnit. Miss Hurst cattily says Elizabeth, “has nothing, in short, to recommend her but” her excellence at this activity, which Darcy says has “brightened” her “fine eyes” when she does it after Jane suddenly falls ill. For 10 points, Marianne is caught by a rainstorm while doing what activity favored by Jane Austen’s more free-spirited “genteel country ladies,” the subject of Solnit’s Wanderlust?
walking [accept synonyms like strolling or hiking; prompt on wandering or traveling; reject faster activities like “running”] (The books clued are Mansfield Park, Pride and Prejudice, and Sense and Sensibility.)
[ [ 0, 142 ], [ 143, 365 ], [ 366, 534 ], [ 535, 746 ], [ 747, 927 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 57, 15 ], [ 85, 15 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 140, 0 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-17_5
For 10 points, Marianne is caught by a rainstorm while doing what activity favored by Jane Austen’s more free-spirited “genteel country ladies,” the subject of Solnit’s Wanderlust?
[ "walking", "stroll", "hiking", "walk", "synonyms like strolling" ]
acf-co24-11-17
5
While debating how long they have been engaging in this activity, a woman tells an aspiring clergyman, “Oh! Do not attack me with your watch.” A character’s love of this activity, which her rivals attribute to “conceited independence, a most country-town indifference to decorum,” is analyzed in a nonfiction book in a chapter titled for that character’s petticoat. A writer’s disregard of the Napoleonic wars is contrasted with her acceptance of the “cult of landscape” in a book on the “history of” this activity by Rebecca Solnit. Miss Hurst cattily says Elizabeth, “has nothing, in short, to recommend her but” her excellence at this activity, which Darcy says has “brightened” her “fine eyes” when she does it after Jane suddenly falls ill. For 10 points, Marianne is caught by a rainstorm while doing what activity favored by Jane Austen’s more free-spirited “genteel country ladies,” the subject of Solnit’s Wanderlust?
walking [accept synonyms like strolling or hiking; prompt on wandering or traveling; reject faster activities like “running”] (The books clued are Mansfield Park, Pride and Prejudice, and Sense and Sensibility.)
[ [ 0, 142 ], [ 143, 365 ], [ 366, 534 ], [ 535, 746 ], [ 747, 927 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 57, 15 ], [ 85, 15 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 121, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 139, -5 ], [ 140, 0 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-11-18_1
Rabbi Joshua told one of these people that bodily resurrection occurs via the almond-shaped luz bone.
[ "emperor", "emperors of Rome", "princep", "Roman emperors", "princeps", "caesars until Caesarea is read", "caesar", "emperor Rome", "Roman emperor", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-11-18
1
Rabbi Joshua told one of these people that bodily resurrection occurs via the almond-shaped luz bone. In the Talmud, these people include a ghost who inspires his nephew to write the Targum Onkelos and the convert ancestor of Rabbi Meir. After arriving in a coffin, Yochanan ben Zakkai prophesied that his host would become one of these people and requested him to “give me Yavneh and its sages.” One of these people indirectly names the standard system of niqqud diacritics, since a city named for him was home to scribes who used stringent error detection methods to create the Masoretic Text. The phrase “may his bones be crushed” follows Talmudic mentions of one of these people who executed the Ten Martyrs. Jews may avoid walking under a structure named for one of them that features a relief of a captured menorah. For 10 points, name these rulers whose forces suppressed the Bar Kokhba revolt and destroyed the Second Temple.
Roman emperors [or emperors of Rome; or caesars until “Caesarea” is read; or princeps; prompt on emperors or synonyms of ruler, but reject “kings” or “dictators”; prompt on Romans or gentiles or non-Jews; prompt on Roman generals] (In the Talmud, Onkelos is Titus’s nephew and Nero converted to Judaism. The Masoretes invented the Tiberian system of vocalization in the city of Tiberias.)
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 237 ], [ 238, 396 ], [ 397, 596 ], [ 597, 713 ], [ 714, 822 ], [ 823, 934 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 63, 15 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 118, -5 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 143, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-11-18_2
In the Talmud, these people include a ghost who inspires his nephew to write the Targum Onkelos and the convert ancestor of Rabbi Meir.
[ "emperor", "emperors of Rome", "princep", "Roman emperors", "princeps", "caesars until Caesarea is read", "caesar", "emperor Rome", "Roman emperor", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-11-18
2
Rabbi Joshua told one of these people that bodily resurrection occurs via the almond-shaped luz bone. In the Talmud, these people include a ghost who inspires his nephew to write the Targum Onkelos and the convert ancestor of Rabbi Meir. After arriving in a coffin, Yochanan ben Zakkai prophesied that his host would become one of these people and requested him to “give me Yavneh and its sages.” One of these people indirectly names the standard system of niqqud diacritics, since a city named for him was home to scribes who used stringent error detection methods to create the Masoretic Text. The phrase “may his bones be crushed” follows Talmudic mentions of one of these people who executed the Ten Martyrs. Jews may avoid walking under a structure named for one of them that features a relief of a captured menorah. For 10 points, name these rulers whose forces suppressed the Bar Kokhba revolt and destroyed the Second Temple.
Roman emperors [or emperors of Rome; or caesars until “Caesarea” is read; or princeps; prompt on emperors or synonyms of ruler, but reject “kings” or “dictators”; prompt on Romans or gentiles or non-Jews; prompt on Roman generals] (In the Talmud, Onkelos is Titus’s nephew and Nero converted to Judaism. The Masoretes invented the Tiberian system of vocalization in the city of Tiberias.)
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 237 ], [ 238, 396 ], [ 397, 596 ], [ 597, 713 ], [ 714, 822 ], [ 823, 934 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 63, 15 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 118, -5 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 143, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-11-18_3
After arriving in a coffin, Yochanan ben Zakkai prophesied that his host would become one of these people and requested him to “give me Yavneh and its sages.”
[ "emperor", "emperors of Rome", "princep", "Roman emperors", "princeps", "caesars until Caesarea is read", "caesar", "emperor Rome", "Roman emperor", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-11-18
3
Rabbi Joshua told one of these people that bodily resurrection occurs via the almond-shaped luz bone. In the Talmud, these people include a ghost who inspires his nephew to write the Targum Onkelos and the convert ancestor of Rabbi Meir. After arriving in a coffin, Yochanan ben Zakkai prophesied that his host would become one of these people and requested him to “give me Yavneh and its sages.” One of these people indirectly names the standard system of niqqud diacritics, since a city named for him was home to scribes who used stringent error detection methods to create the Masoretic Text. The phrase “may his bones be crushed” follows Talmudic mentions of one of these people who executed the Ten Martyrs. Jews may avoid walking under a structure named for one of them that features a relief of a captured menorah. For 10 points, name these rulers whose forces suppressed the Bar Kokhba revolt and destroyed the Second Temple.
Roman emperors [or emperors of Rome; or caesars until “Caesarea” is read; or princeps; prompt on emperors or synonyms of ruler, but reject “kings” or “dictators”; prompt on Romans or gentiles or non-Jews; prompt on Roman generals] (In the Talmud, Onkelos is Titus’s nephew and Nero converted to Judaism. The Masoretes invented the Tiberian system of vocalization in the city of Tiberias.)
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 237 ], [ 238, 396 ], [ 397, 596 ], [ 597, 713 ], [ 714, 822 ], [ 823, 934 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 63, 15 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 118, -5 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 143, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-11-18_4
One of these people indirectly names the standard system of niqqud diacritics, since a city named for him was home to scribes who used stringent error detection methods to create the Masoretic Text.
[ "emperor", "emperors of Rome", "princep", "Roman emperors", "princeps", "caesars until Caesarea is read", "caesar", "emperor Rome", "Roman emperor", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-11-18
4
Rabbi Joshua told one of these people that bodily resurrection occurs via the almond-shaped luz bone. In the Talmud, these people include a ghost who inspires his nephew to write the Targum Onkelos and the convert ancestor of Rabbi Meir. After arriving in a coffin, Yochanan ben Zakkai prophesied that his host would become one of these people and requested him to “give me Yavneh and its sages.” One of these people indirectly names the standard system of niqqud diacritics, since a city named for him was home to scribes who used stringent error detection methods to create the Masoretic Text. The phrase “may his bones be crushed” follows Talmudic mentions of one of these people who executed the Ten Martyrs. Jews may avoid walking under a structure named for one of them that features a relief of a captured menorah. For 10 points, name these rulers whose forces suppressed the Bar Kokhba revolt and destroyed the Second Temple.
Roman emperors [or emperors of Rome; or caesars until “Caesarea” is read; or princeps; prompt on emperors or synonyms of ruler, but reject “kings” or “dictators”; prompt on Romans or gentiles or non-Jews; prompt on Roman generals] (In the Talmud, Onkelos is Titus’s nephew and Nero converted to Judaism. The Masoretes invented the Tiberian system of vocalization in the city of Tiberias.)
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 237 ], [ 238, 396 ], [ 397, 596 ], [ 597, 713 ], [ 714, 822 ], [ 823, 934 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 63, 15 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 118, -5 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 143, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-11-18_5
The phrase “may his bones be crushed” follows Talmudic mentions of one of these people who executed the Ten Martyrs.
[ "emperor", "emperors of Rome", "princep", "Roman emperors", "princeps", "caesars until Caesarea is read", "caesar", "emperor Rome", "Roman emperor", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-11-18
5
Rabbi Joshua told one of these people that bodily resurrection occurs via the almond-shaped luz bone. In the Talmud, these people include a ghost who inspires his nephew to write the Targum Onkelos and the convert ancestor of Rabbi Meir. After arriving in a coffin, Yochanan ben Zakkai prophesied that his host would become one of these people and requested him to “give me Yavneh and its sages.” One of these people indirectly names the standard system of niqqud diacritics, since a city named for him was home to scribes who used stringent error detection methods to create the Masoretic Text. The phrase “may his bones be crushed” follows Talmudic mentions of one of these people who executed the Ten Martyrs. Jews may avoid walking under a structure named for one of them that features a relief of a captured menorah. For 10 points, name these rulers whose forces suppressed the Bar Kokhba revolt and destroyed the Second Temple.
Roman emperors [or emperors of Rome; or caesars until “Caesarea” is read; or princeps; prompt on emperors or synonyms of ruler, but reject “kings” or “dictators”; prompt on Romans or gentiles or non-Jews; prompt on Roman generals] (In the Talmud, Onkelos is Titus’s nephew and Nero converted to Judaism. The Masoretes invented the Tiberian system of vocalization in the city of Tiberias.)
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 237 ], [ 238, 396 ], [ 397, 596 ], [ 597, 713 ], [ 714, 822 ], [ 823, 934 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 63, 15 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 118, -5 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 143, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-11-18_6
Jews may avoid walking under a structure named for one of them that features a relief of a captured menorah.
[ "emperor", "emperors of Rome", "princep", "Roman emperors", "princeps", "caesars until Caesarea is read", "caesar", "emperor Rome", "Roman emperor", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-11-18
6
Rabbi Joshua told one of these people that bodily resurrection occurs via the almond-shaped luz bone. In the Talmud, these people include a ghost who inspires his nephew to write the Targum Onkelos and the convert ancestor of Rabbi Meir. After arriving in a coffin, Yochanan ben Zakkai prophesied that his host would become one of these people and requested him to “give me Yavneh and its sages.” One of these people indirectly names the standard system of niqqud diacritics, since a city named for him was home to scribes who used stringent error detection methods to create the Masoretic Text. The phrase “may his bones be crushed” follows Talmudic mentions of one of these people who executed the Ten Martyrs. Jews may avoid walking under a structure named for one of them that features a relief of a captured menorah. For 10 points, name these rulers whose forces suppressed the Bar Kokhba revolt and destroyed the Second Temple.
Roman emperors [or emperors of Rome; or caesars until “Caesarea” is read; or princeps; prompt on emperors or synonyms of ruler, but reject “kings” or “dictators”; prompt on Romans or gentiles or non-Jews; prompt on Roman generals] (In the Talmud, Onkelos is Titus’s nephew and Nero converted to Judaism. The Masoretes invented the Tiberian system of vocalization in the city of Tiberias.)
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 237 ], [ 238, 396 ], [ 397, 596 ], [ 597, 713 ], [ 714, 822 ], [ 823, 934 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 63, 15 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 118, -5 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 143, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-11-18_7
For 10 points, name these rulers whose forces suppressed the Bar Kokhba revolt and destroyed the Second Temple.
[ "emperor", "emperors of Rome", "princep", "Roman emperors", "princeps", "caesars until Caesarea is read", "caesar", "emperor Rome", "Roman emperor", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-11-18
7
Rabbi Joshua told one of these people that bodily resurrection occurs via the almond-shaped luz bone. In the Talmud, these people include a ghost who inspires his nephew to write the Targum Onkelos and the convert ancestor of Rabbi Meir. After arriving in a coffin, Yochanan ben Zakkai prophesied that his host would become one of these people and requested him to “give me Yavneh and its sages.” One of these people indirectly names the standard system of niqqud diacritics, since a city named for him was home to scribes who used stringent error detection methods to create the Masoretic Text. The phrase “may his bones be crushed” follows Talmudic mentions of one of these people who executed the Ten Martyrs. Jews may avoid walking under a structure named for one of them that features a relief of a captured menorah. For 10 points, name these rulers whose forces suppressed the Bar Kokhba revolt and destroyed the Second Temple.
Roman emperors [or emperors of Rome; or caesars until “Caesarea” is read; or princeps; prompt on emperors or synonyms of ruler, but reject “kings” or “dictators”; prompt on Romans or gentiles or non-Jews; prompt on Roman generals] (In the Talmud, Onkelos is Titus’s nephew and Nero converted to Judaism. The Masoretes invented the Tiberian system of vocalization in the city of Tiberias.)
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 237 ], [ 238, 396 ], [ 397, 596 ], [ 597, 713 ], [ 714, 822 ], [ 823, 934 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 63, 15 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 118, -5 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 136, 10 ], [ 143, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ], [ 159, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-11-19_1
This was the main language of a jazz pop musician whose signature song calls his home city “a thousand colors, a thousand fears.”
[ "Canzone napoletana", "canzona napulitana", "Neapolitan", "napoletano", "napulitana", "napulitano", "nnapulitano", "’o nnapulitano", "napoletana" ]
acf-co24-11-19
1
This was the main language of a jazz pop musician whose signature song calls his home city “a thousand colors, a thousand fears.” It’s not Spanish, but a quirky Guinness ad popularized Pérez Prado’s mambo version of a song in this language whose title means “boy” or “urchin.” A song in this language about an “evil woman” was first written on a cigarette pack by a comedian known by the mononym Totò. A 1956 song in this language uses English phrases like “I love you,” “whiskey,” “soda,” and “rock ’n’ roll” to satirize its speakers as wannabe Americans. Elvis’s single “It’s Now or Never” was based on a song in this language whose title means “my sunshine.” Richard Strauss’s first tone poem accidentally plagiarized a song in this language that celebrates a cable railway on a volcano. For 10 points, name this language used in “Funiculì, Funiculà,” “’O Sole Mio,” and other songs from Campania.
Neapolitan [or napulitano; or ’o nnapulitano; or napoletano; accept Canzone napoletana or canzona napulitana; prompt on Italian] (The jazz pop musician is Pino Daniele, the songwriter of “Napule è.” The other songs are “Guaglione” and “Tu vuò fà l’americano.” The tone poem is Aus Italien.)
[ [ 0, 129 ], [ 130, 276 ], [ 277, 401 ], [ 402, 557 ], [ 558, 662 ], [ 663, 791 ], [ 792, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 49, -5 ], [ 73, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 86, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 93, 15 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-11-19_2
It’s not Spanish, but a quirky Guinness ad popularized Pérez Prado’s mambo version of a song in this language whose title means “boy” or “urchin.”
[ "Canzone napoletana", "canzona napulitana", "Neapolitan", "napoletano", "napulitana", "napulitano", "nnapulitano", "’o nnapulitano", "napoletana" ]
acf-co24-11-19
2
This was the main language of a jazz pop musician whose signature song calls his home city “a thousand colors, a thousand fears.” It’s not Spanish, but a quirky Guinness ad popularized Pérez Prado’s mambo version of a song in this language whose title means “boy” or “urchin.” A song in this language about an “evil woman” was first written on a cigarette pack by a comedian known by the mononym Totò. A 1956 song in this language uses English phrases like “I love you,” “whiskey,” “soda,” and “rock ’n’ roll” to satirize its speakers as wannabe Americans. Elvis’s single “It’s Now or Never” was based on a song in this language whose title means “my sunshine.” Richard Strauss’s first tone poem accidentally plagiarized a song in this language that celebrates a cable railway on a volcano. For 10 points, name this language used in “Funiculì, Funiculà,” “’O Sole Mio,” and other songs from Campania.
Neapolitan [or napulitano; or ’o nnapulitano; or napoletano; accept Canzone napoletana or canzona napulitana; prompt on Italian] (The jazz pop musician is Pino Daniele, the songwriter of “Napule è.” The other songs are “Guaglione” and “Tu vuò fà l’americano.” The tone poem is Aus Italien.)
[ [ 0, 129 ], [ 130, 276 ], [ 277, 401 ], [ 402, 557 ], [ 558, 662 ], [ 663, 791 ], [ 792, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 49, -5 ], [ 73, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 86, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 93, 15 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-11-19_3
A song in this language about an “evil woman” was first written on a cigarette pack by a comedian known by the mononym Totò.
[ "Canzone napoletana", "canzona napulitana", "Neapolitan", "napoletano", "napulitana", "napulitano", "nnapulitano", "’o nnapulitano", "napoletana" ]
acf-co24-11-19
3
This was the main language of a jazz pop musician whose signature song calls his home city “a thousand colors, a thousand fears.” It’s not Spanish, but a quirky Guinness ad popularized Pérez Prado’s mambo version of a song in this language whose title means “boy” or “urchin.” A song in this language about an “evil woman” was first written on a cigarette pack by a comedian known by the mononym Totò. A 1956 song in this language uses English phrases like “I love you,” “whiskey,” “soda,” and “rock ’n’ roll” to satirize its speakers as wannabe Americans. Elvis’s single “It’s Now or Never” was based on a song in this language whose title means “my sunshine.” Richard Strauss’s first tone poem accidentally plagiarized a song in this language that celebrates a cable railway on a volcano. For 10 points, name this language used in “Funiculì, Funiculà,” “’O Sole Mio,” and other songs from Campania.
Neapolitan [or napulitano; or ’o nnapulitano; or napoletano; accept Canzone napoletana or canzona napulitana; prompt on Italian] (The jazz pop musician is Pino Daniele, the songwriter of “Napule è.” The other songs are “Guaglione” and “Tu vuò fà l’americano.” The tone poem is Aus Italien.)
[ [ 0, 129 ], [ 130, 276 ], [ 277, 401 ], [ 402, 557 ], [ 558, 662 ], [ 663, 791 ], [ 792, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 49, -5 ], [ 73, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 86, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 93, 15 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-11-19_4
A 1956 song in this language uses English phrases like “I love you,” “whiskey,” “soda,” and “rock ’n’ roll” to satirize its speakers as wannabe Americans.
[ "Canzone napoletana", "canzona napulitana", "Neapolitan", "napoletano", "napulitana", "napulitano", "nnapulitano", "’o nnapulitano", "napoletana" ]
acf-co24-11-19
4
This was the main language of a jazz pop musician whose signature song calls his home city “a thousand colors, a thousand fears.” It’s not Spanish, but a quirky Guinness ad popularized Pérez Prado’s mambo version of a song in this language whose title means “boy” or “urchin.” A song in this language about an “evil woman” was first written on a cigarette pack by a comedian known by the mononym Totò. A 1956 song in this language uses English phrases like “I love you,” “whiskey,” “soda,” and “rock ’n’ roll” to satirize its speakers as wannabe Americans. Elvis’s single “It’s Now or Never” was based on a song in this language whose title means “my sunshine.” Richard Strauss’s first tone poem accidentally plagiarized a song in this language that celebrates a cable railway on a volcano. For 10 points, name this language used in “Funiculì, Funiculà,” “’O Sole Mio,” and other songs from Campania.
Neapolitan [or napulitano; or ’o nnapulitano; or napoletano; accept Canzone napoletana or canzona napulitana; prompt on Italian] (The jazz pop musician is Pino Daniele, the songwriter of “Napule è.” The other songs are “Guaglione” and “Tu vuò fà l’americano.” The tone poem is Aus Italien.)
[ [ 0, 129 ], [ 130, 276 ], [ 277, 401 ], [ 402, 557 ], [ 558, 662 ], [ 663, 791 ], [ 792, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 49, -5 ], [ 73, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 86, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 93, 15 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-11-19_5
Elvis’s single “It’s Now or Never” was based on a song in this language whose title means “my sunshine.”
[ "Canzone napoletana", "canzona napulitana", "Neapolitan", "napoletano", "napulitana", "napulitano", "nnapulitano", "’o nnapulitano", "napoletana" ]
acf-co24-11-19
5
This was the main language of a jazz pop musician whose signature song calls his home city “a thousand colors, a thousand fears.” It’s not Spanish, but a quirky Guinness ad popularized Pérez Prado’s mambo version of a song in this language whose title means “boy” or “urchin.” A song in this language about an “evil woman” was first written on a cigarette pack by a comedian known by the mononym Totò. A 1956 song in this language uses English phrases like “I love you,” “whiskey,” “soda,” and “rock ’n’ roll” to satirize its speakers as wannabe Americans. Elvis’s single “It’s Now or Never” was based on a song in this language whose title means “my sunshine.” Richard Strauss’s first tone poem accidentally plagiarized a song in this language that celebrates a cable railway on a volcano. For 10 points, name this language used in “Funiculì, Funiculà,” “’O Sole Mio,” and other songs from Campania.
Neapolitan [or napulitano; or ’o nnapulitano; or napoletano; accept Canzone napoletana or canzona napulitana; prompt on Italian] (The jazz pop musician is Pino Daniele, the songwriter of “Napule è.” The other songs are “Guaglione” and “Tu vuò fà l’americano.” The tone poem is Aus Italien.)
[ [ 0, 129 ], [ 130, 276 ], [ 277, 401 ], [ 402, 557 ], [ 558, 662 ], [ 663, 791 ], [ 792, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 49, -5 ], [ 73, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 86, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 93, 15 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-11-19_6
Richard Strauss’s first tone poem accidentally plagiarized a song in this language that celebrates a cable railway on a volcano.
[ "Canzone napoletana", "canzona napulitana", "Neapolitan", "napoletano", "napulitana", "napulitano", "nnapulitano", "’o nnapulitano", "napoletana" ]
acf-co24-11-19
6
This was the main language of a jazz pop musician whose signature song calls his home city “a thousand colors, a thousand fears.” It’s not Spanish, but a quirky Guinness ad popularized Pérez Prado’s mambo version of a song in this language whose title means “boy” or “urchin.” A song in this language about an “evil woman” was first written on a cigarette pack by a comedian known by the mononym Totò. A 1956 song in this language uses English phrases like “I love you,” “whiskey,” “soda,” and “rock ’n’ roll” to satirize its speakers as wannabe Americans. Elvis’s single “It’s Now or Never” was based on a song in this language whose title means “my sunshine.” Richard Strauss’s first tone poem accidentally plagiarized a song in this language that celebrates a cable railway on a volcano. For 10 points, name this language used in “Funiculì, Funiculà,” “’O Sole Mio,” and other songs from Campania.
Neapolitan [or napulitano; or ’o nnapulitano; or napoletano; accept Canzone napoletana or canzona napulitana; prompt on Italian] (The jazz pop musician is Pino Daniele, the songwriter of “Napule è.” The other songs are “Guaglione” and “Tu vuò fà l’americano.” The tone poem is Aus Italien.)
[ [ 0, 129 ], [ 130, 276 ], [ 277, 401 ], [ 402, 557 ], [ 558, 662 ], [ 663, 791 ], [ 792, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 49, -5 ], [ 73, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 86, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 93, 15 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-11-19_7
For 10 points, name this language used in “Funiculì, Funiculà,” “’O Sole Mio,” and other songs from Campania.
[ "Canzone napoletana", "canzona napulitana", "Neapolitan", "napoletano", "napulitana", "napulitano", "nnapulitano", "’o nnapulitano", "napoletana" ]
acf-co24-11-19
7
This was the main language of a jazz pop musician whose signature song calls his home city “a thousand colors, a thousand fears.” It’s not Spanish, but a quirky Guinness ad popularized Pérez Prado’s mambo version of a song in this language whose title means “boy” or “urchin.” A song in this language about an “evil woman” was first written on a cigarette pack by a comedian known by the mononym Totò. A 1956 song in this language uses English phrases like “I love you,” “whiskey,” “soda,” and “rock ’n’ roll” to satirize its speakers as wannabe Americans. Elvis’s single “It’s Now or Never” was based on a song in this language whose title means “my sunshine.” Richard Strauss’s first tone poem accidentally plagiarized a song in this language that celebrates a cable railway on a volcano. For 10 points, name this language used in “Funiculì, Funiculà,” “’O Sole Mio,” and other songs from Campania.
Neapolitan [or napulitano; or ’o nnapulitano; or napoletano; accept Canzone napoletana or canzona napulitana; prompt on Italian] (The jazz pop musician is Pino Daniele, the songwriter of “Napule è.” The other songs are “Guaglione” and “Tu vuò fà l’americano.” The tone poem is Aus Italien.)
[ [ 0, 129 ], [ 130, 276 ], [ 277, 401 ], [ 402, 557 ], [ 558, 662 ], [ 663, 791 ], [ 792, 901 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 49, -5 ], [ 73, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 86, -5 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 93, 15 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 146, -5 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ], [ 155, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-11-20_1
The apical side of this tissue contains Kolmer cells, a class of unique tissue-resident macrophages.
[ "epiplexus", "choroid plexus" ]
acf-co24-11-20
1
The apical side of this tissue contains Kolmer cells, a class of unique tissue-resident macrophages. “Strap junctions” join adjacent cells early in this tissue’s development, which follows the 4-stage Netsky model and is heavily dependent on glycogen accumulation. It isn’t in the thyroid or the liver, but epithelial cells in this tissue produce the thyroxine transport protein, transthyretin. A class of secretory cells in this tissue pass their output through the foramen of Monro. Aquaporins lining epithelial cells in this tissue provide convective input into the glymphatic system. This tissue is lined with a class of ciliated, simple columnar cells that secrete roughly 500 milliliters of fluid daily into the lateral ventricles, which are called ependymal cells. For 10 points, name this specialized network of capillaries and secretory cells that make new cerebrospinal fluid.
choroid plexus [accept epiplexus; prompt on the blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier or blood–CSF barrier by asking “what is the primary tissue component of this barrier?”; prompt on brain ventricles or lateral ventricles by asking “what is the primary tissue lining these regions?”]
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 264 ], [ 265, 394 ], [ 395, 485 ], [ 486, 589 ], [ 590, 773 ], [ 774, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 77, -5 ], [ 80, -5 ], [ 82, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 99, -5 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-11-20_2
“Strap junctions” join adjacent cells early in this tissue’s development, which follows the 4-stage Netsky model and is heavily dependent on glycogen accumulation.
[ "epiplexus", "choroid plexus" ]
acf-co24-11-20
2
The apical side of this tissue contains Kolmer cells, a class of unique tissue-resident macrophages. “Strap junctions” join adjacent cells early in this tissue’s development, which follows the 4-stage Netsky model and is heavily dependent on glycogen accumulation. It isn’t in the thyroid or the liver, but epithelial cells in this tissue produce the thyroxine transport protein, transthyretin. A class of secretory cells in this tissue pass their output through the foramen of Monro. Aquaporins lining epithelial cells in this tissue provide convective input into the glymphatic system. This tissue is lined with a class of ciliated, simple columnar cells that secrete roughly 500 milliliters of fluid daily into the lateral ventricles, which are called ependymal cells. For 10 points, name this specialized network of capillaries and secretory cells that make new cerebrospinal fluid.
choroid plexus [accept epiplexus; prompt on the blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier or blood–CSF barrier by asking “what is the primary tissue component of this barrier?”; prompt on brain ventricles or lateral ventricles by asking “what is the primary tissue lining these regions?”]
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 264 ], [ 265, 394 ], [ 395, 485 ], [ 486, 589 ], [ 590, 773 ], [ 774, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 77, -5 ], [ 80, -5 ], [ 82, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 99, -5 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-11-20_3
It isn’t in the thyroid or the liver, but epithelial cells in this tissue produce the thyroxine transport protein, transthyretin.
[ "epiplexus", "choroid plexus" ]
acf-co24-11-20
3
The apical side of this tissue contains Kolmer cells, a class of unique tissue-resident macrophages. “Strap junctions” join adjacent cells early in this tissue’s development, which follows the 4-stage Netsky model and is heavily dependent on glycogen accumulation. It isn’t in the thyroid or the liver, but epithelial cells in this tissue produce the thyroxine transport protein, transthyretin. A class of secretory cells in this tissue pass their output through the foramen of Monro. Aquaporins lining epithelial cells in this tissue provide convective input into the glymphatic system. This tissue is lined with a class of ciliated, simple columnar cells that secrete roughly 500 milliliters of fluid daily into the lateral ventricles, which are called ependymal cells. For 10 points, name this specialized network of capillaries and secretory cells that make new cerebrospinal fluid.
choroid plexus [accept epiplexus; prompt on the blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier or blood–CSF barrier by asking “what is the primary tissue component of this barrier?”; prompt on brain ventricles or lateral ventricles by asking “what is the primary tissue lining these regions?”]
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 264 ], [ 265, 394 ], [ 395, 485 ], [ 486, 589 ], [ 590, 773 ], [ 774, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 77, -5 ], [ 80, -5 ], [ 82, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 99, -5 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-11-20_4
A class of secretory cells in this tissue pass their output through the foramen of Monro.
[ "epiplexus", "choroid plexus" ]
acf-co24-11-20
4
The apical side of this tissue contains Kolmer cells, a class of unique tissue-resident macrophages. “Strap junctions” join adjacent cells early in this tissue’s development, which follows the 4-stage Netsky model and is heavily dependent on glycogen accumulation. It isn’t in the thyroid or the liver, but epithelial cells in this tissue produce the thyroxine transport protein, transthyretin. A class of secretory cells in this tissue pass their output through the foramen of Monro. Aquaporins lining epithelial cells in this tissue provide convective input into the glymphatic system. This tissue is lined with a class of ciliated, simple columnar cells that secrete roughly 500 milliliters of fluid daily into the lateral ventricles, which are called ependymal cells. For 10 points, name this specialized network of capillaries and secretory cells that make new cerebrospinal fluid.
choroid plexus [accept epiplexus; prompt on the blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier or blood–CSF barrier by asking “what is the primary tissue component of this barrier?”; prompt on brain ventricles or lateral ventricles by asking “what is the primary tissue lining these regions?”]
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 264 ], [ 265, 394 ], [ 395, 485 ], [ 486, 589 ], [ 590, 773 ], [ 774, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 77, -5 ], [ 80, -5 ], [ 82, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 99, -5 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-11-20_5
Aquaporins lining epithelial cells in this tissue provide convective input into the glymphatic system.
[ "epiplexus", "choroid plexus" ]
acf-co24-11-20
5
The apical side of this tissue contains Kolmer cells, a class of unique tissue-resident macrophages. “Strap junctions” join adjacent cells early in this tissue’s development, which follows the 4-stage Netsky model and is heavily dependent on glycogen accumulation. It isn’t in the thyroid or the liver, but epithelial cells in this tissue produce the thyroxine transport protein, transthyretin. A class of secretory cells in this tissue pass their output through the foramen of Monro. Aquaporins lining epithelial cells in this tissue provide convective input into the glymphatic system. This tissue is lined with a class of ciliated, simple columnar cells that secrete roughly 500 milliliters of fluid daily into the lateral ventricles, which are called ependymal cells. For 10 points, name this specialized network of capillaries and secretory cells that make new cerebrospinal fluid.
choroid plexus [accept epiplexus; prompt on the blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier or blood–CSF barrier by asking “what is the primary tissue component of this barrier?”; prompt on brain ventricles or lateral ventricles by asking “what is the primary tissue lining these regions?”]
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 264 ], [ 265, 394 ], [ 395, 485 ], [ 486, 589 ], [ 590, 773 ], [ 774, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 77, -5 ], [ 80, -5 ], [ 82, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 99, -5 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-11-20_6
This tissue is lined with a class of ciliated, simple columnar cells that secrete roughly 500 milliliters of fluid daily into the lateral ventricles, which are called ependymal cells.
[ "epiplexus", "choroid plexus" ]
acf-co24-11-20
6
The apical side of this tissue contains Kolmer cells, a class of unique tissue-resident macrophages. “Strap junctions” join adjacent cells early in this tissue’s development, which follows the 4-stage Netsky model and is heavily dependent on glycogen accumulation. It isn’t in the thyroid or the liver, but epithelial cells in this tissue produce the thyroxine transport protein, transthyretin. A class of secretory cells in this tissue pass their output through the foramen of Monro. Aquaporins lining epithelial cells in this tissue provide convective input into the glymphatic system. This tissue is lined with a class of ciliated, simple columnar cells that secrete roughly 500 milliliters of fluid daily into the lateral ventricles, which are called ependymal cells. For 10 points, name this specialized network of capillaries and secretory cells that make new cerebrospinal fluid.
choroid plexus [accept epiplexus; prompt on the blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier or blood–CSF barrier by asking “what is the primary tissue component of this barrier?”; prompt on brain ventricles or lateral ventricles by asking “what is the primary tissue lining these regions?”]
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 264 ], [ 265, 394 ], [ 395, 485 ], [ 486, 589 ], [ 590, 773 ], [ 774, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 77, -5 ], [ 80, -5 ], [ 82, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 99, -5 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-11-20_7
For 10 points, name this specialized network of capillaries and secretory cells that make new cerebrospinal fluid.
[ "epiplexus", "choroid plexus" ]
acf-co24-11-20
7
The apical side of this tissue contains Kolmer cells, a class of unique tissue-resident macrophages. “Strap junctions” join adjacent cells early in this tissue’s development, which follows the 4-stage Netsky model and is heavily dependent on glycogen accumulation. It isn’t in the thyroid or the liver, but epithelial cells in this tissue produce the thyroxine transport protein, transthyretin. A class of secretory cells in this tissue pass their output through the foramen of Monro. Aquaporins lining epithelial cells in this tissue provide convective input into the glymphatic system. This tissue is lined with a class of ciliated, simple columnar cells that secrete roughly 500 milliliters of fluid daily into the lateral ventricles, which are called ependymal cells. For 10 points, name this specialized network of capillaries and secretory cells that make new cerebrospinal fluid.
choroid plexus [accept epiplexus; prompt on the blood–cerebrospinal fluid barrier or blood–CSF barrier by asking “what is the primary tissue component of this barrier?”; prompt on brain ventricles or lateral ventricles by asking “what is the primary tissue lining these regions?”]
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 264 ], [ 265, 394 ], [ 395, 485 ], [ 486, 589 ], [ 590, 773 ], [ 774, 888 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 77, -5 ], [ 80, -5 ], [ 82, -5 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 99, -5 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet K. Editors 5", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-12-1_1
Bouchaud et al. proposed a hyperbolic differential equation to describe the stress distribution in one of these materials, whose characteristic curves can be interpreted as “force chains.”
[ "powders", "fragile", "Abelian sandpiles", "granular", "sand", "rice-piles", "grain", "granular materials", "rice", "powder", "grains", "fragile matter" ]
acf-co24-12-1
1
Bouchaud et al. proposed a hyperbolic differential equation to describe the stress distribution in one of these materials, whose characteristic curves can be interpreted as “force chains.” An early model of these materials that displays a pressure less than “rho g h” at the base of a cylinder is named after Janssen. Manna names a model of these materials whose sites “topple” when they hold two particles, an example of the “Abelian” models of these materials that display self-organized criticality. These materials’ velocity becomes non-zero in a density-dependent jamming transition. Reynolds described these materials’ change in volume under a shear stress, known as dilitancy. These materials may have a bistable angle of repose due to stabilization by internal Coulomb friction. For 10 points, in the Brazil nut effect, convection affects what materials composed of many large particles?
granular materials [accept grains or powders; accept Abelian sandpiles; accept fragile matter; accept rice-piles]
[ [ 0, 188 ], [ 189, 317 ], [ 318, 503 ], [ 504, 589 ], [ 590, 684 ], [ 685, 787 ], [ 788, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 71, 10 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 79, -5 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-12-1_2
An early model of these materials that displays a pressure less than “rho g h” at the base of a cylinder is named after Janssen.
[ "powders", "fragile", "Abelian sandpiles", "granular", "sand", "rice-piles", "grain", "granular materials", "rice", "powder", "grains", "fragile matter" ]
acf-co24-12-1
2
Bouchaud et al. proposed a hyperbolic differential equation to describe the stress distribution in one of these materials, whose characteristic curves can be interpreted as “force chains.” An early model of these materials that displays a pressure less than “rho g h” at the base of a cylinder is named after Janssen. Manna names a model of these materials whose sites “topple” when they hold two particles, an example of the “Abelian” models of these materials that display self-organized criticality. These materials’ velocity becomes non-zero in a density-dependent jamming transition. Reynolds described these materials’ change in volume under a shear stress, known as dilitancy. These materials may have a bistable angle of repose due to stabilization by internal Coulomb friction. For 10 points, in the Brazil nut effect, convection affects what materials composed of many large particles?
granular materials [accept grains or powders; accept Abelian sandpiles; accept fragile matter; accept rice-piles]
[ [ 0, 188 ], [ 189, 317 ], [ 318, 503 ], [ 504, 589 ], [ 590, 684 ], [ 685, 787 ], [ 788, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 71, 10 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 79, -5 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-12-1_3
Manna names a model of these materials whose sites “topple” when they hold two particles, an example of the “Abelian” models of these materials that display self-organized criticality.
[ "powders", "fragile", "Abelian sandpiles", "granular", "sand", "rice-piles", "grain", "granular materials", "rice", "powder", "grains", "fragile matter" ]
acf-co24-12-1
3
Bouchaud et al. proposed a hyperbolic differential equation to describe the stress distribution in one of these materials, whose characteristic curves can be interpreted as “force chains.” An early model of these materials that displays a pressure less than “rho g h” at the base of a cylinder is named after Janssen. Manna names a model of these materials whose sites “topple” when they hold two particles, an example of the “Abelian” models of these materials that display self-organized criticality. These materials’ velocity becomes non-zero in a density-dependent jamming transition. Reynolds described these materials’ change in volume under a shear stress, known as dilitancy. These materials may have a bistable angle of repose due to stabilization by internal Coulomb friction. For 10 points, in the Brazil nut effect, convection affects what materials composed of many large particles?
granular materials [accept grains or powders; accept Abelian sandpiles; accept fragile matter; accept rice-piles]
[ [ 0, 188 ], [ 189, 317 ], [ 318, 503 ], [ 504, 589 ], [ 590, 684 ], [ 685, 787 ], [ 788, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 71, 10 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 79, -5 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-12-1_4
These materials’ velocity becomes non-zero in a density-dependent jamming transition.
[ "powders", "fragile", "Abelian sandpiles", "granular", "sand", "rice-piles", "grain", "granular materials", "rice", "powder", "grains", "fragile matter" ]
acf-co24-12-1
4
Bouchaud et al. proposed a hyperbolic differential equation to describe the stress distribution in one of these materials, whose characteristic curves can be interpreted as “force chains.” An early model of these materials that displays a pressure less than “rho g h” at the base of a cylinder is named after Janssen. Manna names a model of these materials whose sites “topple” when they hold two particles, an example of the “Abelian” models of these materials that display self-organized criticality. These materials’ velocity becomes non-zero in a density-dependent jamming transition. Reynolds described these materials’ change in volume under a shear stress, known as dilitancy. These materials may have a bistable angle of repose due to stabilization by internal Coulomb friction. For 10 points, in the Brazil nut effect, convection affects what materials composed of many large particles?
granular materials [accept grains or powders; accept Abelian sandpiles; accept fragile matter; accept rice-piles]
[ [ 0, 188 ], [ 189, 317 ], [ 318, 503 ], [ 504, 589 ], [ 590, 684 ], [ 685, 787 ], [ 788, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 71, 10 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 79, -5 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-12-1_5
Reynolds described these materials’ change in volume under a shear stress, known as dilitancy.
[ "powders", "fragile", "Abelian sandpiles", "granular", "sand", "rice-piles", "grain", "granular materials", "rice", "powder", "grains", "fragile matter" ]
acf-co24-12-1
5
Bouchaud et al. proposed a hyperbolic differential equation to describe the stress distribution in one of these materials, whose characteristic curves can be interpreted as “force chains.” An early model of these materials that displays a pressure less than “rho g h” at the base of a cylinder is named after Janssen. Manna names a model of these materials whose sites “topple” when they hold two particles, an example of the “Abelian” models of these materials that display self-organized criticality. These materials’ velocity becomes non-zero in a density-dependent jamming transition. Reynolds described these materials’ change in volume under a shear stress, known as dilitancy. These materials may have a bistable angle of repose due to stabilization by internal Coulomb friction. For 10 points, in the Brazil nut effect, convection affects what materials composed of many large particles?
granular materials [accept grains or powders; accept Abelian sandpiles; accept fragile matter; accept rice-piles]
[ [ 0, 188 ], [ 189, 317 ], [ 318, 503 ], [ 504, 589 ], [ 590, 684 ], [ 685, 787 ], [ 788, 896 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 71, 10 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 79, -5 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 0 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet L. Editors 6", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }