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acf-co24-12-1_6 | These materials may have a bistable angle of repose due to stabilization by internal Coulomb friction. | [
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acf-co24-12-1_7 | For 10 points, in the Brazil nut effect, convection affects what materials composed of many large particles? | [
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acf-co24-12-2_1 | This man uses his “vigorous warmth” to scatter “his Maker’s image” in the opening lines of a satirical poem set before “priest-craft did begin” and “before polygamy was made a sin.” | [
"David"
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acf-co24-12-2_2 | A poem attributed to this man was expanded into the first English sonnet sequence, a “meditation” by Anne Locke. | [
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acf-co24-12-2_3 | In Renaissance Self-Fashioning, Stephen Greenblatt notes that a cycle by Thomas Wyatt may make a veiled comparison between this man and Henry VIII, since Wyatt could not safely say to Henry, “Thou art the man.” | [
"David"
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acf-co24-12-2_4 | Pietro Aretino’s paraphrase of a set of “penitential” poems attributed to this man influenced Tudor poets. | [
"David"
] | acf-co24-12-2 | 4 | This man uses his “vigorous warmth” to scatter “his Maker’s image” in the opening lines of a satirical poem set before “priest-craft did begin” and “before polygamy was made a sin.” A poem attributed to this man was expanded into the first English sonnet sequence, a “meditation” by Anne Locke. In Renaissance Self-Fashioning, Stephen Greenblatt notes that a cycle by Thomas Wyatt may make a veiled comparison between this man and Henry VIII, since Wyatt could not safely say to Henry, “Thou art the man.” Pietro Aretino’s paraphrase of a set of “penitential” poems attributed to this man influenced Tudor poets. In the King James Version, this man tells Nathan that a thief who steals a ewe lamb “shall surely die,” not realizing he is judging himself. For 10 points, what king appears in John Dryden’s Absalom and Achitophel, and was thought to have sought forgiveness for seducing Bathsheba in his Psalms? | David [prompt on the author of the Psalms until “Psalms” is read or the Penitential Sinner until “penitential” is read by asking “who was traditionally credited with writing those poems?”; prompt on Charles II until “sonnet” is read by asking “who is the actual character in the poem?”] | [
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acf-co24-12-2_5 | In the King James Version, this man tells Nathan that a thief who steals a ewe lamb “shall surely die,” not realizing he is judging himself. | [
"David"
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acf-co24-12-2_6 | For 10 points, what king appears in John Dryden’s Absalom and Achitophel, and was thought to have sought forgiveness for seducing Bathsheba in his Psalms? | [
"David"
] | acf-co24-12-2 | 6 | This man uses his “vigorous warmth” to scatter “his Maker’s image” in the opening lines of a satirical poem set before “priest-craft did begin” and “before polygamy was made a sin.” A poem attributed to this man was expanded into the first English sonnet sequence, a “meditation” by Anne Locke. In Renaissance Self-Fashioning, Stephen Greenblatt notes that a cycle by Thomas Wyatt may make a veiled comparison between this man and Henry VIII, since Wyatt could not safely say to Henry, “Thou art the man.” Pietro Aretino’s paraphrase of a set of “penitential” poems attributed to this man influenced Tudor poets. In the King James Version, this man tells Nathan that a thief who steals a ewe lamb “shall surely die,” not realizing he is judging himself. For 10 points, what king appears in John Dryden’s Absalom and Achitophel, and was thought to have sought forgiveness for seducing Bathsheba in his Psalms? | David [prompt on the author of the Psalms until “Psalms” is read or the Penitential Sinner until “penitential” is read by asking “who was traditionally credited with writing those poems?”; prompt on Charles II until “sonnet” is read by asking “who is the actual character in the poem?”] | [
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acf-co24-12-3_1 | In a paper on a new avenue for philosophy, this thinker distinguished the title relation from mere liking because it involves “identifying” with a subject and is “inherently prospective.” | [
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] | acf-co24-12-3 | 1 | In a paper on a new avenue for philosophy, this thinker distinguished the title relation from mere liking because it involves “identifying” with a subject and is “inherently prospective.” In one paper, this thinker noted that “my Jolly Roger is now unfurled” in a footnote admitting the boldness of not analyzing the term “morally responsible.” This philosopher complained that focusing on “what to believe” and “how to behave” means neglecting “The Importance of What We Care About.” This philosopher proposed a thought experiment in which, at the last moment, Black prevents Jones from acting in accordance with his will, thereby refuting the principle of alternative possibilities. This philosopher discussed “humbug” and “lying” in a book about “lack of respect for the truth.” This philosopher supported compatibilism with his namesake “cases.” For 10 points, name this philosopher who wrote the book On Bullshit. | Harry Frankfurt [or Harry Gordon Frankfurt] | [
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acf-co24-12-3_2 | In one paper, this thinker noted that “my Jolly Roger is now unfurled” in a footnote admitting the boldness of not analyzing the term “morally responsible.” | [
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acf-co24-12-4_1 | The creation of a Guianese colony for this duchy was the aim of the Thornton expedition. | [
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acf-co24-12-4_2 | This duchy signed secret anti-Ottoman treaties with the celali Ali Janbulad and the Druze emir Fakhr al-Din, who then had to flee to its capital. | [
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acf-co24-12-4_3 | A science patron from this duchy, Christina of Lorraine, was the addressee of a letter reconciling Copernicanism and scripture. | [
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acf-co24-12-4_4 | An enlightened despot from this duchy sponsored a Febronian church reform at the Synod of Pistoia and made it the first state to abolish the death penalty in 1787. | [
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acf-co24-12-4_6 | This duchy was ruled by Ferdinando I and by Joseph II’s brother, Leopold I. | [
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acf-co24-12-4_7 | This duchy home to Galileo became “grand” when it replaced a state named for its capital under Cosimo I. | [
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acf-co24-12-4_8 | For 10 points, name this Italian duchy once ruled by the Medicis from Florence. | [
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"Toscana",
"Etruria",
"Kingdom of Etruria"
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acf-co24-12-5_1 | Rachmaninoff’s fast recording of this sonata’s third movement grows to a roar that, after a tranquil trio, resumes at a roar then recedes. | [
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] | acf-co24-12-5 | 1 | Rachmaninoff’s fast recording of this sonata’s third movement grows to a roar that, after a tranquil trio, resumes at a roar then recedes. A final fortissimo is the only dynamic in this sonata’s presto, whose single line drifts up and down in unpedaled sotto voce e legato triplet 8th notes “gossiping in unison.” Some editions lack a repeat sign between this sonata’s 4-bar grave introduction and doppio movimento. This sonata’s 1½-minute perpetuum mobile finale was called the first atonal piece by Ligeti, “wind howling around graves” by Arthur Rubinstein, and sphinxlike by Schumann, who derided the composer’s discomfort with form and said this sonata “bound together his four unruliest children.” Its third movement, inspired by Beethoven’s 12th, is a morbid cortège in B-flat minor. For 10 points, what middle piano sonata written at George Sand’s house contains a march that was played at the composer’s own funeral? | Piano Sonata No. 2 by Fréderic Chopin [or Chopin’s Piano Sonata No. 2 in B-flat minor; or Chopin’s Op. 35; prompt on Piano Sonata in B-flat minor by Chopin until “B-flat” is read; prompt on Chopin’s “Marche funèbre” or “Funeral march” until “funeral” is read; prompt on Chopin’s Piano Sonata or Piano Sonata No. 2 or Piano Sonata in B-flat minor until “B-flat” is read] | [
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acf-co24-12-5_2 | A final fortissimo is the only dynamic in this sonata’s presto, whose single line drifts up and down in unpedaled sotto voce e legato triplet 8th notes “gossiping in unison.” | [
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acf-co24-12-5_3 | Some editions lack a repeat sign between this sonata’s 4-bar grave introduction and doppio movimento. | [
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acf-co24-12-5_4 | This sonata’s 1½-minute perpetuum mobile finale was called the first atonal piece by Ligeti, “wind howling around graves” by Arthur Rubinstein, and sphinxlike by Schumann, who derided the composer’s discomfort with form and said this sonata “bound together his four unruliest children.” | [
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acf-co24-12-5_5 | Its third movement, inspired by Beethoven’s 12th, is a morbid cortège in B-flat minor. | [
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acf-co24-12-5_6 | For 10 points, what middle piano sonata written at George Sand’s house contains a march that was played at the composer’s own funeral? | [
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] | acf-co24-12-5 | 6 | Rachmaninoff’s fast recording of this sonata’s third movement grows to a roar that, after a tranquil trio, resumes at a roar then recedes. A final fortissimo is the only dynamic in this sonata’s presto, whose single line drifts up and down in unpedaled sotto voce e legato triplet 8th notes “gossiping in unison.” Some editions lack a repeat sign between this sonata’s 4-bar grave introduction and doppio movimento. This sonata’s 1½-minute perpetuum mobile finale was called the first atonal piece by Ligeti, “wind howling around graves” by Arthur Rubinstein, and sphinxlike by Schumann, who derided the composer’s discomfort with form and said this sonata “bound together his four unruliest children.” Its third movement, inspired by Beethoven’s 12th, is a morbid cortège in B-flat minor. For 10 points, what middle piano sonata written at George Sand’s house contains a march that was played at the composer’s own funeral? | Piano Sonata No. 2 by Fréderic Chopin [or Chopin’s Piano Sonata No. 2 in B-flat minor; or Chopin’s Op. 35; prompt on Piano Sonata in B-flat minor by Chopin until “B-flat” is read; prompt on Chopin’s “Marche funèbre” or “Funeral march” until “funeral” is read; prompt on Chopin’s Piano Sonata or Piano Sonata No. 2 or Piano Sonata in B-flat minor until “B-flat” is read] | [
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acf-co24-12-6_1 | This reaction occurs twice between a cuprate and an 8-membered enone ring in a total synthesis that starts with serine, whose namesake also modified this reaction. | [
"Michael",
"Michael addition",
"Michael reaction"
] | acf-co24-12-6 | 1 | This reaction occurs twice between a cuprate and an 8-membered enone ring in a total synthesis that starts with serine, whose namesake also modified this reaction. This reaction is the most common mechanism by which acrolein reacts with thiol groups on amino acids. An asymmetric example of this reaction attacks with 4-hydroxycoumarin to synthesize the anticoagulant Warfarin. Both the carbanion “donor” and the alkene “acceptor” of this reaction are stabilized by resonance and contain one or more electron withdrawing groups. It’s not the aldol reaction, but a titanium tetrachloride catalyst is used with a silyl enol ether in this reaction’s Mukaiyama variant. This reaction has a similar mechanism to the Stork enamine reaction. This reaction begins the Robinson annulation. For 10 points, an enolate is joined to an alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl by what 1,4-addition reaction? | Michael addition [or Michael reaction; prompt on nucleophilic conjugate addition until read; prompt on 1,4-addition or addition until read] (The first clue refers to the Mukaiyama Taxol total synthesis.) | [
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acf-co24-12-6_2 | This reaction is the most common mechanism by which acrolein reacts with thiol groups on amino acids. | [
"Michael",
"Michael addition",
"Michael reaction"
] | acf-co24-12-6 | 2 | This reaction occurs twice between a cuprate and an 8-membered enone ring in a total synthesis that starts with serine, whose namesake also modified this reaction. This reaction is the most common mechanism by which acrolein reacts with thiol groups on amino acids. An asymmetric example of this reaction attacks with 4-hydroxycoumarin to synthesize the anticoagulant Warfarin. Both the carbanion “donor” and the alkene “acceptor” of this reaction are stabilized by resonance and contain one or more electron withdrawing groups. It’s not the aldol reaction, but a titanium tetrachloride catalyst is used with a silyl enol ether in this reaction’s Mukaiyama variant. This reaction has a similar mechanism to the Stork enamine reaction. This reaction begins the Robinson annulation. For 10 points, an enolate is joined to an alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl by what 1,4-addition reaction? | Michael addition [or Michael reaction; prompt on nucleophilic conjugate addition until read; prompt on 1,4-addition or addition until read] (The first clue refers to the Mukaiyama Taxol total synthesis.) | [
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acf-co24-12-6_3 | An asymmetric example of this reaction attacks with 4-hydroxycoumarin to synthesize the anticoagulant Warfarin. | [
"Michael",
"Michael addition",
"Michael reaction"
] | acf-co24-12-6 | 3 | This reaction occurs twice between a cuprate and an 8-membered enone ring in a total synthesis that starts with serine, whose namesake also modified this reaction. This reaction is the most common mechanism by which acrolein reacts with thiol groups on amino acids. An asymmetric example of this reaction attacks with 4-hydroxycoumarin to synthesize the anticoagulant Warfarin. Both the carbanion “donor” and the alkene “acceptor” of this reaction are stabilized by resonance and contain one or more electron withdrawing groups. It’s not the aldol reaction, but a titanium tetrachloride catalyst is used with a silyl enol ether in this reaction’s Mukaiyama variant. This reaction has a similar mechanism to the Stork enamine reaction. This reaction begins the Robinson annulation. For 10 points, an enolate is joined to an alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl by what 1,4-addition reaction? | Michael addition [or Michael reaction; prompt on nucleophilic conjugate addition until read; prompt on 1,4-addition or addition until read] (The first clue refers to the Mukaiyama Taxol total synthesis.) | [
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acf-co24-12-6_4 | Both the carbanion “donor” and the alkene “acceptor” of this reaction are stabilized by resonance and contain one or more electron withdrawing groups. | [
"Michael",
"Michael addition",
"Michael reaction"
] | acf-co24-12-6 | 4 | This reaction occurs twice between a cuprate and an 8-membered enone ring in a total synthesis that starts with serine, whose namesake also modified this reaction. This reaction is the most common mechanism by which acrolein reacts with thiol groups on amino acids. An asymmetric example of this reaction attacks with 4-hydroxycoumarin to synthesize the anticoagulant Warfarin. Both the carbanion “donor” and the alkene “acceptor” of this reaction are stabilized by resonance and contain one or more electron withdrawing groups. It’s not the aldol reaction, but a titanium tetrachloride catalyst is used with a silyl enol ether in this reaction’s Mukaiyama variant. This reaction has a similar mechanism to the Stork enamine reaction. This reaction begins the Robinson annulation. For 10 points, an enolate is joined to an alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl by what 1,4-addition reaction? | Michael addition [or Michael reaction; prompt on nucleophilic conjugate addition until read; prompt on 1,4-addition or addition until read] (The first clue refers to the Mukaiyama Taxol total synthesis.) | [
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acf-co24-12-6_5 | It’s not the aldol reaction, but a titanium tetrachloride catalyst is used with a silyl enol ether in this reaction’s Mukaiyama variant. | [
"Michael",
"Michael addition",
"Michael reaction"
] | acf-co24-12-6 | 5 | This reaction occurs twice between a cuprate and an 8-membered enone ring in a total synthesis that starts with serine, whose namesake also modified this reaction. This reaction is the most common mechanism by which acrolein reacts with thiol groups on amino acids. An asymmetric example of this reaction attacks with 4-hydroxycoumarin to synthesize the anticoagulant Warfarin. Both the carbanion “donor” and the alkene “acceptor” of this reaction are stabilized by resonance and contain one or more electron withdrawing groups. It’s not the aldol reaction, but a titanium tetrachloride catalyst is used with a silyl enol ether in this reaction’s Mukaiyama variant. This reaction has a similar mechanism to the Stork enamine reaction. This reaction begins the Robinson annulation. For 10 points, an enolate is joined to an alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl by what 1,4-addition reaction? | Michael addition [or Michael reaction; prompt on nucleophilic conjugate addition until read; prompt on 1,4-addition or addition until read] (The first clue refers to the Mukaiyama Taxol total synthesis.) | [
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acf-co24-12-6_6 | This reaction has a similar mechanism to the Stork enamine reaction. | [
"Michael",
"Michael addition",
"Michael reaction"
] | acf-co24-12-6 | 6 | This reaction occurs twice between a cuprate and an 8-membered enone ring in a total synthesis that starts with serine, whose namesake also modified this reaction. This reaction is the most common mechanism by which acrolein reacts with thiol groups on amino acids. An asymmetric example of this reaction attacks with 4-hydroxycoumarin to synthesize the anticoagulant Warfarin. Both the carbanion “donor” and the alkene “acceptor” of this reaction are stabilized by resonance and contain one or more electron withdrawing groups. It’s not the aldol reaction, but a titanium tetrachloride catalyst is used with a silyl enol ether in this reaction’s Mukaiyama variant. This reaction has a similar mechanism to the Stork enamine reaction. This reaction begins the Robinson annulation. For 10 points, an enolate is joined to an alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl by what 1,4-addition reaction? | Michael addition [or Michael reaction; prompt on nucleophilic conjugate addition until read; prompt on 1,4-addition or addition until read] (The first clue refers to the Mukaiyama Taxol total synthesis.) | [
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acf-co24-12-6_7 | This reaction begins the Robinson annulation. | [
"Michael",
"Michael addition",
"Michael reaction"
] | acf-co24-12-6 | 7 | This reaction occurs twice between a cuprate and an 8-membered enone ring in a total synthesis that starts with serine, whose namesake also modified this reaction. This reaction is the most common mechanism by which acrolein reacts with thiol groups on amino acids. An asymmetric example of this reaction attacks with 4-hydroxycoumarin to synthesize the anticoagulant Warfarin. Both the carbanion “donor” and the alkene “acceptor” of this reaction are stabilized by resonance and contain one or more electron withdrawing groups. It’s not the aldol reaction, but a titanium tetrachloride catalyst is used with a silyl enol ether in this reaction’s Mukaiyama variant. This reaction has a similar mechanism to the Stork enamine reaction. This reaction begins the Robinson annulation. For 10 points, an enolate is joined to an alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl by what 1,4-addition reaction? | Michael addition [or Michael reaction; prompt on nucleophilic conjugate addition until read; prompt on 1,4-addition or addition until read] (The first clue refers to the Mukaiyama Taxol total synthesis.) | [
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acf-co24-12-6_8 | For 10 points, an enolate is joined to an alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl by what 1,4-addition reaction? | [
"Michael",
"Michael addition",
"Michael reaction"
] | acf-co24-12-6 | 8 | This reaction occurs twice between a cuprate and an 8-membered enone ring in a total synthesis that starts with serine, whose namesake also modified this reaction. This reaction is the most common mechanism by which acrolein reacts with thiol groups on amino acids. An asymmetric example of this reaction attacks with 4-hydroxycoumarin to synthesize the anticoagulant Warfarin. Both the carbanion “donor” and the alkene “acceptor” of this reaction are stabilized by resonance and contain one or more electron withdrawing groups. It’s not the aldol reaction, but a titanium tetrachloride catalyst is used with a silyl enol ether in this reaction’s Mukaiyama variant. This reaction has a similar mechanism to the Stork enamine reaction. This reaction begins the Robinson annulation. For 10 points, an enolate is joined to an alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl by what 1,4-addition reaction? | Michael addition [or Michael reaction; prompt on nucleophilic conjugate addition until read; prompt on 1,4-addition or addition until read] (The first clue refers to the Mukaiyama Taxol total synthesis.) | [
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acf-co24-12-7_1 | In a chapter of Trout Fishing in America titled for this body of water, the narrator recalls discussing plans for a flea circus with his wino friends. | [
"Walden Pond",
"Walden"
] | acf-co24-12-7 | 1 | In a chapter of Trout Fishing in America titled for this body of water, the narrator recalls discussing plans for a flea circus with his wino friends. A book set on this body of water inspired the title of a novel by William Melvyn Kelly in which Tucker Caliban leads an exodus of Black farmers. A narrator who lost a “hound, a bay horse, and a turtle-dove” before coming to this body of water compares the whistle of nearby trains to the “scream of a hawk.” Selin and Ivan swim in this American body in Elif Batuman’s The Idiot. An illiterate Canadian woodchopper who is “as bottomless as” this body visits it in a book that notes, “if a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer.” The narrator of a book titled for this body of water watches a battle between red and black ants. For 10 points, name this body of water in Concord that titles a memoir by Henry David Thoreau. | Walden Pond [or Walden] | [
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acf-co24-12-7_2 | A book set on this body of water inspired the title of a novel by William Melvyn Kelly in which Tucker Caliban leads an exodus of Black farmers. | [
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acf-co24-12-7_4 | Selin and Ivan swim in this American body in Elif Batuman’s The Idiot. | [
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acf-co24-12-7_7 | For 10 points, name this body of water in Concord that titles a memoir by Henry David Thoreau. | [
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acf-co24-12-8_1 | A poem by al-Ḥallāj reports using the “eye” of one of these objects to see Allah, who answers his question “who are you?” by saying “you.” | [
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acf-co24-12-8_2 | A hadith holds that dhikr polishes the “rust” of these objects, which can be shiny, tied with a knot, turned upside down, or wrapped. | [
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acf-co24-12-8_3 | This sort of object names the “weakest” of three ways to fulfill the duty of ḥisbah, or “enjoining right and forbidding wrong.” | [
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acf-co24-12-8_4 | A tiny black spot was removed from one of these objects by a pair of figures carrying a jug and a platter of snow while its owner lived with his foster-mother Halima. | [
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acf-co24-12-8_6 | One of these objects belonging to Muhammad was “washed” by the angel Jibreel. | [
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acf-co24-12-8_7 | These objects, called qalb in Arabic, name a personal form of jihad. | [
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acf-co24-12-8_8 | For 10 points, the scriptures of the Abrahamic religions refer to the metaphorical “hardening” of what organs? | [
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acf-co24-12-9_1 | Two pieces of boxwood on ivory hinges from this archaeological site predate similar “books” from Nimrud and were compared by George Bass to Homer’s description of a “folding tablet” with “baneful signs” carried by Bellerophon. | [
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acf-co24-12-9_2 | An early example of the mortise-and-tenon design was found at this site, predating Kyrenia by almost a thousand years. | [
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acf-co24-12-9_3 | A scarab inscribed with Nefertiti’s name helped date this site, whose other finds include logs of African blackwood and dozens of jars filled with pistacia terebinth resin. | [
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acf-co24-12-9_4 | This site superseded the importance of a similar find at Cape Gelidonya. | [
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acf-co24-12-9_5 | Reports of “metal biscuits with ears” at this site led researchers to document its Cypriot oxhide ingots. | [
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acf-co24-12-9_7 | For 10 points, what key archaeological site of the Late Bronze Age is a shipwreck off the coast of Turkey? | [
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acf-co24-12-10_3 | Naïve theories of this event were given mocking names like pooh-pooh, yo-he-ho, bow-wow, and ding-dong by Max Müller. | [
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acf-co24-12-10_5 | Robin Dunbar suggests that this event made “manual grooming” obsolete as a bonding mechanism. | [
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acf-co24-12-10_6 | A just-so story that connects this event to mimicry of animals like sheep is offered in J. G. Herder’s treatise titled for it, which is often collected with Jean Jacques Rousseau’s. | [
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acf-co24-12-11_1 | This process lowers the accuracy of the so-called Bootstrap algorithm that leverages dynamic tie points to cluster data plotted using 19V, 37H, and 37V channels. | [
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acf-co24-12-11_2 | This process leads to “downwasting” that is often imaged using cyanotypes. | [
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acf-co24-12-11_3 | A substance partially named for this process forms the upper interface of “false bottoms.” | [
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acf-co24-12-11_4 | This process directly leads to the formation of cryoconite holes due to accumulation of particulates like soot. | [
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acf-co24-12-11_5 | Resistance to this process differentiates the multiyear form of a certain substance from its first-year form. | [
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acf-co24-12-11_6 | This process, which lowers albedo as it occurs, is the primary ablation process in “land-terminating” features. | [
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acf-co24-12-11_7 | This process leads to the formation of namesake ponds during an annual cycle that alternates with the freeze cycle. | [
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acf-co24-12-11_8 | For 10 points, name this physical process that leads to a rise in sea levels when it happens to glaciers. | [
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"meltwater"
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acf-co24-12-12_1 | In this series, a shipping clerk buys easily rippable tights for a women’s wrestling league that he tries to start to “save” Ilona from a knife-throwing act. | [
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acf-co24-12-12_2 | In this series, a Bible study session formatted as a play script ends with men singing “Lord God of Sabaoth,” part of a Salvation Army motif that includes verse chapters about the girl Marie. | [
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acf-co24-12-12_3 | The last part of this series contains many chapters reflecting on the role of “private theologies” in a 500-year-long process called the “disintegration of values.” | [
"Die Schlafwandler",
"Sleepwalkers",
"Schlafwandler",
"The Sleepwalkers"
] | acf-co24-12-12 | 3 | In this series, a shipping clerk buys easily rippable tights for a women’s wrestling league that he tries to start to “save” Ilona from a knife-throwing act. In this series, a Bible study session formatted as a play script ends with men singing “Lord God of Sabaoth,” part of a Salvation Army motif that includes verse chapters about the girl Marie. The last part of this series contains many chapters reflecting on the role of “private theologies” in a 500-year-long process called the “disintegration of values.” Milan Kundera’s essays often praised this “polyphonic” series, in which Eduard von Bertrand’s homosexuality is exposed by Esch, who is later bayoneted by the deserter Huguenau. Lieutenant Joachim von Pasenow is the title “Romantic” of the first part of this series, which proceeds to parts on the “Anarchist” and the “Realist.” For 10 points, name this modernist trilogy by Hermann Broch. | The Sleepwalkers [or Die Schlafwandler] | [
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acf-co24-12-12_4 | Milan Kundera’s essays often praised this “polyphonic” series, in which Eduard von Bertrand’s homosexuality is exposed by Esch, who is later bayoneted by the deserter Huguenau. | [
"Die Schlafwandler",
"Sleepwalkers",
"Schlafwandler",
"The Sleepwalkers"
] | acf-co24-12-12 | 4 | In this series, a shipping clerk buys easily rippable tights for a women’s wrestling league that he tries to start to “save” Ilona from a knife-throwing act. In this series, a Bible study session formatted as a play script ends with men singing “Lord God of Sabaoth,” part of a Salvation Army motif that includes verse chapters about the girl Marie. The last part of this series contains many chapters reflecting on the role of “private theologies” in a 500-year-long process called the “disintegration of values.” Milan Kundera’s essays often praised this “polyphonic” series, in which Eduard von Bertrand’s homosexuality is exposed by Esch, who is later bayoneted by the deserter Huguenau. Lieutenant Joachim von Pasenow is the title “Romantic” of the first part of this series, which proceeds to parts on the “Anarchist” and the “Realist.” For 10 points, name this modernist trilogy by Hermann Broch. | The Sleepwalkers [or Die Schlafwandler] | [
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acf-co24-12-12_5 | Lieutenant Joachim von Pasenow is the title “Romantic” of the first part of this series, which proceeds to parts on the “Anarchist” and the “Realist.” | [
"Die Schlafwandler",
"Sleepwalkers",
"Schlafwandler",
"The Sleepwalkers"
] | acf-co24-12-12 | 5 | In this series, a shipping clerk buys easily rippable tights for a women’s wrestling league that he tries to start to “save” Ilona from a knife-throwing act. In this series, a Bible study session formatted as a play script ends with men singing “Lord God of Sabaoth,” part of a Salvation Army motif that includes verse chapters about the girl Marie. The last part of this series contains many chapters reflecting on the role of “private theologies” in a 500-year-long process called the “disintegration of values.” Milan Kundera’s essays often praised this “polyphonic” series, in which Eduard von Bertrand’s homosexuality is exposed by Esch, who is later bayoneted by the deserter Huguenau. Lieutenant Joachim von Pasenow is the title “Romantic” of the first part of this series, which proceeds to parts on the “Anarchist” and the “Realist.” For 10 points, name this modernist trilogy by Hermann Broch. | The Sleepwalkers [or Die Schlafwandler] | [
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acf-co24-12-12_6 | For 10 points, name this modernist trilogy by Hermann Broch. | [
"Die Schlafwandler",
"Sleepwalkers",
"Schlafwandler",
"The Sleepwalkers"
] | acf-co24-12-12 | 6 | In this series, a shipping clerk buys easily rippable tights for a women’s wrestling league that he tries to start to “save” Ilona from a knife-throwing act. In this series, a Bible study session formatted as a play script ends with men singing “Lord God of Sabaoth,” part of a Salvation Army motif that includes verse chapters about the girl Marie. The last part of this series contains many chapters reflecting on the role of “private theologies” in a 500-year-long process called the “disintegration of values.” Milan Kundera’s essays often praised this “polyphonic” series, in which Eduard von Bertrand’s homosexuality is exposed by Esch, who is later bayoneted by the deserter Huguenau. Lieutenant Joachim von Pasenow is the title “Romantic” of the first part of this series, which proceeds to parts on the “Anarchist” and the “Realist.” For 10 points, name this modernist trilogy by Hermann Broch. | The Sleepwalkers [or Die Schlafwandler] | [
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acf-co24-12-13_1 | A word from this language titled a Waldo Frank-influenced journal edited by members of the North Group. | [
"Quechua",
"Kichwa",
"Runasimi"
] | acf-co24-12-13 | 1 | A word from this language titled a Waldo Frank-influenced journal edited by members of the North Group. The oppression of speakers of this language by gamonalism was attacked in the essays of a wheelchair-using Marxist who was nicknamed for its word for “teacher.” This language provides the grammar of the “Half Language” spoken in a country where a neologism in this language for the “good way of living” was codified with the “rights of nature” in a 2008 constitution. The MUPP-NP party’s common name is a word in this language that’s gained popularity with indigenists for its connotation of “world reversal.” During the “time of fear,” speakers of this language were targeted by Sinchi paratroopers, the Chuschi ballot burning, and the Lucanamarca massacre perpetrated by Abimael Guzmán’s forces. For 10 points, the word pachakutik comes from what indigenous language of Ecuador and Peru? | Quechua [or Runasimi; or Kichwa] (El Amauta is José Carlos Mariátegui. The MUPP-NP is Ecuador’s Pachakutik Plurinational Unity Movement – New Country party.) | [
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acf-co24-12-13_2 | The oppression of speakers of this language by gamonalism was attacked in the essays of a wheelchair-using Marxist who was nicknamed for its word for “teacher.” | [
"Quechua",
"Kichwa",
"Runasimi"
] | acf-co24-12-13 | 2 | A word from this language titled a Waldo Frank-influenced journal edited by members of the North Group. The oppression of speakers of this language by gamonalism was attacked in the essays of a wheelchair-using Marxist who was nicknamed for its word for “teacher.” This language provides the grammar of the “Half Language” spoken in a country where a neologism in this language for the “good way of living” was codified with the “rights of nature” in a 2008 constitution. The MUPP-NP party’s common name is a word in this language that’s gained popularity with indigenists for its connotation of “world reversal.” During the “time of fear,” speakers of this language were targeted by Sinchi paratroopers, the Chuschi ballot burning, and the Lucanamarca massacre perpetrated by Abimael Guzmán’s forces. For 10 points, the word pachakutik comes from what indigenous language of Ecuador and Peru? | Quechua [or Runasimi; or Kichwa] (El Amauta is José Carlos Mariátegui. The MUPP-NP is Ecuador’s Pachakutik Plurinational Unity Movement – New Country party.) | [
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acf-co24-12-13_3 | This language provides the grammar of the “Half Language” spoken in a country where a neologism in this language for the “good way of living” was codified with the “rights of nature” in a 2008 constitution. | [
"Quechua",
"Kichwa",
"Runasimi"
] | acf-co24-12-13 | 3 | A word from this language titled a Waldo Frank-influenced journal edited by members of the North Group. The oppression of speakers of this language by gamonalism was attacked in the essays of a wheelchair-using Marxist who was nicknamed for its word for “teacher.” This language provides the grammar of the “Half Language” spoken in a country where a neologism in this language for the “good way of living” was codified with the “rights of nature” in a 2008 constitution. The MUPP-NP party’s common name is a word in this language that’s gained popularity with indigenists for its connotation of “world reversal.” During the “time of fear,” speakers of this language were targeted by Sinchi paratroopers, the Chuschi ballot burning, and the Lucanamarca massacre perpetrated by Abimael Guzmán’s forces. For 10 points, the word pachakutik comes from what indigenous language of Ecuador and Peru? | Quechua [or Runasimi; or Kichwa] (El Amauta is José Carlos Mariátegui. The MUPP-NP is Ecuador’s Pachakutik Plurinational Unity Movement – New Country party.) | [
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acf-co24-12-13_4 | The MUPP-NP party’s common name is a word in this language that’s gained popularity with indigenists for its connotation of “world reversal.” | [
"Quechua",
"Kichwa",
"Runasimi"
] | acf-co24-12-13 | 4 | A word from this language titled a Waldo Frank-influenced journal edited by members of the North Group. The oppression of speakers of this language by gamonalism was attacked in the essays of a wheelchair-using Marxist who was nicknamed for its word for “teacher.” This language provides the grammar of the “Half Language” spoken in a country where a neologism in this language for the “good way of living” was codified with the “rights of nature” in a 2008 constitution. The MUPP-NP party’s common name is a word in this language that’s gained popularity with indigenists for its connotation of “world reversal.” During the “time of fear,” speakers of this language were targeted by Sinchi paratroopers, the Chuschi ballot burning, and the Lucanamarca massacre perpetrated by Abimael Guzmán’s forces. For 10 points, the word pachakutik comes from what indigenous language of Ecuador and Peru? | Quechua [or Runasimi; or Kichwa] (El Amauta is José Carlos Mariátegui. The MUPP-NP is Ecuador’s Pachakutik Plurinational Unity Movement – New Country party.) | [
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acf-co24-12-13_5 | During the “time of fear,” speakers of this language were targeted by Sinchi paratroopers, the Chuschi ballot burning, and the Lucanamarca massacre perpetrated by Abimael Guzmán’s forces. | [
"Quechua",
"Kichwa",
"Runasimi"
] | acf-co24-12-13 | 5 | A word from this language titled a Waldo Frank-influenced journal edited by members of the North Group. The oppression of speakers of this language by gamonalism was attacked in the essays of a wheelchair-using Marxist who was nicknamed for its word for “teacher.” This language provides the grammar of the “Half Language” spoken in a country where a neologism in this language for the “good way of living” was codified with the “rights of nature” in a 2008 constitution. The MUPP-NP party’s common name is a word in this language that’s gained popularity with indigenists for its connotation of “world reversal.” During the “time of fear,” speakers of this language were targeted by Sinchi paratroopers, the Chuschi ballot burning, and the Lucanamarca massacre perpetrated by Abimael Guzmán’s forces. For 10 points, the word pachakutik comes from what indigenous language of Ecuador and Peru? | Quechua [or Runasimi; or Kichwa] (El Amauta is José Carlos Mariátegui. The MUPP-NP is Ecuador’s Pachakutik Plurinational Unity Movement – New Country party.) | [
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acf-co24-12-13_6 | For 10 points, the word pachakutik comes from what indigenous language of Ecuador and Peru? | [
"Quechua",
"Kichwa",
"Runasimi"
] | acf-co24-12-13 | 6 | A word from this language titled a Waldo Frank-influenced journal edited by members of the North Group. The oppression of speakers of this language by gamonalism was attacked in the essays of a wheelchair-using Marxist who was nicknamed for its word for “teacher.” This language provides the grammar of the “Half Language” spoken in a country where a neologism in this language for the “good way of living” was codified with the “rights of nature” in a 2008 constitution. The MUPP-NP party’s common name is a word in this language that’s gained popularity with indigenists for its connotation of “world reversal.” During the “time of fear,” speakers of this language were targeted by Sinchi paratroopers, the Chuschi ballot burning, and the Lucanamarca massacre perpetrated by Abimael Guzmán’s forces. For 10 points, the word pachakutik comes from what indigenous language of Ecuador and Peru? | Quechua [or Runasimi; or Kichwa] (El Amauta is José Carlos Mariátegui. The MUPP-NP is Ecuador’s Pachakutik Plurinational Unity Movement – New Country party.) | [
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acf-co24-12-14_1 | While demonstrating one of these objects, an employee of William Penny nicknamed “Bobbie” fell ill in Aberdeen. | [
"kayak",
"kayaks",
"qajaq",
"kayak roll",
"kayak angst"
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acf-co24-12-14_2 | John Brand documented 18th-century sightings of these objects in Scotland, where they were believed to belong to “Finnmen.” | [
"kayak",
"kayaks",
"qajaq",
"kayak roll",
"kayak angst"
] | acf-co24-12-14 | 2 | While demonstrating one of these objects, an employee of William Penny nicknamed “Bobbie” fell ill in Aberdeen. John Brand documented 18th-century sightings of these objects in Scotland, where they were believed to belong to “Finnmen.” Pilots of these objects made tactile use of three-dimensional maps carved from driftwood that are celebrated in Bill Buxton’s book Sketching User Experiences. Users of these objects experience dizziness and panic in a culture-bound syndrome called their “angst.” “C-to-C” and “sweep” are methods for “rolling” these boats. In most versions of a myth, a disguised stormy petrel uses one of these boats to carry off a future sea goddess, who later clings to one of these boats belonging to her father until he cuts her fingers off. For 10 points, oiled sealskin was often used to make Inuit examples of what narrow, closed-top boats propelled by double-sided paddles? | kayaks [or qajaq; accept kayak roll or kayak angst; prompt on boats or watercrafts until “boats” is read] (The first sentence is about Eenoolooapik. The penultimate sentence is the story of Sedna.) | [
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acf-co24-12-14_3 | Pilots of these objects made tactile use of three-dimensional maps carved from driftwood that are celebrated in Bill Buxton’s book Sketching User Experiences. | [
"kayak",
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"qajaq",
"kayak roll",
"kayak angst"
] | acf-co24-12-14 | 3 | While demonstrating one of these objects, an employee of William Penny nicknamed “Bobbie” fell ill in Aberdeen. John Brand documented 18th-century sightings of these objects in Scotland, where they were believed to belong to “Finnmen.” Pilots of these objects made tactile use of three-dimensional maps carved from driftwood that are celebrated in Bill Buxton’s book Sketching User Experiences. Users of these objects experience dizziness and panic in a culture-bound syndrome called their “angst.” “C-to-C” and “sweep” are methods for “rolling” these boats. In most versions of a myth, a disguised stormy petrel uses one of these boats to carry off a future sea goddess, who later clings to one of these boats belonging to her father until he cuts her fingers off. For 10 points, oiled sealskin was often used to make Inuit examples of what narrow, closed-top boats propelled by double-sided paddles? | kayaks [or qajaq; accept kayak roll or kayak angst; prompt on boats or watercrafts until “boats” is read] (The first sentence is about Eenoolooapik. The penultimate sentence is the story of Sedna.) | [
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acf-co24-12-14_4 | Users of these objects experience dizziness and panic in a culture-bound syndrome called their “angst.” | [
"kayak",
"kayaks",
"qajaq",
"kayak roll",
"kayak angst"
] | acf-co24-12-14 | 4 | While demonstrating one of these objects, an employee of William Penny nicknamed “Bobbie” fell ill in Aberdeen. John Brand documented 18th-century sightings of these objects in Scotland, where they were believed to belong to “Finnmen.” Pilots of these objects made tactile use of three-dimensional maps carved from driftwood that are celebrated in Bill Buxton’s book Sketching User Experiences. Users of these objects experience dizziness and panic in a culture-bound syndrome called their “angst.” “C-to-C” and “sweep” are methods for “rolling” these boats. In most versions of a myth, a disguised stormy petrel uses one of these boats to carry off a future sea goddess, who later clings to one of these boats belonging to her father until he cuts her fingers off. For 10 points, oiled sealskin was often used to make Inuit examples of what narrow, closed-top boats propelled by double-sided paddles? | kayaks [or qajaq; accept kayak roll or kayak angst; prompt on boats or watercrafts until “boats” is read] (The first sentence is about Eenoolooapik. The penultimate sentence is the story of Sedna.) | [
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acf-co24-12-14_5 | “C-to-C” and “sweep” are methods for “rolling” these boats. | [
"kayak",
"kayaks",
"qajaq",
"kayak roll",
"kayak angst"
] | acf-co24-12-14 | 5 | While demonstrating one of these objects, an employee of William Penny nicknamed “Bobbie” fell ill in Aberdeen. John Brand documented 18th-century sightings of these objects in Scotland, where they were believed to belong to “Finnmen.” Pilots of these objects made tactile use of three-dimensional maps carved from driftwood that are celebrated in Bill Buxton’s book Sketching User Experiences. Users of these objects experience dizziness and panic in a culture-bound syndrome called their “angst.” “C-to-C” and “sweep” are methods for “rolling” these boats. In most versions of a myth, a disguised stormy petrel uses one of these boats to carry off a future sea goddess, who later clings to one of these boats belonging to her father until he cuts her fingers off. For 10 points, oiled sealskin was often used to make Inuit examples of what narrow, closed-top boats propelled by double-sided paddles? | kayaks [or qajaq; accept kayak roll or kayak angst; prompt on boats or watercrafts until “boats” is read] (The first sentence is about Eenoolooapik. The penultimate sentence is the story of Sedna.) | [
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acf-co24-12-14_6 | In most versions of a myth, a disguised stormy petrel uses one of these boats to carry off a future sea goddess, who later clings to one of these boats belonging to her father until he cuts her fingers off. | [
"kayak",
"kayaks",
"qajaq",
"kayak roll",
"kayak angst"
] | acf-co24-12-14 | 6 | While demonstrating one of these objects, an employee of William Penny nicknamed “Bobbie” fell ill in Aberdeen. John Brand documented 18th-century sightings of these objects in Scotland, where they were believed to belong to “Finnmen.” Pilots of these objects made tactile use of three-dimensional maps carved from driftwood that are celebrated in Bill Buxton’s book Sketching User Experiences. Users of these objects experience dizziness and panic in a culture-bound syndrome called their “angst.” “C-to-C” and “sweep” are methods for “rolling” these boats. In most versions of a myth, a disguised stormy petrel uses one of these boats to carry off a future sea goddess, who later clings to one of these boats belonging to her father until he cuts her fingers off. For 10 points, oiled sealskin was often used to make Inuit examples of what narrow, closed-top boats propelled by double-sided paddles? | kayaks [or qajaq; accept kayak roll or kayak angst; prompt on boats or watercrafts until “boats” is read] (The first sentence is about Eenoolooapik. The penultimate sentence is the story of Sedna.) | [
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acf-co24-12-14_7 | For 10 points, oiled sealskin was often used to make Inuit examples of what narrow, closed-top boats propelled by double-sided paddles? | [
"kayak",
"kayaks",
"qajaq",
"kayak roll",
"kayak angst"
] | acf-co24-12-14 | 7 | While demonstrating one of these objects, an employee of William Penny nicknamed “Bobbie” fell ill in Aberdeen. John Brand documented 18th-century sightings of these objects in Scotland, where they were believed to belong to “Finnmen.” Pilots of these objects made tactile use of three-dimensional maps carved from driftwood that are celebrated in Bill Buxton’s book Sketching User Experiences. Users of these objects experience dizziness and panic in a culture-bound syndrome called their “angst.” “C-to-C” and “sweep” are methods for “rolling” these boats. In most versions of a myth, a disguised stormy petrel uses one of these boats to carry off a future sea goddess, who later clings to one of these boats belonging to her father until he cuts her fingers off. For 10 points, oiled sealskin was often used to make Inuit examples of what narrow, closed-top boats propelled by double-sided paddles? | kayaks [or qajaq; accept kayak roll or kayak angst; prompt on boats or watercrafts until “boats” is read] (The first sentence is about Eenoolooapik. The penultimate sentence is the story of Sedna.) | [
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acf-co24-12-15_1 | In a June festival held in this region since 1992, dancers with scarecrow clappers lift and tug in a style developed at a school. | [
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"Tsugaru",
"Tsugaru Peninsula",
"North Japan",
"Northern Japan",
"Tsugaru-jamisen",
"Japan",
"North",
"Hokkaidō",
"Tōhoku",
"Sapporo",
"Kushiro",
"anywhere on Hokkaidō",
"Northeastern Japan",
"Northeast Japan"
] | acf-co24-12-15 | 1 | In a June festival held in this region since 1992, dancers with scarecrow clappers lift and tug in a style developed at a school. A onetime forestry officer from this region used its ritual music in his primitivistic Sinfonia Tapkaara, scored 300 films, and won his mentor Tcherepnin’s award with an orchestral Rhapsody. In an edgier style pioneered in this region by the blind street musician Nitabo, a flared tortoiseshell plectrum is struck on the dogskin drum of a thicker-necked lute with 3 large pegs that is tuned while playing jongara. This region’s Yosakoi Soran Festival chants a call-and-response dokkoisho sea shanty by Takio Itō. Bukimisha sings a cappella renditions of the Godzilla score by a composer from this region, Akira Ifukube. The Yoshida Brothers’ percussive shredding exemplifies a shamisen style named for a peninsula in this region. For 10 points, name this region where upopo songs and yukar epics were sung in Ainu. | Northern Japan [accept Hokkaidō or Aomori Prefecture or Tsugaru Peninsula or Tōhoku; accept Tsugaru-jamisen or Tsugaru jongara bushi; accept Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro, or anywhere on Hokkaidō; or Northeastern Japan; prompt on Japan] | [
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acf-co24-12-15_2 | A onetime forestry officer from this region used its ritual music in his primitivistic Sinfonia Tapkaara, scored 300 films, and won his mentor Tcherepnin’s award with an orchestral Rhapsody. | [
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"Hokkaidō",
"Tōhoku",
"Sapporo",
"Kushiro",
"anywhere on Hokkaidō",
"Northeastern Japan",
"Northeast Japan"
] | acf-co24-12-15 | 2 | In a June festival held in this region since 1992, dancers with scarecrow clappers lift and tug in a style developed at a school. A onetime forestry officer from this region used its ritual music in his primitivistic Sinfonia Tapkaara, scored 300 films, and won his mentor Tcherepnin’s award with an orchestral Rhapsody. In an edgier style pioneered in this region by the blind street musician Nitabo, a flared tortoiseshell plectrum is struck on the dogskin drum of a thicker-necked lute with 3 large pegs that is tuned while playing jongara. This region’s Yosakoi Soran Festival chants a call-and-response dokkoisho sea shanty by Takio Itō. Bukimisha sings a cappella renditions of the Godzilla score by a composer from this region, Akira Ifukube. The Yoshida Brothers’ percussive shredding exemplifies a shamisen style named for a peninsula in this region. For 10 points, name this region where upopo songs and yukar epics were sung in Ainu. | Northern Japan [accept Hokkaidō or Aomori Prefecture or Tsugaru Peninsula or Tōhoku; accept Tsugaru-jamisen or Tsugaru jongara bushi; accept Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro, or anywhere on Hokkaidō; or Northeastern Japan; prompt on Japan] | [
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acf-co24-12-15_3 | In an edgier style pioneered in this region by the blind street musician Nitabo, a flared tortoiseshell plectrum is struck on the dogskin drum of a thicker-necked lute with 3 large pegs that is tuned while playing jongara. | [
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"Aomori",
"Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro,",
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"North Japan",
"Northern Japan",
"Tsugaru-jamisen",
"Japan",
"North",
"Hokkaidō",
"Tōhoku",
"Sapporo",
"Kushiro",
"anywhere on Hokkaidō",
"Northeastern Japan",
"Northeast Japan"
] | acf-co24-12-15 | 3 | In a June festival held in this region since 1992, dancers with scarecrow clappers lift and tug in a style developed at a school. A onetime forestry officer from this region used its ritual music in his primitivistic Sinfonia Tapkaara, scored 300 films, and won his mentor Tcherepnin’s award with an orchestral Rhapsody. In an edgier style pioneered in this region by the blind street musician Nitabo, a flared tortoiseshell plectrum is struck on the dogskin drum of a thicker-necked lute with 3 large pegs that is tuned while playing jongara. This region’s Yosakoi Soran Festival chants a call-and-response dokkoisho sea shanty by Takio Itō. Bukimisha sings a cappella renditions of the Godzilla score by a composer from this region, Akira Ifukube. The Yoshida Brothers’ percussive shredding exemplifies a shamisen style named for a peninsula in this region. For 10 points, name this region where upopo songs and yukar epics were sung in Ainu. | Northern Japan [accept Hokkaidō or Aomori Prefecture or Tsugaru Peninsula or Tōhoku; accept Tsugaru-jamisen or Tsugaru jongara bushi; accept Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro, or anywhere on Hokkaidō; or Northeastern Japan; prompt on Japan] | [
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} |
acf-co24-12-15_4 | This region’s Yosakoi Soran Festival chants a call-and-response dokkoisho sea shanty by Takio Itō. | [
"Tsugaru jongara bushi",
"Aomori Prefecture",
"Sapporo Wakkanai Kushiro",
"Northeast",
"Wakkanai",
"Aomori",
"Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro,",
"Tsugaru",
"Tsugaru Peninsula",
"North Japan",
"Northern Japan",
"Tsugaru-jamisen",
"Japan",
"North",
"Hokkaidō",
"Tōhoku",
"Sapporo",
"Kushiro",
"anywhere on Hokkaidō",
"Northeastern Japan",
"Northeast Japan"
] | acf-co24-12-15 | 4 | In a June festival held in this region since 1992, dancers with scarecrow clappers lift and tug in a style developed at a school. A onetime forestry officer from this region used its ritual music in his primitivistic Sinfonia Tapkaara, scored 300 films, and won his mentor Tcherepnin’s award with an orchestral Rhapsody. In an edgier style pioneered in this region by the blind street musician Nitabo, a flared tortoiseshell plectrum is struck on the dogskin drum of a thicker-necked lute with 3 large pegs that is tuned while playing jongara. This region’s Yosakoi Soran Festival chants a call-and-response dokkoisho sea shanty by Takio Itō. Bukimisha sings a cappella renditions of the Godzilla score by a composer from this region, Akira Ifukube. The Yoshida Brothers’ percussive shredding exemplifies a shamisen style named for a peninsula in this region. For 10 points, name this region where upopo songs and yukar epics were sung in Ainu. | Northern Japan [accept Hokkaidō or Aomori Prefecture or Tsugaru Peninsula or Tōhoku; accept Tsugaru-jamisen or Tsugaru jongara bushi; accept Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro, or anywhere on Hokkaidō; or Northeastern Japan; prompt on Japan] | [
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"packet": "Packet L. Editors 6",
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"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-12-15_5 | Bukimisha sings a cappella renditions of the Godzilla score by a composer from this region, Akira Ifukube. | [
"Tsugaru jongara bushi",
"Aomori Prefecture",
"Sapporo Wakkanai Kushiro",
"Northeast",
"Wakkanai",
"Aomori",
"Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro,",
"Tsugaru",
"Tsugaru Peninsula",
"North Japan",
"Northern Japan",
"Tsugaru-jamisen",
"Japan",
"North",
"Hokkaidō",
"Tōhoku",
"Sapporo",
"Kushiro",
"anywhere on Hokkaidō",
"Northeastern Japan",
"Northeast Japan"
] | acf-co24-12-15 | 5 | In a June festival held in this region since 1992, dancers with scarecrow clappers lift and tug in a style developed at a school. A onetime forestry officer from this region used its ritual music in his primitivistic Sinfonia Tapkaara, scored 300 films, and won his mentor Tcherepnin’s award with an orchestral Rhapsody. In an edgier style pioneered in this region by the blind street musician Nitabo, a flared tortoiseshell plectrum is struck on the dogskin drum of a thicker-necked lute with 3 large pegs that is tuned while playing jongara. This region’s Yosakoi Soran Festival chants a call-and-response dokkoisho sea shanty by Takio Itō. Bukimisha sings a cappella renditions of the Godzilla score by a composer from this region, Akira Ifukube. The Yoshida Brothers’ percussive shredding exemplifies a shamisen style named for a peninsula in this region. For 10 points, name this region where upopo songs and yukar epics were sung in Ainu. | Northern Japan [accept Hokkaidō or Aomori Prefecture or Tsugaru Peninsula or Tōhoku; accept Tsugaru-jamisen or Tsugaru jongara bushi; accept Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro, or anywhere on Hokkaidō; or Northeastern Japan; prompt on Japan] | [
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"packet": "Packet L. Editors 6",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-12-15_6 | The Yoshida Brothers’ percussive shredding exemplifies a shamisen style named for a peninsula in this region. | [
"Tsugaru jongara bushi",
"Aomori Prefecture",
"Sapporo Wakkanai Kushiro",
"Northeast",
"Wakkanai",
"Aomori",
"Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro,",
"Tsugaru",
"Tsugaru Peninsula",
"North Japan",
"Northern Japan",
"Tsugaru-jamisen",
"Japan",
"North",
"Hokkaidō",
"Tōhoku",
"Sapporo",
"Kushiro",
"anywhere on Hokkaidō",
"Northeastern Japan",
"Northeast Japan"
] | acf-co24-12-15 | 6 | In a June festival held in this region since 1992, dancers with scarecrow clappers lift and tug in a style developed at a school. A onetime forestry officer from this region used its ritual music in his primitivistic Sinfonia Tapkaara, scored 300 films, and won his mentor Tcherepnin’s award with an orchestral Rhapsody. In an edgier style pioneered in this region by the blind street musician Nitabo, a flared tortoiseshell plectrum is struck on the dogskin drum of a thicker-necked lute with 3 large pegs that is tuned while playing jongara. This region’s Yosakoi Soran Festival chants a call-and-response dokkoisho sea shanty by Takio Itō. Bukimisha sings a cappella renditions of the Godzilla score by a composer from this region, Akira Ifukube. The Yoshida Brothers’ percussive shredding exemplifies a shamisen style named for a peninsula in this region. For 10 points, name this region where upopo songs and yukar epics were sung in Ainu. | Northern Japan [accept Hokkaidō or Aomori Prefecture or Tsugaru Peninsula or Tōhoku; accept Tsugaru-jamisen or Tsugaru jongara bushi; accept Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro, or anywhere on Hokkaidō; or Northeastern Japan; prompt on Japan] | [
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"packet": "Packet L. Editors 6",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-12-15_7 | For 10 points, name this region where upopo songs and yukar epics were sung in Ainu. | [
"Tsugaru jongara bushi",
"Aomori Prefecture",
"Sapporo Wakkanai Kushiro",
"Northeast",
"Wakkanai",
"Aomori",
"Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro,",
"Tsugaru",
"Tsugaru Peninsula",
"North Japan",
"Northern Japan",
"Tsugaru-jamisen",
"Japan",
"North",
"Hokkaidō",
"Tōhoku",
"Sapporo",
"Kushiro",
"anywhere on Hokkaidō",
"Northeastern Japan",
"Northeast Japan"
] | acf-co24-12-15 | 7 | In a June festival held in this region since 1992, dancers with scarecrow clappers lift and tug in a style developed at a school. A onetime forestry officer from this region used its ritual music in his primitivistic Sinfonia Tapkaara, scored 300 films, and won his mentor Tcherepnin’s award with an orchestral Rhapsody. In an edgier style pioneered in this region by the blind street musician Nitabo, a flared tortoiseshell plectrum is struck on the dogskin drum of a thicker-necked lute with 3 large pegs that is tuned while playing jongara. This region’s Yosakoi Soran Festival chants a call-and-response dokkoisho sea shanty by Takio Itō. Bukimisha sings a cappella renditions of the Godzilla score by a composer from this region, Akira Ifukube. The Yoshida Brothers’ percussive shredding exemplifies a shamisen style named for a peninsula in this region. For 10 points, name this region where upopo songs and yukar epics were sung in Ainu. | Northern Japan [accept Hokkaidō or Aomori Prefecture or Tsugaru Peninsula or Tōhoku; accept Tsugaru-jamisen or Tsugaru jongara bushi; accept Sapporo, Wakkanai, Kushiro, or anywhere on Hokkaidō; or Northeastern Japan; prompt on Japan] | [
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643
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644,
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861,
945
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"packet": "Packet L. Editors 6",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
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