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-co24-13-11_2 | A leader of this group transcribed his debate with the Abbasid caliph al-Mahdi. | [
"Syriac",
"Assyrian",
"Nestorian",
"Nestorian Stele",
"Assyrian Church of the East",
"Nestorian Church",
"Church of the East",
"East Syriac Church",
"East"
] | acf-co24-13-11 | 2 | A mass grave from a town of this group near Lake Issyk Kul is the earliest evidence of the bubonic plague. A leader of this group transcribed his debate with the Abbasid caliph al-Mahdi. While traveling with this group’s future leader Yahballaha to meet Honorius IV, a member of this group documented the Sicilian Vespers and an eruption of Etna. This religious group included the Keraite princess who led the “Toluid revolution,” Sorghaghtani Beki, her uncle Toghrul, and her niece Doquz Khatun, who got Hulagu to spare this group during the sack of Baghdad. Táng Tàizōng’s patronage of this religious group under Alopen is recorded on the Xī’ān stele. The Yuán emissary Rabban Bar Sauma was part of this group, whose prevalence led to the Prester John legends. For 10 points, name this Christian church often misleadingly named for a 5th-century heresiarch. | Church of the East [or Nestorian Church; or East Syriac Church; or Assyrian Church of the East; accept Nestorian Stele; prompt on Eastern Christianity; prompt on Syriac Christians] (The second sentence refers to Patriarch Timothy I of Seleucia-Ctesiphon.) | [
[
0,
106
],
[
107,
186
],
[
187,
346
],
[
347,
560
],
[
561,
654
],
[
655,
763
],
[
764,
860
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - World History",
"category_main": "history-world-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
61,
15
],
[
70,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
72,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
76,
15
],
[
88,
-5
],
[
95,
10
],
[
102,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
111,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-11_3 | While traveling with this group’s future leader Yahballaha to meet Honorius IV, a member of this group documented the Sicilian Vespers and an eruption of Etna. | [
"Syriac",
"Assyrian",
"Nestorian",
"Nestorian Stele",
"Assyrian Church of the East",
"Nestorian Church",
"Church of the East",
"East Syriac Church",
"East"
] | acf-co24-13-11 | 3 | A mass grave from a town of this group near Lake Issyk Kul is the earliest evidence of the bubonic plague. A leader of this group transcribed his debate with the Abbasid caliph al-Mahdi. While traveling with this group’s future leader Yahballaha to meet Honorius IV, a member of this group documented the Sicilian Vespers and an eruption of Etna. This religious group included the Keraite princess who led the “Toluid revolution,” Sorghaghtani Beki, her uncle Toghrul, and her niece Doquz Khatun, who got Hulagu to spare this group during the sack of Baghdad. Táng Tàizōng’s patronage of this religious group under Alopen is recorded on the Xī’ān stele. The Yuán emissary Rabban Bar Sauma was part of this group, whose prevalence led to the Prester John legends. For 10 points, name this Christian church often misleadingly named for a 5th-century heresiarch. | Church of the East [or Nestorian Church; or East Syriac Church; or Assyrian Church of the East; accept Nestorian Stele; prompt on Eastern Christianity; prompt on Syriac Christians] (The second sentence refers to Patriarch Timothy I of Seleucia-Ctesiphon.) | [
[
0,
106
],
[
107,
186
],
[
187,
346
],
[
347,
560
],
[
561,
654
],
[
655,
763
],
[
764,
860
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - World History",
"category_main": "history-world-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
61,
15
],
[
70,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
72,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
76,
15
],
[
88,
-5
],
[
95,
10
],
[
102,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
111,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-11_4 | This religious group included the Keraite princess who led the “Toluid revolution,” Sorghaghtani Beki, her uncle Toghrul, and her niece Doquz Khatun, who got Hulagu to spare this group during the sack of Baghdad. | [
"Syriac",
"Assyrian",
"Nestorian",
"Nestorian Stele",
"Assyrian Church of the East",
"Nestorian Church",
"Church of the East",
"East Syriac Church",
"East"
] | acf-co24-13-11 | 4 | A mass grave from a town of this group near Lake Issyk Kul is the earliest evidence of the bubonic plague. A leader of this group transcribed his debate with the Abbasid caliph al-Mahdi. While traveling with this group’s future leader Yahballaha to meet Honorius IV, a member of this group documented the Sicilian Vespers and an eruption of Etna. This religious group included the Keraite princess who led the “Toluid revolution,” Sorghaghtani Beki, her uncle Toghrul, and her niece Doquz Khatun, who got Hulagu to spare this group during the sack of Baghdad. Táng Tàizōng’s patronage of this religious group under Alopen is recorded on the Xī’ān stele. The Yuán emissary Rabban Bar Sauma was part of this group, whose prevalence led to the Prester John legends. For 10 points, name this Christian church often misleadingly named for a 5th-century heresiarch. | Church of the East [or Nestorian Church; or East Syriac Church; or Assyrian Church of the East; accept Nestorian Stele; prompt on Eastern Christianity; prompt on Syriac Christians] (The second sentence refers to Patriarch Timothy I of Seleucia-Ctesiphon.) | [
[
0,
106
],
[
107,
186
],
[
187,
346
],
[
347,
560
],
[
561,
654
],
[
655,
763
],
[
764,
860
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - World History",
"category_main": "history-world-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
61,
15
],
[
70,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
72,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
76,
15
],
[
88,
-5
],
[
95,
10
],
[
102,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
111,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-11_5 | Táng Tàizōng’s patronage of this religious group under Alopen is recorded on the Xī’ān stele. | [
"Syriac",
"Assyrian",
"Nestorian",
"Nestorian Stele",
"Assyrian Church of the East",
"Nestorian Church",
"Church of the East",
"East Syriac Church",
"East"
] | acf-co24-13-11 | 5 | A mass grave from a town of this group near Lake Issyk Kul is the earliest evidence of the bubonic plague. A leader of this group transcribed his debate with the Abbasid caliph al-Mahdi. While traveling with this group’s future leader Yahballaha to meet Honorius IV, a member of this group documented the Sicilian Vespers and an eruption of Etna. This religious group included the Keraite princess who led the “Toluid revolution,” Sorghaghtani Beki, her uncle Toghrul, and her niece Doquz Khatun, who got Hulagu to spare this group during the sack of Baghdad. Táng Tàizōng’s patronage of this religious group under Alopen is recorded on the Xī’ān stele. The Yuán emissary Rabban Bar Sauma was part of this group, whose prevalence led to the Prester John legends. For 10 points, name this Christian church often misleadingly named for a 5th-century heresiarch. | Church of the East [or Nestorian Church; or East Syriac Church; or Assyrian Church of the East; accept Nestorian Stele; prompt on Eastern Christianity; prompt on Syriac Christians] (The second sentence refers to Patriarch Timothy I of Seleucia-Ctesiphon.) | [
[
0,
106
],
[
107,
186
],
[
187,
346
],
[
347,
560
],
[
561,
654
],
[
655,
763
],
[
764,
860
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - World History",
"category_main": "history-world-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
61,
15
],
[
70,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
72,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
76,
15
],
[
88,
-5
],
[
95,
10
],
[
102,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
111,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-11_6 | The Yuán emissary Rabban Bar Sauma was part of this group, whose prevalence led to the Prester John legends. | [
"Syriac",
"Assyrian",
"Nestorian",
"Nestorian Stele",
"Assyrian Church of the East",
"Nestorian Church",
"Church of the East",
"East Syriac Church",
"East"
] | acf-co24-13-11 | 6 | A mass grave from a town of this group near Lake Issyk Kul is the earliest evidence of the bubonic plague. A leader of this group transcribed his debate with the Abbasid caliph al-Mahdi. While traveling with this group’s future leader Yahballaha to meet Honorius IV, a member of this group documented the Sicilian Vespers and an eruption of Etna. This religious group included the Keraite princess who led the “Toluid revolution,” Sorghaghtani Beki, her uncle Toghrul, and her niece Doquz Khatun, who got Hulagu to spare this group during the sack of Baghdad. Táng Tàizōng’s patronage of this religious group under Alopen is recorded on the Xī’ān stele. The Yuán emissary Rabban Bar Sauma was part of this group, whose prevalence led to the Prester John legends. For 10 points, name this Christian church often misleadingly named for a 5th-century heresiarch. | Church of the East [or Nestorian Church; or East Syriac Church; or Assyrian Church of the East; accept Nestorian Stele; prompt on Eastern Christianity; prompt on Syriac Christians] (The second sentence refers to Patriarch Timothy I of Seleucia-Ctesiphon.) | [
[
0,
106
],
[
107,
186
],
[
187,
346
],
[
347,
560
],
[
561,
654
],
[
655,
763
],
[
764,
860
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - World History",
"category_main": "history-world-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
61,
15
],
[
70,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
72,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
76,
15
],
[
88,
-5
],
[
95,
10
],
[
102,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
111,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-11_7 | For 10 points, name this Christian church often misleadingly named for a 5th-century heresiarch. | [
"Syriac",
"Assyrian",
"Nestorian",
"Nestorian Stele",
"Assyrian Church of the East",
"Nestorian Church",
"Church of the East",
"East Syriac Church",
"East"
] | acf-co24-13-11 | 7 | A mass grave from a town of this group near Lake Issyk Kul is the earliest evidence of the bubonic plague. A leader of this group transcribed his debate with the Abbasid caliph al-Mahdi. While traveling with this group’s future leader Yahballaha to meet Honorius IV, a member of this group documented the Sicilian Vespers and an eruption of Etna. This religious group included the Keraite princess who led the “Toluid revolution,” Sorghaghtani Beki, her uncle Toghrul, and her niece Doquz Khatun, who got Hulagu to spare this group during the sack of Baghdad. Táng Tàizōng’s patronage of this religious group under Alopen is recorded on the Xī’ān stele. The Yuán emissary Rabban Bar Sauma was part of this group, whose prevalence led to the Prester John legends. For 10 points, name this Christian church often misleadingly named for a 5th-century heresiarch. | Church of the East [or Nestorian Church; or East Syriac Church; or Assyrian Church of the East; accept Nestorian Stele; prompt on Eastern Christianity; prompt on Syriac Christians] (The second sentence refers to Patriarch Timothy I of Seleucia-Ctesiphon.) | [
[
0,
106
],
[
107,
186
],
[
187,
346
],
[
347,
560
],
[
561,
654
],
[
655,
763
],
[
764,
860
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - World History",
"category_main": "history-world-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
61,
15
],
[
70,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
71,
15
],
[
72,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
76,
15
],
[
88,
-5
],
[
95,
10
],
[
102,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
111,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
],
[
142,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"world-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-12_1 | A Tanner Lecture series ends by noting that the author of this argument “must have been alone in his room with the Scientific World View” while writing it, since it neglects “people, and the other animals.” | [
"argument from queerness",
"queer"
] | acf-co24-13-12 | 1 | A Tanner Lecture series ends by noting that the author of this argument “must have been alone in his room with the Scientific World View” while writing it, since it neglects “people, and the other animals.” Jonas Olson’s four formulations of this argument are targeted by the “partners in crime” and “companions in guilt” strategies. This argument points to Samuel Clarke’s theory of “fitness” and Plato’s Forms as a “dramatic picture” of intrinsic “action-guiding” requirements. This argument, which is critiqued at the end of Christine Korsgaard’s The Sources of Normativity, rejects the existence of a “special faculty” for perceiving entities that are “utterly different from anything else in the universe.” It occupies Chapter 9 of a book that opens, “There are no objective values.” For 10 points, what argument for moral error theory from J. L. Mackie’s Ethics is named for the strangeness of moral properties? | argument from queerness [prompt on moral error theory or moral anti-realism until “error” is read] | [
[
0,
206
],
[
207,
333
],
[
334,
479
],
[
480,
712
],
[
713,
789
],
[
790,
918
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
89,
-5
],
[
96,
-5
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
113,
10
],
[
118,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
126,
-5
],
[
145,
10
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-12_2 | Jonas Olson’s four formulations of this argument are targeted by the “partners in crime” and “companions in guilt” strategies. | [
"argument from queerness",
"queer"
] | acf-co24-13-12 | 2 | A Tanner Lecture series ends by noting that the author of this argument “must have been alone in his room with the Scientific World View” while writing it, since it neglects “people, and the other animals.” Jonas Olson’s four formulations of this argument are targeted by the “partners in crime” and “companions in guilt” strategies. This argument points to Samuel Clarke’s theory of “fitness” and Plato’s Forms as a “dramatic picture” of intrinsic “action-guiding” requirements. This argument, which is critiqued at the end of Christine Korsgaard’s The Sources of Normativity, rejects the existence of a “special faculty” for perceiving entities that are “utterly different from anything else in the universe.” It occupies Chapter 9 of a book that opens, “There are no objective values.” For 10 points, what argument for moral error theory from J. L. Mackie’s Ethics is named for the strangeness of moral properties? | argument from queerness [prompt on moral error theory or moral anti-realism until “error” is read] | [
[
0,
206
],
[
207,
333
],
[
334,
479
],
[
480,
712
],
[
713,
789
],
[
790,
918
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
89,
-5
],
[
96,
-5
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
113,
10
],
[
118,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
126,
-5
],
[
145,
10
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-12_3 | This argument points to Samuel Clarke’s theory of “fitness” and Plato’s Forms as a “dramatic picture” of intrinsic “action-guiding” requirements. | [
"argument from queerness",
"queer"
] | acf-co24-13-12 | 3 | A Tanner Lecture series ends by noting that the author of this argument “must have been alone in his room with the Scientific World View” while writing it, since it neglects “people, and the other animals.” Jonas Olson’s four formulations of this argument are targeted by the “partners in crime” and “companions in guilt” strategies. This argument points to Samuel Clarke’s theory of “fitness” and Plato’s Forms as a “dramatic picture” of intrinsic “action-guiding” requirements. This argument, which is critiqued at the end of Christine Korsgaard’s The Sources of Normativity, rejects the existence of a “special faculty” for perceiving entities that are “utterly different from anything else in the universe.” It occupies Chapter 9 of a book that opens, “There are no objective values.” For 10 points, what argument for moral error theory from J. L. Mackie’s Ethics is named for the strangeness of moral properties? | argument from queerness [prompt on moral error theory or moral anti-realism until “error” is read] | [
[
0,
206
],
[
207,
333
],
[
334,
479
],
[
480,
712
],
[
713,
789
],
[
790,
918
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
89,
-5
],
[
96,
-5
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
113,
10
],
[
118,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
126,
-5
],
[
145,
10
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-12_4 | This argument, which is critiqued at the end of Christine Korsgaard’s The Sources of Normativity, rejects the existence of a “special faculty” for perceiving entities that are “utterly different from anything else in the universe.” | [
"argument from queerness",
"queer"
] | acf-co24-13-12 | 4 | A Tanner Lecture series ends by noting that the author of this argument “must have been alone in his room with the Scientific World View” while writing it, since it neglects “people, and the other animals.” Jonas Olson’s four formulations of this argument are targeted by the “partners in crime” and “companions in guilt” strategies. This argument points to Samuel Clarke’s theory of “fitness” and Plato’s Forms as a “dramatic picture” of intrinsic “action-guiding” requirements. This argument, which is critiqued at the end of Christine Korsgaard’s The Sources of Normativity, rejects the existence of a “special faculty” for perceiving entities that are “utterly different from anything else in the universe.” It occupies Chapter 9 of a book that opens, “There are no objective values.” For 10 points, what argument for moral error theory from J. L. Mackie’s Ethics is named for the strangeness of moral properties? | argument from queerness [prompt on moral error theory or moral anti-realism until “error” is read] | [
[
0,
206
],
[
207,
333
],
[
334,
479
],
[
480,
712
],
[
713,
789
],
[
790,
918
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
89,
-5
],
[
96,
-5
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
113,
10
],
[
118,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
126,
-5
],
[
145,
10
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-12_5 | It occupies Chapter 9 of a book that opens, “There are no objective values.” | [
"argument from queerness",
"queer"
] | acf-co24-13-12 | 5 | A Tanner Lecture series ends by noting that the author of this argument “must have been alone in his room with the Scientific World View” while writing it, since it neglects “people, and the other animals.” Jonas Olson’s four formulations of this argument are targeted by the “partners in crime” and “companions in guilt” strategies. This argument points to Samuel Clarke’s theory of “fitness” and Plato’s Forms as a “dramatic picture” of intrinsic “action-guiding” requirements. This argument, which is critiqued at the end of Christine Korsgaard’s The Sources of Normativity, rejects the existence of a “special faculty” for perceiving entities that are “utterly different from anything else in the universe.” It occupies Chapter 9 of a book that opens, “There are no objective values.” For 10 points, what argument for moral error theory from J. L. Mackie’s Ethics is named for the strangeness of moral properties? | argument from queerness [prompt on moral error theory or moral anti-realism until “error” is read] | [
[
0,
206
],
[
207,
333
],
[
334,
479
],
[
480,
712
],
[
713,
789
],
[
790,
918
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
89,
-5
],
[
96,
-5
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
113,
10
],
[
118,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
126,
-5
],
[
145,
10
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-12_6 | For 10 points, what argument for moral error theory from J. L. Mackie’s Ethics is named for the strangeness of moral properties? | [
"argument from queerness",
"queer"
] | acf-co24-13-12 | 6 | A Tanner Lecture series ends by noting that the author of this argument “must have been alone in his room with the Scientific World View” while writing it, since it neglects “people, and the other animals.” Jonas Olson’s four formulations of this argument are targeted by the “partners in crime” and “companions in guilt” strategies. This argument points to Samuel Clarke’s theory of “fitness” and Plato’s Forms as a “dramatic picture” of intrinsic “action-guiding” requirements. This argument, which is critiqued at the end of Christine Korsgaard’s The Sources of Normativity, rejects the existence of a “special faculty” for perceiving entities that are “utterly different from anything else in the universe.” It occupies Chapter 9 of a book that opens, “There are no objective values.” For 10 points, what argument for moral error theory from J. L. Mackie’s Ethics is named for the strangeness of moral properties? | argument from queerness [prompt on moral error theory or moral anti-realism until “error” is read] | [
[
0,
206
],
[
207,
333
],
[
334,
479
],
[
480,
712
],
[
713,
789
],
[
790,
918
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
89,
-5
],
[
96,
-5
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
113,
10
],
[
118,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
126,
-5
],
[
145,
10
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
0
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-13_1 | A composer from this family wrote an autobiography whose opening uses an asterisk after the word “Daddy” for a footnote that describes him as “composer, womanizer, alcoholic, genius.” | [
"Richard Rodgers",
"Rodgers",
"Mary Rodgers"
] | acf-co24-13-13 | 1 | A composer from this family wrote an autobiography whose opening uses an asterisk after the word “Daddy” for a footnote that describes him as “composer, womanizer, alcoholic, genius.” A composer from this family with a different surname wrote the song “Fable” to end a musical in which Margaret lets her mentally disabled daughter Clara marry Fabrizio. The Light in the Piazza was written by Adam Guettel, whose mother from this family wrote the song “Shy” for a musical about Princess Winnifred. Due to his songwriting partner’s death in 1960, a composer from this family wrote lyrics to the songs “Something Good” and “I Have Confidence” for a 1965 film adaptation. This family includes the composer of Once Upon A Mattress, Mary, and her father, who wrote “My Funny Valentine” with Lorenz Hart. For 10 points, what family includes a composer who wrote The Sound of Music with Oscar Hammerstein? | Rodgers [accept Richard Rodgers; accept Mary Rodgers; prompt on Adam Guettel until read] | [
[
0,
183
],
[
184,
352
],
[
353,
497
],
[
498,
669
],
[
670,
799
],
[
800,
899
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts",
"category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
52,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
120,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
148,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-13_2 | A composer from this family with a different surname wrote the song “Fable” to end a musical in which Margaret lets her mentally disabled daughter Clara marry Fabrizio. | [
"Richard Rodgers",
"Rodgers",
"Mary Rodgers"
] | acf-co24-13-13 | 2 | A composer from this family wrote an autobiography whose opening uses an asterisk after the word “Daddy” for a footnote that describes him as “composer, womanizer, alcoholic, genius.” A composer from this family with a different surname wrote the song “Fable” to end a musical in which Margaret lets her mentally disabled daughter Clara marry Fabrizio. The Light in the Piazza was written by Adam Guettel, whose mother from this family wrote the song “Shy” for a musical about Princess Winnifred. Due to his songwriting partner’s death in 1960, a composer from this family wrote lyrics to the songs “Something Good” and “I Have Confidence” for a 1965 film adaptation. This family includes the composer of Once Upon A Mattress, Mary, and her father, who wrote “My Funny Valentine” with Lorenz Hart. For 10 points, what family includes a composer who wrote The Sound of Music with Oscar Hammerstein? | Rodgers [accept Richard Rodgers; accept Mary Rodgers; prompt on Adam Guettel until read] | [
[
0,
183
],
[
184,
352
],
[
353,
497
],
[
498,
669
],
[
670,
799
],
[
800,
899
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts",
"category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
52,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
120,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
148,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-13_3 | The Light in the Piazza was written by Adam Guettel, whose mother from this family wrote the song “Shy” for a musical about Princess Winnifred. | [
"Richard Rodgers",
"Rodgers",
"Mary Rodgers"
] | acf-co24-13-13 | 3 | A composer from this family wrote an autobiography whose opening uses an asterisk after the word “Daddy” for a footnote that describes him as “composer, womanizer, alcoholic, genius.” A composer from this family with a different surname wrote the song “Fable” to end a musical in which Margaret lets her mentally disabled daughter Clara marry Fabrizio. The Light in the Piazza was written by Adam Guettel, whose mother from this family wrote the song “Shy” for a musical about Princess Winnifred. Due to his songwriting partner’s death in 1960, a composer from this family wrote lyrics to the songs “Something Good” and “I Have Confidence” for a 1965 film adaptation. This family includes the composer of Once Upon A Mattress, Mary, and her father, who wrote “My Funny Valentine” with Lorenz Hart. For 10 points, what family includes a composer who wrote The Sound of Music with Oscar Hammerstein? | Rodgers [accept Richard Rodgers; accept Mary Rodgers; prompt on Adam Guettel until read] | [
[
0,
183
],
[
184,
352
],
[
353,
497
],
[
498,
669
],
[
670,
799
],
[
800,
899
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts",
"category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
52,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
120,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
148,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-13_4 | Due to his songwriting partner’s death in 1960, a composer from this family wrote lyrics to the songs “Something Good” and “I Have Confidence” for a 1965 film adaptation. | [
"Richard Rodgers",
"Rodgers",
"Mary Rodgers"
] | acf-co24-13-13 | 4 | A composer from this family wrote an autobiography whose opening uses an asterisk after the word “Daddy” for a footnote that describes him as “composer, womanizer, alcoholic, genius.” A composer from this family with a different surname wrote the song “Fable” to end a musical in which Margaret lets her mentally disabled daughter Clara marry Fabrizio. The Light in the Piazza was written by Adam Guettel, whose mother from this family wrote the song “Shy” for a musical about Princess Winnifred. Due to his songwriting partner’s death in 1960, a composer from this family wrote lyrics to the songs “Something Good” and “I Have Confidence” for a 1965 film adaptation. This family includes the composer of Once Upon A Mattress, Mary, and her father, who wrote “My Funny Valentine” with Lorenz Hart. For 10 points, what family includes a composer who wrote The Sound of Music with Oscar Hammerstein? | Rodgers [accept Richard Rodgers; accept Mary Rodgers; prompt on Adam Guettel until read] | [
[
0,
183
],
[
184,
352
],
[
353,
497
],
[
498,
669
],
[
670,
799
],
[
800,
899
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts",
"category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
52,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
120,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
148,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-13_5 | This family includes the composer of Once Upon A Mattress, Mary, and her father, who wrote “My Funny Valentine” with Lorenz Hart. | [
"Richard Rodgers",
"Rodgers",
"Mary Rodgers"
] | acf-co24-13-13 | 5 | A composer from this family wrote an autobiography whose opening uses an asterisk after the word “Daddy” for a footnote that describes him as “composer, womanizer, alcoholic, genius.” A composer from this family with a different surname wrote the song “Fable” to end a musical in which Margaret lets her mentally disabled daughter Clara marry Fabrizio. The Light in the Piazza was written by Adam Guettel, whose mother from this family wrote the song “Shy” for a musical about Princess Winnifred. Due to his songwriting partner’s death in 1960, a composer from this family wrote lyrics to the songs “Something Good” and “I Have Confidence” for a 1965 film adaptation. This family includes the composer of Once Upon A Mattress, Mary, and her father, who wrote “My Funny Valentine” with Lorenz Hart. For 10 points, what family includes a composer who wrote The Sound of Music with Oscar Hammerstein? | Rodgers [accept Richard Rodgers; accept Mary Rodgers; prompt on Adam Guettel until read] | [
[
0,
183
],
[
184,
352
],
[
353,
497
],
[
498,
669
],
[
670,
799
],
[
800,
899
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts",
"category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
52,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
120,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
148,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-13_6 | For 10 points, what family includes a composer who wrote The Sound of Music with Oscar Hammerstein? | [
"Richard Rodgers",
"Rodgers",
"Mary Rodgers"
] | acf-co24-13-13 | 6 | A composer from this family wrote an autobiography whose opening uses an asterisk after the word “Daddy” for a footnote that describes him as “composer, womanizer, alcoholic, genius.” A composer from this family with a different surname wrote the song “Fable” to end a musical in which Margaret lets her mentally disabled daughter Clara marry Fabrizio. The Light in the Piazza was written by Adam Guettel, whose mother from this family wrote the song “Shy” for a musical about Princess Winnifred. Due to his songwriting partner’s death in 1960, a composer from this family wrote lyrics to the songs “Something Good” and “I Have Confidence” for a 1965 film adaptation. This family includes the composer of Once Upon A Mattress, Mary, and her father, who wrote “My Funny Valentine” with Lorenz Hart. For 10 points, what family includes a composer who wrote The Sound of Music with Oscar Hammerstein? | Rodgers [accept Richard Rodgers; accept Mary Rodgers; prompt on Adam Guettel until read] | [
[
0,
183
],
[
184,
352
],
[
353,
497
],
[
498,
669
],
[
670,
799
],
[
800,
899
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts",
"category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
52,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
120,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
135,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
148,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
149,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-arts"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-14_1 | This character laments that men can’t buy babies at temples in a misogynistic rant he delivers after bursting through a palace door. | [
"Hippolytus"
] | acf-co24-13-14 | 1 | This character laments that men can’t buy babies at temples in a misogynistic rant he delivers after bursting through a palace door. In The Clouds, Aristophanes riffed on this character’s claim that “my tongue swore but my heart remained unpledged,” a line whose sophistic immorality scandalized Athenians. In the opening scene, this hunter explains that he worships “Cypris” from “a long way off” when asked why he doesn’t lay a wreath on her altar. In that play, a nurse pleads with this title man on behalf of a woman who is trying to starve herself to death out of love for him. This character angers Aphrodite with his chaste devotion to Artemis, setting off a chain of events that ends with a monstrous bull rising from the sea to capsize his chariot. For 10 points, name this title character of a Euripides play, a son of Theseus who is falsely accused of rape by his stepmother Phaedra. | Hippolytus | [
[
0,
132
],
[
133,
306
],
[
307,
450
],
[
451,
583
],
[
584,
758
],
[
759,
895
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
12,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
101,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
111,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
138,
-5
],
[
142,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
156,
-5
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-14_2 | In The Clouds, Aristophanes riffed on this character’s claim that “my tongue swore but my heart remained unpledged,” a line whose sophistic immorality scandalized Athenians. | [
"Hippolytus"
] | acf-co24-13-14 | 2 | This character laments that men can’t buy babies at temples in a misogynistic rant he delivers after bursting through a palace door. In The Clouds, Aristophanes riffed on this character’s claim that “my tongue swore but my heart remained unpledged,” a line whose sophistic immorality scandalized Athenians. In the opening scene, this hunter explains that he worships “Cypris” from “a long way off” when asked why he doesn’t lay a wreath on her altar. In that play, a nurse pleads with this title man on behalf of a woman who is trying to starve herself to death out of love for him. This character angers Aphrodite with his chaste devotion to Artemis, setting off a chain of events that ends with a monstrous bull rising from the sea to capsize his chariot. For 10 points, name this title character of a Euripides play, a son of Theseus who is falsely accused of rape by his stepmother Phaedra. | Hippolytus | [
[
0,
132
],
[
133,
306
],
[
307,
450
],
[
451,
583
],
[
584,
758
],
[
759,
895
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
12,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
101,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
111,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
138,
-5
],
[
142,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
156,
-5
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-14_3 | In the opening scene, this hunter explains that he worships “Cypris” from “a long way off” when asked why he doesn’t lay a wreath on her altar. | [
"Hippolytus"
] | acf-co24-13-14 | 3 | This character laments that men can’t buy babies at temples in a misogynistic rant he delivers after bursting through a palace door. In The Clouds, Aristophanes riffed on this character’s claim that “my tongue swore but my heart remained unpledged,” a line whose sophistic immorality scandalized Athenians. In the opening scene, this hunter explains that he worships “Cypris” from “a long way off” when asked why he doesn’t lay a wreath on her altar. In that play, a nurse pleads with this title man on behalf of a woman who is trying to starve herself to death out of love for him. This character angers Aphrodite with his chaste devotion to Artemis, setting off a chain of events that ends with a monstrous bull rising from the sea to capsize his chariot. For 10 points, name this title character of a Euripides play, a son of Theseus who is falsely accused of rape by his stepmother Phaedra. | Hippolytus | [
[
0,
132
],
[
133,
306
],
[
307,
450
],
[
451,
583
],
[
584,
758
],
[
759,
895
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
12,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
101,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
111,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
138,
-5
],
[
142,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
156,
-5
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-14_4 | In that play, a nurse pleads with this title man on behalf of a woman who is trying to starve herself to death out of love for him. | [
"Hippolytus"
] | acf-co24-13-14 | 4 | This character laments that men can’t buy babies at temples in a misogynistic rant he delivers after bursting through a palace door. In The Clouds, Aristophanes riffed on this character’s claim that “my tongue swore but my heart remained unpledged,” a line whose sophistic immorality scandalized Athenians. In the opening scene, this hunter explains that he worships “Cypris” from “a long way off” when asked why he doesn’t lay a wreath on her altar. In that play, a nurse pleads with this title man on behalf of a woman who is trying to starve herself to death out of love for him. This character angers Aphrodite with his chaste devotion to Artemis, setting off a chain of events that ends with a monstrous bull rising from the sea to capsize his chariot. For 10 points, name this title character of a Euripides play, a son of Theseus who is falsely accused of rape by his stepmother Phaedra. | Hippolytus | [
[
0,
132
],
[
133,
306
],
[
307,
450
],
[
451,
583
],
[
584,
758
],
[
759,
895
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
12,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
101,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
111,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
138,
-5
],
[
142,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
156,
-5
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-14_5 | This character angers Aphrodite with his chaste devotion to Artemis, setting off a chain of events that ends with a monstrous bull rising from the sea to capsize his chariot. | [
"Hippolytus"
] | acf-co24-13-14 | 5 | This character laments that men can’t buy babies at temples in a misogynistic rant he delivers after bursting through a palace door. In The Clouds, Aristophanes riffed on this character’s claim that “my tongue swore but my heart remained unpledged,” a line whose sophistic immorality scandalized Athenians. In the opening scene, this hunter explains that he worships “Cypris” from “a long way off” when asked why he doesn’t lay a wreath on her altar. In that play, a nurse pleads with this title man on behalf of a woman who is trying to starve herself to death out of love for him. This character angers Aphrodite with his chaste devotion to Artemis, setting off a chain of events that ends with a monstrous bull rising from the sea to capsize his chariot. For 10 points, name this title character of a Euripides play, a son of Theseus who is falsely accused of rape by his stepmother Phaedra. | Hippolytus | [
[
0,
132
],
[
133,
306
],
[
307,
450
],
[
451,
583
],
[
584,
758
],
[
759,
895
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
12,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
101,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
111,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
138,
-5
],
[
142,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
156,
-5
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-14_6 | For 10 points, name this title character of a Euripides play, a son of Theseus who is falsely accused of rape by his stepmother Phaedra. | [
"Hippolytus"
] | acf-co24-13-14 | 6 | This character laments that men can’t buy babies at temples in a misogynistic rant he delivers after bursting through a palace door. In The Clouds, Aristophanes riffed on this character’s claim that “my tongue swore but my heart remained unpledged,” a line whose sophistic immorality scandalized Athenians. In the opening scene, this hunter explains that he worships “Cypris” from “a long way off” when asked why he doesn’t lay a wreath on her altar. In that play, a nurse pleads with this title man on behalf of a woman who is trying to starve herself to death out of love for him. This character angers Aphrodite with his chaste devotion to Artemis, setting off a chain of events that ends with a monstrous bull rising from the sea to capsize his chariot. For 10 points, name this title character of a Euripides play, a son of Theseus who is falsely accused of rape by his stepmother Phaedra. | Hippolytus | [
[
0,
132
],
[
133,
306
],
[
307,
450
],
[
451,
583
],
[
584,
758
],
[
759,
895
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - European Literature",
"category_main": "literature-european-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
12,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
101,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
111,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
138,
-5
],
[
142,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
156,
-5
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
0
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
],
[
157,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-15_1 | Code is compiled into C and a language created by this company through the use of interaction combinators in the 2024-released language, Bend. | [
"Nvidia",
"NVDA"
] | acf-co24-13-15 | 1 | Code is compiled into C and a language created by this company through the use of interaction combinators in the 2024-released language, Bend. Researchers may leverage this company’s Parabricks and RAPIDS software suites to analyze genomic data through its Clara platform. Microsoft developed HLSL alongside this company’s now-deprecated Cg language. Streaming multiprocessors manage warp-level primitives that are executed under the SIMT architecture developed by this company. Prior to its discontinuation, this company’s products could be linked together through their SLI technology. In a 2024 keynote, several hyperscalers endorsed this company’s new Blackwell architecture. Products by this company may utilize pre-trained neural networks to power DLSS image upscaling technology. For 10 points, name this company whose CUDA platform facilitates parallel computing through its GPUs. | Nvidia [or NVDA] | [
[
0,
142
],
[
143,
272
],
[
273,
350
],
[
351,
479
],
[
480,
588
],
[
589,
680
],
[
681,
787
],
[
788,
889
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Computer Science) - Other Science (Computer Science)",
"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
15
],
[
61,
10
],
[
79,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
82,
10
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
92,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
98,
-5
],
[
104,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-15_2 | Researchers may leverage this company’s Parabricks and RAPIDS software suites to analyze genomic data through its Clara platform. | [
"Nvidia",
"NVDA"
] | acf-co24-13-15 | 2 | Code is compiled into C and a language created by this company through the use of interaction combinators in the 2024-released language, Bend. Researchers may leverage this company’s Parabricks and RAPIDS software suites to analyze genomic data through its Clara platform. Microsoft developed HLSL alongside this company’s now-deprecated Cg language. Streaming multiprocessors manage warp-level primitives that are executed under the SIMT architecture developed by this company. Prior to its discontinuation, this company’s products could be linked together through their SLI technology. In a 2024 keynote, several hyperscalers endorsed this company’s new Blackwell architecture. Products by this company may utilize pre-trained neural networks to power DLSS image upscaling technology. For 10 points, name this company whose CUDA platform facilitates parallel computing through its GPUs. | Nvidia [or NVDA] | [
[
0,
142
],
[
143,
272
],
[
273,
350
],
[
351,
479
],
[
480,
588
],
[
589,
680
],
[
681,
787
],
[
788,
889
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Computer Science) - Other Science (Computer Science)",
"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
15
],
[
61,
10
],
[
79,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
82,
10
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
92,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
98,
-5
],
[
104,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-15_3 | Microsoft developed HLSL alongside this company’s now-deprecated Cg language. | [
"Nvidia",
"NVDA"
] | acf-co24-13-15 | 3 | Code is compiled into C and a language created by this company through the use of interaction combinators in the 2024-released language, Bend. Researchers may leverage this company’s Parabricks and RAPIDS software suites to analyze genomic data through its Clara platform. Microsoft developed HLSL alongside this company’s now-deprecated Cg language. Streaming multiprocessors manage warp-level primitives that are executed under the SIMT architecture developed by this company. Prior to its discontinuation, this company’s products could be linked together through their SLI technology. In a 2024 keynote, several hyperscalers endorsed this company’s new Blackwell architecture. Products by this company may utilize pre-trained neural networks to power DLSS image upscaling technology. For 10 points, name this company whose CUDA platform facilitates parallel computing through its GPUs. | Nvidia [or NVDA] | [
[
0,
142
],
[
143,
272
],
[
273,
350
],
[
351,
479
],
[
480,
588
],
[
589,
680
],
[
681,
787
],
[
788,
889
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Computer Science) - Other Science (Computer Science)",
"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
15
],
[
61,
10
],
[
79,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
82,
10
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
92,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
98,
-5
],
[
104,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-15_4 | Streaming multiprocessors manage warp-level primitives that are executed under the SIMT architecture developed by this company. | [
"Nvidia",
"NVDA"
] | acf-co24-13-15 | 4 | Code is compiled into C and a language created by this company through the use of interaction combinators in the 2024-released language, Bend. Researchers may leverage this company’s Parabricks and RAPIDS software suites to analyze genomic data through its Clara platform. Microsoft developed HLSL alongside this company’s now-deprecated Cg language. Streaming multiprocessors manage warp-level primitives that are executed under the SIMT architecture developed by this company. Prior to its discontinuation, this company’s products could be linked together through their SLI technology. In a 2024 keynote, several hyperscalers endorsed this company’s new Blackwell architecture. Products by this company may utilize pre-trained neural networks to power DLSS image upscaling technology. For 10 points, name this company whose CUDA platform facilitates parallel computing through its GPUs. | Nvidia [or NVDA] | [
[
0,
142
],
[
143,
272
],
[
273,
350
],
[
351,
479
],
[
480,
588
],
[
589,
680
],
[
681,
787
],
[
788,
889
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Computer Science) - Other Science (Computer Science)",
"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
15
],
[
61,
10
],
[
79,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
82,
10
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
92,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
98,
-5
],
[
104,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-15_5 | Prior to its discontinuation, this company’s products could be linked together through their SLI technology. | [
"Nvidia",
"NVDA"
] | acf-co24-13-15 | 5 | Code is compiled into C and a language created by this company through the use of interaction combinators in the 2024-released language, Bend. Researchers may leverage this company’s Parabricks and RAPIDS software suites to analyze genomic data through its Clara platform. Microsoft developed HLSL alongside this company’s now-deprecated Cg language. Streaming multiprocessors manage warp-level primitives that are executed under the SIMT architecture developed by this company. Prior to its discontinuation, this company’s products could be linked together through their SLI technology. In a 2024 keynote, several hyperscalers endorsed this company’s new Blackwell architecture. Products by this company may utilize pre-trained neural networks to power DLSS image upscaling technology. For 10 points, name this company whose CUDA platform facilitates parallel computing through its GPUs. | Nvidia [or NVDA] | [
[
0,
142
],
[
143,
272
],
[
273,
350
],
[
351,
479
],
[
480,
588
],
[
589,
680
],
[
681,
787
],
[
788,
889
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Computer Science) - Other Science (Computer Science)",
"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
15
],
[
61,
10
],
[
79,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
82,
10
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
92,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
98,
-5
],
[
104,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-15_6 | In a 2024 keynote, several hyperscalers endorsed this company’s new Blackwell architecture. | [
"Nvidia",
"NVDA"
] | acf-co24-13-15 | 6 | Code is compiled into C and a language created by this company through the use of interaction combinators in the 2024-released language, Bend. Researchers may leverage this company’s Parabricks and RAPIDS software suites to analyze genomic data through its Clara platform. Microsoft developed HLSL alongside this company’s now-deprecated Cg language. Streaming multiprocessors manage warp-level primitives that are executed under the SIMT architecture developed by this company. Prior to its discontinuation, this company’s products could be linked together through their SLI technology. In a 2024 keynote, several hyperscalers endorsed this company’s new Blackwell architecture. Products by this company may utilize pre-trained neural networks to power DLSS image upscaling technology. For 10 points, name this company whose CUDA platform facilitates parallel computing through its GPUs. | Nvidia [or NVDA] | [
[
0,
142
],
[
143,
272
],
[
273,
350
],
[
351,
479
],
[
480,
588
],
[
589,
680
],
[
681,
787
],
[
788,
889
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Computer Science) - Other Science (Computer Science)",
"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
15
],
[
61,
10
],
[
79,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
82,
10
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
92,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
98,
-5
],
[
104,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-15_7 | Products by this company may utilize pre-trained neural networks to power DLSS image upscaling technology. | [
"Nvidia",
"NVDA"
] | acf-co24-13-15 | 7 | Code is compiled into C and a language created by this company through the use of interaction combinators in the 2024-released language, Bend. Researchers may leverage this company’s Parabricks and RAPIDS software suites to analyze genomic data through its Clara platform. Microsoft developed HLSL alongside this company’s now-deprecated Cg language. Streaming multiprocessors manage warp-level primitives that are executed under the SIMT architecture developed by this company. Prior to its discontinuation, this company’s products could be linked together through their SLI technology. In a 2024 keynote, several hyperscalers endorsed this company’s new Blackwell architecture. Products by this company may utilize pre-trained neural networks to power DLSS image upscaling technology. For 10 points, name this company whose CUDA platform facilitates parallel computing through its GPUs. | Nvidia [or NVDA] | [
[
0,
142
],
[
143,
272
],
[
273,
350
],
[
351,
479
],
[
480,
588
],
[
589,
680
],
[
681,
787
],
[
788,
889
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Computer Science) - Other Science (Computer Science)",
"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
15
],
[
61,
10
],
[
79,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
82,
10
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
92,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
98,
-5
],
[
104,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-15_8 | For 10 points, name this company whose CUDA platform facilitates parallel computing through its GPUs. | [
"Nvidia",
"NVDA"
] | acf-co24-13-15 | 8 | Code is compiled into C and a language created by this company through the use of interaction combinators in the 2024-released language, Bend. Researchers may leverage this company’s Parabricks and RAPIDS software suites to analyze genomic data through its Clara platform. Microsoft developed HLSL alongside this company’s now-deprecated Cg language. Streaming multiprocessors manage warp-level primitives that are executed under the SIMT architecture developed by this company. Prior to its discontinuation, this company’s products could be linked together through their SLI technology. In a 2024 keynote, several hyperscalers endorsed this company’s new Blackwell architecture. Products by this company may utilize pre-trained neural networks to power DLSS image upscaling technology. For 10 points, name this company whose CUDA platform facilitates parallel computing through its GPUs. | Nvidia [or NVDA] | [
[
0,
142
],
[
143,
272
],
[
273,
350
],
[
351,
479
],
[
480,
588
],
[
589,
680
],
[
681,
787
],
[
788,
889
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Computer Science) - Other Science (Computer Science)",
"category_main": "other-science-(computer-science)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
15
],
[
61,
10
],
[
79,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
80,
10
],
[
82,
10
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
92,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
98,
-5
],
[
104,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
],
[
123,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(computer-science)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-16_1 | This sort of person names the geonic conferences held biannually at the Sura and Pumbedita academies. | [
"how does one dance",
"bride",
"kallah",
"brides"
] | acf-co24-13-16 | 1 | This sort of person names the geonic conferences held biannually at the Sura and Pumbedita academies. A rabbi juggles three myrtle branches in front of one of these people in a Talmudic sugya that also reports on a dispute between Shammai and Hillel over telling white lies to these people. One of these people stands perfectly still and holds one end of a gartel or handkerchief while a dancer holds the other in a ritual sometimes directed by jesters called badchen. One of these people sits surrounded by family members in the bedeken ritual and is given a coin in Syrian and Yemeni variants of the erusin. A “beloved” is told to “go to meet” one of these people who metaphorically represents the Sabbath in the song Lekha Dodi. One of these people circles a man seven times after receiving seven blessings and drinking wine with him. For 10 points, women in what role might crush a glass under a chuppah? | brides [or kallah; accept “how does one dance before the bride?” or “keitzad merakdim lifnei ha-kalah”; prompt on women, wife or wives, fiancées, betrothed people, wedding couples, newlyweds, marriage partners, or wedding participants; prompt on brides AND grooms by asking “which one?”] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
290
],
[
291,
468
],
[
469,
610
],
[
611,
732
],
[
733,
838
],
[
839,
909
]
] | {
"category": "religion",
"category_full": "Religion - Religion",
"category_main": "religion",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
58,
15
],
[
65,
15
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
93,
-5
],
[
98,
10
],
[
120,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
141,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
153,
10
],
[
158,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-16_2 | A rabbi juggles three myrtle branches in front of one of these people in a Talmudic sugya that also reports on a dispute between Shammai and Hillel over telling white lies to these people. | [
"how does one dance",
"bride",
"kallah",
"brides"
] | acf-co24-13-16 | 2 | This sort of person names the geonic conferences held biannually at the Sura and Pumbedita academies. A rabbi juggles three myrtle branches in front of one of these people in a Talmudic sugya that also reports on a dispute between Shammai and Hillel over telling white lies to these people. One of these people stands perfectly still and holds one end of a gartel or handkerchief while a dancer holds the other in a ritual sometimes directed by jesters called badchen. One of these people sits surrounded by family members in the bedeken ritual and is given a coin in Syrian and Yemeni variants of the erusin. A “beloved” is told to “go to meet” one of these people who metaphorically represents the Sabbath in the song Lekha Dodi. One of these people circles a man seven times after receiving seven blessings and drinking wine with him. For 10 points, women in what role might crush a glass under a chuppah? | brides [or kallah; accept “how does one dance before the bride?” or “keitzad merakdim lifnei ha-kalah”; prompt on women, wife or wives, fiancées, betrothed people, wedding couples, newlyweds, marriage partners, or wedding participants; prompt on brides AND grooms by asking “which one?”] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
290
],
[
291,
468
],
[
469,
610
],
[
611,
732
],
[
733,
838
],
[
839,
909
]
] | {
"category": "religion",
"category_full": "Religion - Religion",
"category_main": "religion",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
58,
15
],
[
65,
15
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
93,
-5
],
[
98,
10
],
[
120,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
141,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
153,
10
],
[
158,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-16_3 | One of these people stands perfectly still and holds one end of a gartel or handkerchief while a dancer holds the other in a ritual sometimes directed by jesters called badchen. | [
"how does one dance",
"bride",
"kallah",
"brides"
] | acf-co24-13-16 | 3 | This sort of person names the geonic conferences held biannually at the Sura and Pumbedita academies. A rabbi juggles three myrtle branches in front of one of these people in a Talmudic sugya that also reports on a dispute between Shammai and Hillel over telling white lies to these people. One of these people stands perfectly still and holds one end of a gartel or handkerchief while a dancer holds the other in a ritual sometimes directed by jesters called badchen. One of these people sits surrounded by family members in the bedeken ritual and is given a coin in Syrian and Yemeni variants of the erusin. A “beloved” is told to “go to meet” one of these people who metaphorically represents the Sabbath in the song Lekha Dodi. One of these people circles a man seven times after receiving seven blessings and drinking wine with him. For 10 points, women in what role might crush a glass under a chuppah? | brides [or kallah; accept “how does one dance before the bride?” or “keitzad merakdim lifnei ha-kalah”; prompt on women, wife or wives, fiancées, betrothed people, wedding couples, newlyweds, marriage partners, or wedding participants; prompt on brides AND grooms by asking “which one?”] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
290
],
[
291,
468
],
[
469,
610
],
[
611,
732
],
[
733,
838
],
[
839,
909
]
] | {
"category": "religion",
"category_full": "Religion - Religion",
"category_main": "religion",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
58,
15
],
[
65,
15
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
93,
-5
],
[
98,
10
],
[
120,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
141,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
153,
10
],
[
158,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-16_4 | One of these people sits surrounded by family members in the bedeken ritual and is given a coin in Syrian and Yemeni variants of the erusin. | [
"how does one dance",
"bride",
"kallah",
"brides"
] | acf-co24-13-16 | 4 | This sort of person names the geonic conferences held biannually at the Sura and Pumbedita academies. A rabbi juggles three myrtle branches in front of one of these people in a Talmudic sugya that also reports on a dispute between Shammai and Hillel over telling white lies to these people. One of these people stands perfectly still and holds one end of a gartel or handkerchief while a dancer holds the other in a ritual sometimes directed by jesters called badchen. One of these people sits surrounded by family members in the bedeken ritual and is given a coin in Syrian and Yemeni variants of the erusin. A “beloved” is told to “go to meet” one of these people who metaphorically represents the Sabbath in the song Lekha Dodi. One of these people circles a man seven times after receiving seven blessings and drinking wine with him. For 10 points, women in what role might crush a glass under a chuppah? | brides [or kallah; accept “how does one dance before the bride?” or “keitzad merakdim lifnei ha-kalah”; prompt on women, wife or wives, fiancées, betrothed people, wedding couples, newlyweds, marriage partners, or wedding participants; prompt on brides AND grooms by asking “which one?”] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
290
],
[
291,
468
],
[
469,
610
],
[
611,
732
],
[
733,
838
],
[
839,
909
]
] | {
"category": "religion",
"category_full": "Religion - Religion",
"category_main": "religion",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
58,
15
],
[
65,
15
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
93,
-5
],
[
98,
10
],
[
120,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
141,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
153,
10
],
[
158,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-16_5 | A “beloved” is told to “go to meet” one of these people who metaphorically represents the Sabbath in the song Lekha Dodi. | [
"how does one dance",
"bride",
"kallah",
"brides"
] | acf-co24-13-16 | 5 | This sort of person names the geonic conferences held biannually at the Sura and Pumbedita academies. A rabbi juggles three myrtle branches in front of one of these people in a Talmudic sugya that also reports on a dispute between Shammai and Hillel over telling white lies to these people. One of these people stands perfectly still and holds one end of a gartel or handkerchief while a dancer holds the other in a ritual sometimes directed by jesters called badchen. One of these people sits surrounded by family members in the bedeken ritual and is given a coin in Syrian and Yemeni variants of the erusin. A “beloved” is told to “go to meet” one of these people who metaphorically represents the Sabbath in the song Lekha Dodi. One of these people circles a man seven times after receiving seven blessings and drinking wine with him. For 10 points, women in what role might crush a glass under a chuppah? | brides [or kallah; accept “how does one dance before the bride?” or “keitzad merakdim lifnei ha-kalah”; prompt on women, wife or wives, fiancées, betrothed people, wedding couples, newlyweds, marriage partners, or wedding participants; prompt on brides AND grooms by asking “which one?”] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
290
],
[
291,
468
],
[
469,
610
],
[
611,
732
],
[
733,
838
],
[
839,
909
]
] | {
"category": "religion",
"category_full": "Religion - Religion",
"category_main": "religion",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
58,
15
],
[
65,
15
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
93,
-5
],
[
98,
10
],
[
120,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
141,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
153,
10
],
[
158,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-16_6 | One of these people circles a man seven times after receiving seven blessings and drinking wine with him. | [
"how does one dance",
"bride",
"kallah",
"brides"
] | acf-co24-13-16 | 6 | This sort of person names the geonic conferences held biannually at the Sura and Pumbedita academies. A rabbi juggles three myrtle branches in front of one of these people in a Talmudic sugya that also reports on a dispute between Shammai and Hillel over telling white lies to these people. One of these people stands perfectly still and holds one end of a gartel or handkerchief while a dancer holds the other in a ritual sometimes directed by jesters called badchen. One of these people sits surrounded by family members in the bedeken ritual and is given a coin in Syrian and Yemeni variants of the erusin. A “beloved” is told to “go to meet” one of these people who metaphorically represents the Sabbath in the song Lekha Dodi. One of these people circles a man seven times after receiving seven blessings and drinking wine with him. For 10 points, women in what role might crush a glass under a chuppah? | brides [or kallah; accept “how does one dance before the bride?” or “keitzad merakdim lifnei ha-kalah”; prompt on women, wife or wives, fiancées, betrothed people, wedding couples, newlyweds, marriage partners, or wedding participants; prompt on brides AND grooms by asking “which one?”] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
290
],
[
291,
468
],
[
469,
610
],
[
611,
732
],
[
733,
838
],
[
839,
909
]
] | {
"category": "religion",
"category_full": "Religion - Religion",
"category_main": "religion",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
58,
15
],
[
65,
15
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
93,
-5
],
[
98,
10
],
[
120,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
141,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
153,
10
],
[
158,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-16_7 | For 10 points, women in what role might crush a glass under a chuppah? | [
"how does one dance",
"bride",
"kallah",
"brides"
] | acf-co24-13-16 | 7 | This sort of person names the geonic conferences held biannually at the Sura and Pumbedita academies. A rabbi juggles three myrtle branches in front of one of these people in a Talmudic sugya that also reports on a dispute between Shammai and Hillel over telling white lies to these people. One of these people stands perfectly still and holds one end of a gartel or handkerchief while a dancer holds the other in a ritual sometimes directed by jesters called badchen. One of these people sits surrounded by family members in the bedeken ritual and is given a coin in Syrian and Yemeni variants of the erusin. A “beloved” is told to “go to meet” one of these people who metaphorically represents the Sabbath in the song Lekha Dodi. One of these people circles a man seven times after receiving seven blessings and drinking wine with him. For 10 points, women in what role might crush a glass under a chuppah? | brides [or kallah; accept “how does one dance before the bride?” or “keitzad merakdim lifnei ha-kalah”; prompt on women, wife or wives, fiancées, betrothed people, wedding couples, newlyweds, marriage partners, or wedding participants; prompt on brides AND grooms by asking “which one?”] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
290
],
[
291,
468
],
[
469,
610
],
[
611,
732
],
[
733,
838
],
[
839,
909
]
] | {
"category": "religion",
"category_full": "Religion - Religion",
"category_main": "religion",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
58,
15
],
[
65,
15
],
[
91,
-5
],
[
92,
-5
],
[
93,
-5
],
[
98,
10
],
[
120,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
128,
-5
],
[
141,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
146,
10
],
[
153,
10
],
[
158,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
],
[
161,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"religion"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-17_1 | Angela Ballara’s work on these events denies the “fatal impact” theory, stresses continuity with events like the “fall of parrots,” and is critiqued in Cannibal Talk by Gananath Obeyesekere. | [
"Musket",
"Musket Wars"
] | acf-co24-13-17 | 1 | Angela Ballara’s work on these events denies the “fatal impact” theory, stresses continuity with events like the “fall of parrots,” and is critiqued in Cannibal Talk by Gananath Obeyesekere. A “hairy man” who helped a leader hide in a pit during these events is celebrated in a song opening “I die, I die! I live, I live!” In the Elizabeth affair, James Stewart ferried men seeking utu during these events in exchange for a cargo of flax. These events are named for the objects that Baron de Thierry sold to a Christian convert ally of Samuel Marsden who was gifted a suit of armor by George IV while touring England. The weapons used in these conflicts were obtained at whaling stations in the Bay of Islands in exchange for pigs and potatoes and necessitated new fortifications for pa villages. For 10 points, Hongi Hika led troops in what bloody, early 19th-century wars fought by Māori iwi with flintlocks? | Musket Wars [prompt on Maori wars, raids, or taua by asking “what is the specific name for the set of conflicts it was part of?”] (Te Rauparaha composed the song “Ka Mate,” which is now the most popular haka.) | [
[
0,
190
],
[
191,
305
],
[
306,
438
],
[
439,
618
],
[
619,
797
],
[
798,
911
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
42,
-5
],
[
56,
-5
],
[
69,
15
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
115,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
127,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
155,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-17_2 | A “hairy man” who helped a leader hide in a pit during these events is celebrated in a song opening “I die, I die! | [
"Musket",
"Musket Wars"
] | acf-co24-13-17 | 2 | Angela Ballara’s work on these events denies the “fatal impact” theory, stresses continuity with events like the “fall of parrots,” and is critiqued in Cannibal Talk by Gananath Obeyesekere. A “hairy man” who helped a leader hide in a pit during these events is celebrated in a song opening “I die, I die! I live, I live!” In the Elizabeth affair, James Stewart ferried men seeking utu during these events in exchange for a cargo of flax. These events are named for the objects that Baron de Thierry sold to a Christian convert ally of Samuel Marsden who was gifted a suit of armor by George IV while touring England. The weapons used in these conflicts were obtained at whaling stations in the Bay of Islands in exchange for pigs and potatoes and necessitated new fortifications for pa villages. For 10 points, Hongi Hika led troops in what bloody, early 19th-century wars fought by Māori iwi with flintlocks? | Musket Wars [prompt on Maori wars, raids, or taua by asking “what is the specific name for the set of conflicts it was part of?”] (Te Rauparaha composed the song “Ka Mate,” which is now the most popular haka.) | [
[
0,
190
],
[
191,
305
],
[
306,
438
],
[
439,
618
],
[
619,
797
],
[
798,
911
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
42,
-5
],
[
56,
-5
],
[
69,
15
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
115,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
127,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
155,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-17_3 | I live, I live!” In the Elizabeth affair, James Stewart ferried men seeking utu during these events in exchange for a cargo of flax. | [
"Musket",
"Musket Wars"
] | acf-co24-13-17 | 3 | Angela Ballara’s work on these events denies the “fatal impact” theory, stresses continuity with events like the “fall of parrots,” and is critiqued in Cannibal Talk by Gananath Obeyesekere. A “hairy man” who helped a leader hide in a pit during these events is celebrated in a song opening “I die, I die! I live, I live!” In the Elizabeth affair, James Stewart ferried men seeking utu during these events in exchange for a cargo of flax. These events are named for the objects that Baron de Thierry sold to a Christian convert ally of Samuel Marsden who was gifted a suit of armor by George IV while touring England. The weapons used in these conflicts were obtained at whaling stations in the Bay of Islands in exchange for pigs and potatoes and necessitated new fortifications for pa villages. For 10 points, Hongi Hika led troops in what bloody, early 19th-century wars fought by Māori iwi with flintlocks? | Musket Wars [prompt on Maori wars, raids, or taua by asking “what is the specific name for the set of conflicts it was part of?”] (Te Rauparaha composed the song “Ka Mate,” which is now the most popular haka.) | [
[
0,
190
],
[
191,
305
],
[
306,
438
],
[
439,
618
],
[
619,
797
],
[
798,
911
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
42,
-5
],
[
56,
-5
],
[
69,
15
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
115,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
127,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
155,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-17_4 | These events are named for the objects that Baron de Thierry sold to a Christian convert ally of Samuel Marsden who was gifted a suit of armor by George IV while touring England. | [
"Musket",
"Musket Wars"
] | acf-co24-13-17 | 4 | Angela Ballara’s work on these events denies the “fatal impact” theory, stresses continuity with events like the “fall of parrots,” and is critiqued in Cannibal Talk by Gananath Obeyesekere. A “hairy man” who helped a leader hide in a pit during these events is celebrated in a song opening “I die, I die! I live, I live!” In the Elizabeth affair, James Stewart ferried men seeking utu during these events in exchange for a cargo of flax. These events are named for the objects that Baron de Thierry sold to a Christian convert ally of Samuel Marsden who was gifted a suit of armor by George IV while touring England. The weapons used in these conflicts were obtained at whaling stations in the Bay of Islands in exchange for pigs and potatoes and necessitated new fortifications for pa villages. For 10 points, Hongi Hika led troops in what bloody, early 19th-century wars fought by Māori iwi with flintlocks? | Musket Wars [prompt on Maori wars, raids, or taua by asking “what is the specific name for the set of conflicts it was part of?”] (Te Rauparaha composed the song “Ka Mate,” which is now the most popular haka.) | [
[
0,
190
],
[
191,
305
],
[
306,
438
],
[
439,
618
],
[
619,
797
],
[
798,
911
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
42,
-5
],
[
56,
-5
],
[
69,
15
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
115,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
127,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
155,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-17_5 | The weapons used in these conflicts were obtained at whaling stations in the Bay of Islands in exchange for pigs and potatoes and necessitated new fortifications for pa villages. | [
"Musket",
"Musket Wars"
] | acf-co24-13-17 | 5 | Angela Ballara’s work on these events denies the “fatal impact” theory, stresses continuity with events like the “fall of parrots,” and is critiqued in Cannibal Talk by Gananath Obeyesekere. A “hairy man” who helped a leader hide in a pit during these events is celebrated in a song opening “I die, I die! I live, I live!” In the Elizabeth affair, James Stewart ferried men seeking utu during these events in exchange for a cargo of flax. These events are named for the objects that Baron de Thierry sold to a Christian convert ally of Samuel Marsden who was gifted a suit of armor by George IV while touring England. The weapons used in these conflicts were obtained at whaling stations in the Bay of Islands in exchange for pigs and potatoes and necessitated new fortifications for pa villages. For 10 points, Hongi Hika led troops in what bloody, early 19th-century wars fought by Māori iwi with flintlocks? | Musket Wars [prompt on Maori wars, raids, or taua by asking “what is the specific name for the set of conflicts it was part of?”] (Te Rauparaha composed the song “Ka Mate,” which is now the most popular haka.) | [
[
0,
190
],
[
191,
305
],
[
306,
438
],
[
439,
618
],
[
619,
797
],
[
798,
911
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
42,
-5
],
[
56,
-5
],
[
69,
15
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
115,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
127,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
155,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-17_6 | For 10 points, Hongi Hika led troops in what bloody, early 19th-century wars fought by Māori iwi with flintlocks? | [
"Musket",
"Musket Wars"
] | acf-co24-13-17 | 6 | Angela Ballara’s work on these events denies the “fatal impact” theory, stresses continuity with events like the “fall of parrots,” and is critiqued in Cannibal Talk by Gananath Obeyesekere. A “hairy man” who helped a leader hide in a pit during these events is celebrated in a song opening “I die, I die! I live, I live!” In the Elizabeth affair, James Stewart ferried men seeking utu during these events in exchange for a cargo of flax. These events are named for the objects that Baron de Thierry sold to a Christian convert ally of Samuel Marsden who was gifted a suit of armor by George IV while touring England. The weapons used in these conflicts were obtained at whaling stations in the Bay of Islands in exchange for pigs and potatoes and necessitated new fortifications for pa villages. For 10 points, Hongi Hika led troops in what bloody, early 19th-century wars fought by Māori iwi with flintlocks? | Musket Wars [prompt on Maori wars, raids, or taua by asking “what is the specific name for the set of conflicts it was part of?”] (Te Rauparaha composed the song “Ka Mate,” which is now the most popular haka.) | [
[
0,
190
],
[
191,
305
],
[
306,
438
],
[
439,
618
],
[
619,
797
],
[
798,
911
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - Other History",
"category_main": "history-other-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
42,
-5
],
[
56,
-5
],
[
69,
15
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
115,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
121,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
127,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
],
[
141,
10
],
[
155,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-18_1 | In a memoir, a member of this family moves to Paris to interview her grandmother Josée in a houseboat on the Seine. | [
"Art Spiegelman",
"Nadja Spiegelman",
"Spiegelman family",
"Spiegelman"
] | acf-co24-13-18 | 1 | In a memoir, a member of this family moves to Paris to interview her grandmother Josée in a houseboat on the Seine. A member of this family chronicled her relationship with her mother in the multigenerational memoir I’m Supposed to Protect You from All This. A fictionalized member of this family yells, “You murdered me, Mommy, and you left me here to take the rap!!!” A member of this family described his struggle with PTSD in reaction to 9/11 in the book In the Shadow of No Towers. A book about this family includes the section “Prisoner on the Hell Planet” and ends with a man telling his son to turn off the tape recorder and saying, “I’m tired from talking, Richieu,” mistaking him for his dead brother. Members of this family named Anja and Vladek survive the Holocaust in a book that depicts Nazis as cats. For 10 points, name this family, the subject of the graphic memoir Maus. | Spiegelman family [accept Art Spiegelman or Nadja Spiegelman] | [
[
0,
115
],
[
116,
258
],
[
259,
369
],
[
370,
487
],
[
488,
712
],
[
713,
817
],
[
818,
890
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
66,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
98,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
114,
10
],
[
144,
-5
],
[
144,
10
],
[
146,
-5
],
[
146,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-18_2 | A member of this family chronicled her relationship with her mother in the multigenerational memoir I’m Supposed to Protect You from All This. | [
"Art Spiegelman",
"Nadja Spiegelman",
"Spiegelman family",
"Spiegelman"
] | acf-co24-13-18 | 2 | In a memoir, a member of this family moves to Paris to interview her grandmother Josée in a houseboat on the Seine. A member of this family chronicled her relationship with her mother in the multigenerational memoir I’m Supposed to Protect You from All This. A fictionalized member of this family yells, “You murdered me, Mommy, and you left me here to take the rap!!!” A member of this family described his struggle with PTSD in reaction to 9/11 in the book In the Shadow of No Towers. A book about this family includes the section “Prisoner on the Hell Planet” and ends with a man telling his son to turn off the tape recorder and saying, “I’m tired from talking, Richieu,” mistaking him for his dead brother. Members of this family named Anja and Vladek survive the Holocaust in a book that depicts Nazis as cats. For 10 points, name this family, the subject of the graphic memoir Maus. | Spiegelman family [accept Art Spiegelman or Nadja Spiegelman] | [
[
0,
115
],
[
116,
258
],
[
259,
369
],
[
370,
487
],
[
488,
712
],
[
713,
817
],
[
818,
890
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
66,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
98,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
114,
10
],
[
144,
-5
],
[
144,
10
],
[
146,
-5
],
[
146,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-18_3 | A fictionalized member of this family yells, “You murdered me, Mommy, and you left me here to take the rap!!!” | [
"Art Spiegelman",
"Nadja Spiegelman",
"Spiegelman family",
"Spiegelman"
] | acf-co24-13-18 | 3 | In a memoir, a member of this family moves to Paris to interview her grandmother Josée in a houseboat on the Seine. A member of this family chronicled her relationship with her mother in the multigenerational memoir I’m Supposed to Protect You from All This. A fictionalized member of this family yells, “You murdered me, Mommy, and you left me here to take the rap!!!” A member of this family described his struggle with PTSD in reaction to 9/11 in the book In the Shadow of No Towers. A book about this family includes the section “Prisoner on the Hell Planet” and ends with a man telling his son to turn off the tape recorder and saying, “I’m tired from talking, Richieu,” mistaking him for his dead brother. Members of this family named Anja and Vladek survive the Holocaust in a book that depicts Nazis as cats. For 10 points, name this family, the subject of the graphic memoir Maus. | Spiegelman family [accept Art Spiegelman or Nadja Spiegelman] | [
[
0,
115
],
[
116,
258
],
[
259,
369
],
[
370,
487
],
[
488,
712
],
[
713,
817
],
[
818,
890
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
66,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
98,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
114,
10
],
[
144,
-5
],
[
144,
10
],
[
146,
-5
],
[
146,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-18_4 | A member of this family described his struggle with PTSD in reaction to 9/11 in the book In the Shadow of No Towers. | [
"Art Spiegelman",
"Nadja Spiegelman",
"Spiegelman family",
"Spiegelman"
] | acf-co24-13-18 | 4 | In a memoir, a member of this family moves to Paris to interview her grandmother Josée in a houseboat on the Seine. A member of this family chronicled her relationship with her mother in the multigenerational memoir I’m Supposed to Protect You from All This. A fictionalized member of this family yells, “You murdered me, Mommy, and you left me here to take the rap!!!” A member of this family described his struggle with PTSD in reaction to 9/11 in the book In the Shadow of No Towers. A book about this family includes the section “Prisoner on the Hell Planet” and ends with a man telling his son to turn off the tape recorder and saying, “I’m tired from talking, Richieu,” mistaking him for his dead brother. Members of this family named Anja and Vladek survive the Holocaust in a book that depicts Nazis as cats. For 10 points, name this family, the subject of the graphic memoir Maus. | Spiegelman family [accept Art Spiegelman or Nadja Spiegelman] | [
[
0,
115
],
[
116,
258
],
[
259,
369
],
[
370,
487
],
[
488,
712
],
[
713,
817
],
[
818,
890
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
66,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
98,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
114,
10
],
[
144,
-5
],
[
144,
10
],
[
146,
-5
],
[
146,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-18_5 | A book about this family includes the section “Prisoner on the Hell Planet” and ends with a man telling his son to turn off the tape recorder and saying, “I’m tired from talking, Richieu,” mistaking him for his dead brother. | [
"Art Spiegelman",
"Nadja Spiegelman",
"Spiegelman family",
"Spiegelman"
] | acf-co24-13-18 | 5 | In a memoir, a member of this family moves to Paris to interview her grandmother Josée in a houseboat on the Seine. A member of this family chronicled her relationship with her mother in the multigenerational memoir I’m Supposed to Protect You from All This. A fictionalized member of this family yells, “You murdered me, Mommy, and you left me here to take the rap!!!” A member of this family described his struggle with PTSD in reaction to 9/11 in the book In the Shadow of No Towers. A book about this family includes the section “Prisoner on the Hell Planet” and ends with a man telling his son to turn off the tape recorder and saying, “I’m tired from talking, Richieu,” mistaking him for his dead brother. Members of this family named Anja and Vladek survive the Holocaust in a book that depicts Nazis as cats. For 10 points, name this family, the subject of the graphic memoir Maus. | Spiegelman family [accept Art Spiegelman or Nadja Spiegelman] | [
[
0,
115
],
[
116,
258
],
[
259,
369
],
[
370,
487
],
[
488,
712
],
[
713,
817
],
[
818,
890
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
66,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
98,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
114,
10
],
[
144,
-5
],
[
144,
10
],
[
146,
-5
],
[
146,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-18_6 | Members of this family named Anja and Vladek survive the Holocaust in a book that depicts Nazis as cats. | [
"Art Spiegelman",
"Nadja Spiegelman",
"Spiegelman family",
"Spiegelman"
] | acf-co24-13-18 | 6 | In a memoir, a member of this family moves to Paris to interview her grandmother Josée in a houseboat on the Seine. A member of this family chronicled her relationship with her mother in the multigenerational memoir I’m Supposed to Protect You from All This. A fictionalized member of this family yells, “You murdered me, Mommy, and you left me here to take the rap!!!” A member of this family described his struggle with PTSD in reaction to 9/11 in the book In the Shadow of No Towers. A book about this family includes the section “Prisoner on the Hell Planet” and ends with a man telling his son to turn off the tape recorder and saying, “I’m tired from talking, Richieu,” mistaking him for his dead brother. Members of this family named Anja and Vladek survive the Holocaust in a book that depicts Nazis as cats. For 10 points, name this family, the subject of the graphic memoir Maus. | Spiegelman family [accept Art Spiegelman or Nadja Spiegelman] | [
[
0,
115
],
[
116,
258
],
[
259,
369
],
[
370,
487
],
[
488,
712
],
[
713,
817
],
[
818,
890
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
66,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
98,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
114,
10
],
[
144,
-5
],
[
144,
10
],
[
146,
-5
],
[
146,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-18_7 | For 10 points, name this family, the subject of the graphic memoir Maus. | [
"Art Spiegelman",
"Nadja Spiegelman",
"Spiegelman family",
"Spiegelman"
] | acf-co24-13-18 | 7 | In a memoir, a member of this family moves to Paris to interview her grandmother Josée in a houseboat on the Seine. A member of this family chronicled her relationship with her mother in the multigenerational memoir I’m Supposed to Protect You from All This. A fictionalized member of this family yells, “You murdered me, Mommy, and you left me here to take the rap!!!” A member of this family described his struggle with PTSD in reaction to 9/11 in the book In the Shadow of No Towers. A book about this family includes the section “Prisoner on the Hell Planet” and ends with a man telling his son to turn off the tape recorder and saying, “I’m tired from talking, Richieu,” mistaking him for his dead brother. Members of this family named Anja and Vladek survive the Holocaust in a book that depicts Nazis as cats. For 10 points, name this family, the subject of the graphic memoir Maus. | Spiegelman family [accept Art Spiegelman or Nadja Spiegelman] | [
[
0,
115
],
[
116,
258
],
[
259,
369
],
[
370,
487
],
[
488,
712
],
[
713,
817
],
[
818,
890
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
66,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
98,
10
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
108,
-5
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
-5
],
[
114,
10
],
[
144,
-5
],
[
144,
10
],
[
146,
-5
],
[
146,
10
],
[
149,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-19_1 | In this multinational region, Delfino plows have been used to dig micro-catchment systems like “half-moons,” contour stone bunds, and zai pits. | [
"Sahelian",
"Sahil",
"Sahel Sahel Sahel",
"Sahelian acacia savanna",
"Sahel"
] | acf-co24-13-19 | 1 | In this multinational region, Delfino plows have been used to dig micro-catchment systems like “half-moons,” contour stone bunds, and zai pits. A group named for this region was formed after committees for the “Salvation of the People” and the “Safeguard of the Homeland” met to sign the 2023 Liptako-Gourma Charter. A December 2023 statement announced plans to dissolve this region’s G5 organization, whose conflict with groups like Ansar Dine received foreign backing in Operation Barkhane. In July 2024, a mutual defense “alliance” named for this region formed a “tri-state confederation” and promised to exit ECOWAS. Most of the countries of the “coup belt” are in this geographical region, where rainwater harvesting initiatives and the Great Green Wall have tried to curb southward-creeping desertification. For 10 points, name this semi-arid region south of the Sahara. | Sahel [or Sahil; or Sahelian acacia savanna; accept Alliance of Sahel States, G5 Sahel, Confederation of the Sahel States; prompt on West Africa or North Africa; prompt on Greater Sahara until “Sahara” is read; prompt on Sudan region; reject “Sahara”] | [
[
0,
143
],
[
144,
316
],
[
317,
493
],
[
494,
621
],
[
622,
814
],
[
815,
877
]
] | {
"category": "modern-world",
"category_full": "Modern World - Modern World",
"category_main": "modern-world",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
49,
15
],
[
63,
15
],
[
70,
-5
],
[
71,
15
],
[
73,
-5
],
[
73,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
74,
-5
],
[
77,
-5
],
[
81,
10
],
[
81,
10
],
[
89,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"modern-world"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-19_2 | A group named for this region was formed after committees for the “Salvation of the People” and the “Safeguard of the Homeland” met to sign the 2023 Liptako-Gourma Charter. | [
"Sahelian",
"Sahil",
"Sahel Sahel Sahel",
"Sahelian acacia savanna",
"Sahel"
] | acf-co24-13-19 | 2 | In this multinational region, Delfino plows have been used to dig micro-catchment systems like “half-moons,” contour stone bunds, and zai pits. A group named for this region was formed after committees for the “Salvation of the People” and the “Safeguard of the Homeland” met to sign the 2023 Liptako-Gourma Charter. A December 2023 statement announced plans to dissolve this region’s G5 organization, whose conflict with groups like Ansar Dine received foreign backing in Operation Barkhane. In July 2024, a mutual defense “alliance” named for this region formed a “tri-state confederation” and promised to exit ECOWAS. Most of the countries of the “coup belt” are in this geographical region, where rainwater harvesting initiatives and the Great Green Wall have tried to curb southward-creeping desertification. For 10 points, name this semi-arid region south of the Sahara. | Sahel [or Sahil; or Sahelian acacia savanna; accept Alliance of Sahel States, G5 Sahel, Confederation of the Sahel States; prompt on West Africa or North Africa; prompt on Greater Sahara until “Sahara” is read; prompt on Sudan region; reject “Sahara”] | [
[
0,
143
],
[
144,
316
],
[
317,
493
],
[
494,
621
],
[
622,
814
],
[
815,
877
]
] | {
"category": "modern-world",
"category_full": "Modern World - Modern World",
"category_main": "modern-world",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
49,
15
],
[
63,
15
],
[
70,
-5
],
[
71,
15
],
[
73,
-5
],
[
73,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
74,
-5
],
[
77,
-5
],
[
81,
10
],
[
81,
10
],
[
89,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"modern-world"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-19_3 | A December 2023 statement announced plans to dissolve this region’s G5 organization, whose conflict with groups like Ansar Dine received foreign backing in Operation Barkhane. | [
"Sahelian",
"Sahil",
"Sahel Sahel Sahel",
"Sahelian acacia savanna",
"Sahel"
] | acf-co24-13-19 | 3 | In this multinational region, Delfino plows have been used to dig micro-catchment systems like “half-moons,” contour stone bunds, and zai pits. A group named for this region was formed after committees for the “Salvation of the People” and the “Safeguard of the Homeland” met to sign the 2023 Liptako-Gourma Charter. A December 2023 statement announced plans to dissolve this region’s G5 organization, whose conflict with groups like Ansar Dine received foreign backing in Operation Barkhane. In July 2024, a mutual defense “alliance” named for this region formed a “tri-state confederation” and promised to exit ECOWAS. Most of the countries of the “coup belt” are in this geographical region, where rainwater harvesting initiatives and the Great Green Wall have tried to curb southward-creeping desertification. For 10 points, name this semi-arid region south of the Sahara. | Sahel [or Sahil; or Sahelian acacia savanna; accept Alliance of Sahel States, G5 Sahel, Confederation of the Sahel States; prompt on West Africa or North Africa; prompt on Greater Sahara until “Sahara” is read; prompt on Sudan region; reject “Sahara”] | [
[
0,
143
],
[
144,
316
],
[
317,
493
],
[
494,
621
],
[
622,
814
],
[
815,
877
]
] | {
"category": "modern-world",
"category_full": "Modern World - Modern World",
"category_main": "modern-world",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
49,
15
],
[
63,
15
],
[
70,
-5
],
[
71,
15
],
[
73,
-5
],
[
73,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
74,
-5
],
[
77,
-5
],
[
81,
10
],
[
81,
10
],
[
89,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"modern-world"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-19_4 | In July 2024, a mutual defense “alliance” named for this region formed a “tri-state confederation” and promised to exit ECOWAS. | [
"Sahelian",
"Sahil",
"Sahel Sahel Sahel",
"Sahelian acacia savanna",
"Sahel"
] | acf-co24-13-19 | 4 | In this multinational region, Delfino plows have been used to dig micro-catchment systems like “half-moons,” contour stone bunds, and zai pits. A group named for this region was formed after committees for the “Salvation of the People” and the “Safeguard of the Homeland” met to sign the 2023 Liptako-Gourma Charter. A December 2023 statement announced plans to dissolve this region’s G5 organization, whose conflict with groups like Ansar Dine received foreign backing in Operation Barkhane. In July 2024, a mutual defense “alliance” named for this region formed a “tri-state confederation” and promised to exit ECOWAS. Most of the countries of the “coup belt” are in this geographical region, where rainwater harvesting initiatives and the Great Green Wall have tried to curb southward-creeping desertification. For 10 points, name this semi-arid region south of the Sahara. | Sahel [or Sahil; or Sahelian acacia savanna; accept Alliance of Sahel States, G5 Sahel, Confederation of the Sahel States; prompt on West Africa or North Africa; prompt on Greater Sahara until “Sahara” is read; prompt on Sudan region; reject “Sahara”] | [
[
0,
143
],
[
144,
316
],
[
317,
493
],
[
494,
621
],
[
622,
814
],
[
815,
877
]
] | {
"category": "modern-world",
"category_full": "Modern World - Modern World",
"category_main": "modern-world",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
49,
15
],
[
63,
15
],
[
70,
-5
],
[
71,
15
],
[
73,
-5
],
[
73,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
74,
-5
],
[
77,
-5
],
[
81,
10
],
[
81,
10
],
[
89,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"modern-world"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-19_5 | Most of the countries of the “coup belt” are in this geographical region, where rainwater harvesting initiatives and the Great Green Wall have tried to curb southward-creeping desertification. | [
"Sahelian",
"Sahil",
"Sahel Sahel Sahel",
"Sahelian acacia savanna",
"Sahel"
] | acf-co24-13-19 | 5 | In this multinational region, Delfino plows have been used to dig micro-catchment systems like “half-moons,” contour stone bunds, and zai pits. A group named for this region was formed after committees for the “Salvation of the People” and the “Safeguard of the Homeland” met to sign the 2023 Liptako-Gourma Charter. A December 2023 statement announced plans to dissolve this region’s G5 organization, whose conflict with groups like Ansar Dine received foreign backing in Operation Barkhane. In July 2024, a mutual defense “alliance” named for this region formed a “tri-state confederation” and promised to exit ECOWAS. Most of the countries of the “coup belt” are in this geographical region, where rainwater harvesting initiatives and the Great Green Wall have tried to curb southward-creeping desertification. For 10 points, name this semi-arid region south of the Sahara. | Sahel [or Sahil; or Sahelian acacia savanna; accept Alliance of Sahel States, G5 Sahel, Confederation of the Sahel States; prompt on West Africa or North Africa; prompt on Greater Sahara until “Sahara” is read; prompt on Sudan region; reject “Sahara”] | [
[
0,
143
],
[
144,
316
],
[
317,
493
],
[
494,
621
],
[
622,
814
],
[
815,
877
]
] | {
"category": "modern-world",
"category_full": "Modern World - Modern World",
"category_main": "modern-world",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
49,
15
],
[
63,
15
],
[
70,
-5
],
[
71,
15
],
[
73,
-5
],
[
73,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
74,
-5
],
[
77,
-5
],
[
81,
10
],
[
81,
10
],
[
89,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"modern-world"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-19_6 | For 10 points, name this semi-arid region south of the Sahara. | [
"Sahelian",
"Sahil",
"Sahel Sahel Sahel",
"Sahelian acacia savanna",
"Sahel"
] | acf-co24-13-19 | 6 | In this multinational region, Delfino plows have been used to dig micro-catchment systems like “half-moons,” contour stone bunds, and zai pits. A group named for this region was formed after committees for the “Salvation of the People” and the “Safeguard of the Homeland” met to sign the 2023 Liptako-Gourma Charter. A December 2023 statement announced plans to dissolve this region’s G5 organization, whose conflict with groups like Ansar Dine received foreign backing in Operation Barkhane. In July 2024, a mutual defense “alliance” named for this region formed a “tri-state confederation” and promised to exit ECOWAS. Most of the countries of the “coup belt” are in this geographical region, where rainwater harvesting initiatives and the Great Green Wall have tried to curb southward-creeping desertification. For 10 points, name this semi-arid region south of the Sahara. | Sahel [or Sahil; or Sahelian acacia savanna; accept Alliance of Sahel States, G5 Sahel, Confederation of the Sahel States; prompt on West Africa or North Africa; prompt on Greater Sahara until “Sahara” is read; prompt on Sudan region; reject “Sahara”] | [
[
0,
143
],
[
144,
316
],
[
317,
493
],
[
494,
621
],
[
622,
814
],
[
815,
877
]
] | {
"category": "modern-world",
"category_full": "Modern World - Modern World",
"category_main": "modern-world",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
49,
15
],
[
63,
15
],
[
70,
-5
],
[
71,
15
],
[
73,
-5
],
[
73,
15
],
[
73,
15
],
[
74,
-5
],
[
77,
-5
],
[
81,
10
],
[
81,
10
],
[
89,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
134,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"modern-world"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-20_1 | A class of objects similar to this object occupies the upper boundary of the radius valley, which might exist due to EUV/X-ray photoevaporation. | [
"Neptunian desert",
"mini-Neptunes",
"Neptune",
"Neptunian",
"sub-Neptunes",
"Neptune desert",
"trans-Neptunian objects"
] | acf-co24-13-20 | 1 | A class of objects similar to this object occupies the upper boundary of the radius valley, which might exist due to EUV/X-ray photoevaporation. A so-called “desert” in mass–period space is either named for this object or a larger object. Extensions to a model developed by Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues propose a discontinuity during this object’s migration to explain the so-called “kernel” of cold classicals. A head-on impact upon this object could explain its large thermal flux, unlike a similar object that is in equilibrium with solar insolation. The Kepler space telescope discovered that the radius of most exoplanets is between that of the Earth and that of this planet. Cubewanos belong to a broad classification of Solar System objects named for this planet. This planet is orbited by the only large moon to have a retrograde orbit. For 10 points, Voyager 2 observed the Great Dark Spot on what ice giant? | Neptune [accept sub-Neptunes or mini-Neptunes; accept Neptune desert or Neptunian desert; accept trans-Neptunian objects] (Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues developed the Nice model.) | [
[
0,
144
],
[
145,
238
],
[
239,
416
],
[
417,
558
],
[
559,
686
],
[
687,
776
],
[
777,
850
],
[
851,
923
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Astronomy) - Other Science (Astronomy)",
"category_main": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
-5
],
[
86,
-5
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
122,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
129,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(astronomy)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-20_2 | A so-called “desert” in mass–period space is either named for this object or a larger object. | [
"Neptunian desert",
"mini-Neptunes",
"Neptune",
"Neptunian",
"sub-Neptunes",
"Neptune desert",
"trans-Neptunian objects"
] | acf-co24-13-20 | 2 | A class of objects similar to this object occupies the upper boundary of the radius valley, which might exist due to EUV/X-ray photoevaporation. A so-called “desert” in mass–period space is either named for this object or a larger object. Extensions to a model developed by Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues propose a discontinuity during this object’s migration to explain the so-called “kernel” of cold classicals. A head-on impact upon this object could explain its large thermal flux, unlike a similar object that is in equilibrium with solar insolation. The Kepler space telescope discovered that the radius of most exoplanets is between that of the Earth and that of this planet. Cubewanos belong to a broad classification of Solar System objects named for this planet. This planet is orbited by the only large moon to have a retrograde orbit. For 10 points, Voyager 2 observed the Great Dark Spot on what ice giant? | Neptune [accept sub-Neptunes or mini-Neptunes; accept Neptune desert or Neptunian desert; accept trans-Neptunian objects] (Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues developed the Nice model.) | [
[
0,
144
],
[
145,
238
],
[
239,
416
],
[
417,
558
],
[
559,
686
],
[
687,
776
],
[
777,
850
],
[
851,
923
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Astronomy) - Other Science (Astronomy)",
"category_main": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
-5
],
[
86,
-5
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
122,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
129,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(astronomy)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-20_3 | Extensions to a model developed by Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues propose a discontinuity during this object’s migration to explain the so-called “kernel” of cold classicals. | [
"Neptunian desert",
"mini-Neptunes",
"Neptune",
"Neptunian",
"sub-Neptunes",
"Neptune desert",
"trans-Neptunian objects"
] | acf-co24-13-20 | 3 | A class of objects similar to this object occupies the upper boundary of the radius valley, which might exist due to EUV/X-ray photoevaporation. A so-called “desert” in mass–period space is either named for this object or a larger object. Extensions to a model developed by Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues propose a discontinuity during this object’s migration to explain the so-called “kernel” of cold classicals. A head-on impact upon this object could explain its large thermal flux, unlike a similar object that is in equilibrium with solar insolation. The Kepler space telescope discovered that the radius of most exoplanets is between that of the Earth and that of this planet. Cubewanos belong to a broad classification of Solar System objects named for this planet. This planet is orbited by the only large moon to have a retrograde orbit. For 10 points, Voyager 2 observed the Great Dark Spot on what ice giant? | Neptune [accept sub-Neptunes or mini-Neptunes; accept Neptune desert or Neptunian desert; accept trans-Neptunian objects] (Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues developed the Nice model.) | [
[
0,
144
],
[
145,
238
],
[
239,
416
],
[
417,
558
],
[
559,
686
],
[
687,
776
],
[
777,
850
],
[
851,
923
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Astronomy) - Other Science (Astronomy)",
"category_main": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
-5
],
[
86,
-5
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
122,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
129,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(astronomy)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-20_4 | A head-on impact upon this object could explain its large thermal flux, unlike a similar object that is in equilibrium with solar insolation. | [
"Neptunian desert",
"mini-Neptunes",
"Neptune",
"Neptunian",
"sub-Neptunes",
"Neptune desert",
"trans-Neptunian objects"
] | acf-co24-13-20 | 4 | A class of objects similar to this object occupies the upper boundary of the radius valley, which might exist due to EUV/X-ray photoevaporation. A so-called “desert” in mass–period space is either named for this object or a larger object. Extensions to a model developed by Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues propose a discontinuity during this object’s migration to explain the so-called “kernel” of cold classicals. A head-on impact upon this object could explain its large thermal flux, unlike a similar object that is in equilibrium with solar insolation. The Kepler space telescope discovered that the radius of most exoplanets is between that of the Earth and that of this planet. Cubewanos belong to a broad classification of Solar System objects named for this planet. This planet is orbited by the only large moon to have a retrograde orbit. For 10 points, Voyager 2 observed the Great Dark Spot on what ice giant? | Neptune [accept sub-Neptunes or mini-Neptunes; accept Neptune desert or Neptunian desert; accept trans-Neptunian objects] (Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues developed the Nice model.) | [
[
0,
144
],
[
145,
238
],
[
239,
416
],
[
417,
558
],
[
559,
686
],
[
687,
776
],
[
777,
850
],
[
851,
923
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Astronomy) - Other Science (Astronomy)",
"category_main": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
-5
],
[
86,
-5
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
122,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
129,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(astronomy)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-20_5 | The Kepler space telescope discovered that the radius of most exoplanets is between that of the Earth and that of this planet. | [
"Neptunian desert",
"mini-Neptunes",
"Neptune",
"Neptunian",
"sub-Neptunes",
"Neptune desert",
"trans-Neptunian objects"
] | acf-co24-13-20 | 5 | A class of objects similar to this object occupies the upper boundary of the radius valley, which might exist due to EUV/X-ray photoevaporation. A so-called “desert” in mass–period space is either named for this object or a larger object. Extensions to a model developed by Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues propose a discontinuity during this object’s migration to explain the so-called “kernel” of cold classicals. A head-on impact upon this object could explain its large thermal flux, unlike a similar object that is in equilibrium with solar insolation. The Kepler space telescope discovered that the radius of most exoplanets is between that of the Earth and that of this planet. Cubewanos belong to a broad classification of Solar System objects named for this planet. This planet is orbited by the only large moon to have a retrograde orbit. For 10 points, Voyager 2 observed the Great Dark Spot on what ice giant? | Neptune [accept sub-Neptunes or mini-Neptunes; accept Neptune desert or Neptunian desert; accept trans-Neptunian objects] (Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues developed the Nice model.) | [
[
0,
144
],
[
145,
238
],
[
239,
416
],
[
417,
558
],
[
559,
686
],
[
687,
776
],
[
777,
850
],
[
851,
923
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Astronomy) - Other Science (Astronomy)",
"category_main": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
-5
],
[
86,
-5
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
122,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
129,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(astronomy)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-20_6 | Cubewanos belong to a broad classification of Solar System objects named for this planet. | [
"Neptunian desert",
"mini-Neptunes",
"Neptune",
"Neptunian",
"sub-Neptunes",
"Neptune desert",
"trans-Neptunian objects"
] | acf-co24-13-20 | 6 | A class of objects similar to this object occupies the upper boundary of the radius valley, which might exist due to EUV/X-ray photoevaporation. A so-called “desert” in mass–period space is either named for this object or a larger object. Extensions to a model developed by Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues propose a discontinuity during this object’s migration to explain the so-called “kernel” of cold classicals. A head-on impact upon this object could explain its large thermal flux, unlike a similar object that is in equilibrium with solar insolation. The Kepler space telescope discovered that the radius of most exoplanets is between that of the Earth and that of this planet. Cubewanos belong to a broad classification of Solar System objects named for this planet. This planet is orbited by the only large moon to have a retrograde orbit. For 10 points, Voyager 2 observed the Great Dark Spot on what ice giant? | Neptune [accept sub-Neptunes or mini-Neptunes; accept Neptune desert or Neptunian desert; accept trans-Neptunian objects] (Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues developed the Nice model.) | [
[
0,
144
],
[
145,
238
],
[
239,
416
],
[
417,
558
],
[
559,
686
],
[
687,
776
],
[
777,
850
],
[
851,
923
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Astronomy) - Other Science (Astronomy)",
"category_main": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
-5
],
[
86,
-5
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
122,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
129,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(astronomy)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-20_7 | This planet is orbited by the only large moon to have a retrograde orbit. | [
"Neptunian desert",
"mini-Neptunes",
"Neptune",
"Neptunian",
"sub-Neptunes",
"Neptune desert",
"trans-Neptunian objects"
] | acf-co24-13-20 | 7 | A class of objects similar to this object occupies the upper boundary of the radius valley, which might exist due to EUV/X-ray photoevaporation. A so-called “desert” in mass–period space is either named for this object or a larger object. Extensions to a model developed by Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues propose a discontinuity during this object’s migration to explain the so-called “kernel” of cold classicals. A head-on impact upon this object could explain its large thermal flux, unlike a similar object that is in equilibrium with solar insolation. The Kepler space telescope discovered that the radius of most exoplanets is between that of the Earth and that of this planet. Cubewanos belong to a broad classification of Solar System objects named for this planet. This planet is orbited by the only large moon to have a retrograde orbit. For 10 points, Voyager 2 observed the Great Dark Spot on what ice giant? | Neptune [accept sub-Neptunes or mini-Neptunes; accept Neptune desert or Neptunian desert; accept trans-Neptunian objects] (Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues developed the Nice model.) | [
[
0,
144
],
[
145,
238
],
[
239,
416
],
[
417,
558
],
[
559,
686
],
[
687,
776
],
[
777,
850
],
[
851,
923
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Astronomy) - Other Science (Astronomy)",
"category_main": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
-5
],
[
86,
-5
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
122,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
129,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(astronomy)"
]
} |
acf-co24-13-20_8 | For 10 points, Voyager 2 observed the Great Dark Spot on what ice giant? | [
"Neptunian desert",
"mini-Neptunes",
"Neptune",
"Neptunian",
"sub-Neptunes",
"Neptune desert",
"trans-Neptunian objects"
] | acf-co24-13-20 | 8 | A class of objects similar to this object occupies the upper boundary of the radius valley, which might exist due to EUV/X-ray photoevaporation. A so-called “desert” in mass–period space is either named for this object or a larger object. Extensions to a model developed by Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues propose a discontinuity during this object’s migration to explain the so-called “kernel” of cold classicals. A head-on impact upon this object could explain its large thermal flux, unlike a similar object that is in equilibrium with solar insolation. The Kepler space telescope discovered that the radius of most exoplanets is between that of the Earth and that of this planet. Cubewanos belong to a broad classification of Solar System objects named for this planet. This planet is orbited by the only large moon to have a retrograde orbit. For 10 points, Voyager 2 observed the Great Dark Spot on what ice giant? | Neptune [accept sub-Neptunes or mini-Neptunes; accept Neptune desert or Neptunian desert; accept trans-Neptunian objects] (Kleomenis Tsiganis and colleagues developed the Nice model.) | [
[
0,
144
],
[
145,
238
],
[
239,
416
],
[
417,
558
],
[
559,
686
],
[
687,
776
],
[
777,
850
],
[
851,
923
]
] | {
"category": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"category_full": "Other Science (Astronomy) - Other Science (Astronomy)",
"category_main": "other-science-(astronomy)",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
31,
-5
],
[
86,
-5
],
[
105,
10
],
[
107,
10
],
[
109,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
110,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
122,
-5
],
[
122,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
129,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
],
[
151,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet M. Editors 7",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"other-science-(astronomy)"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-1_1 | This school of thought constitutes “an essay in the comical” according to a thinker who compared it to a massive castle whose builder opts to instead live in a nearby thatched hut. | [
"absolute idealism",
"the System until system is read",
"Left Hegelians",
"Right Hegelians",
"Hegel",
"Hegelianism",
"System"
] | acf-co24-14-1 | 1 | This school of thought constitutes “an essay in the comical” according to a thinker who compared it to a massive castle whose builder opts to instead live in a nearby thatched hut. The jargon of this school of thought is parodied in The Battle between the Old and the New Soap Cellars. This school was championed by a pastor who turned against it after a divine revelation that is critiqued in The Book on Adler. This school’s “assistant professors” and “Herr Professor” were criticized by a philosopher who also hated “the crowd” and “Christendom.” This school’s aphorism that “the truth is the whole” is replaced with truth as subjectivity in Concluding Unscientific Postscript by Søren Kierkegaard, who attacked it as “the system” and used its terminology in phrases like “infinite absolute negativity.” For 10 points, what school of thought split into “left” and “right” branches after the death of the author of The Philosophy of Right? | Hegelianism [accept absolute idealism; accept Left Hegelians or Right Hegelians; accept “the System” until “system” is read; prompt on dialectics, idealism, or speculative philosophy] | [
[
0,
180
],
[
181,
285
],
[
286,
412
],
[
413,
550
],
[
551,
807
],
[
808,
942
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
93,
-5
],
[
102,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
138,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
150,
10
],
[
156,
0
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-1_2 | The jargon of this school of thought is parodied in The Battle between the Old and the New Soap Cellars. | [
"absolute idealism",
"the System until system is read",
"Left Hegelians",
"Right Hegelians",
"Hegel",
"Hegelianism",
"System"
] | acf-co24-14-1 | 2 | This school of thought constitutes “an essay in the comical” according to a thinker who compared it to a massive castle whose builder opts to instead live in a nearby thatched hut. The jargon of this school of thought is parodied in The Battle between the Old and the New Soap Cellars. This school was championed by a pastor who turned against it after a divine revelation that is critiqued in The Book on Adler. This school’s “assistant professors” and “Herr Professor” were criticized by a philosopher who also hated “the crowd” and “Christendom.” This school’s aphorism that “the truth is the whole” is replaced with truth as subjectivity in Concluding Unscientific Postscript by Søren Kierkegaard, who attacked it as “the system” and used its terminology in phrases like “infinite absolute negativity.” For 10 points, what school of thought split into “left” and “right” branches after the death of the author of The Philosophy of Right? | Hegelianism [accept absolute idealism; accept Left Hegelians or Right Hegelians; accept “the System” until “system” is read; prompt on dialectics, idealism, or speculative philosophy] | [
[
0,
180
],
[
181,
285
],
[
286,
412
],
[
413,
550
],
[
551,
807
],
[
808,
942
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
93,
-5
],
[
102,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
138,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
150,
10
],
[
156,
0
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-1_3 | This school was championed by a pastor who turned against it after a divine revelation that is critiqued in The Book on Adler. | [
"absolute idealism",
"the System until system is read",
"Left Hegelians",
"Right Hegelians",
"Hegel",
"Hegelianism",
"System"
] | acf-co24-14-1 | 3 | This school of thought constitutes “an essay in the comical” according to a thinker who compared it to a massive castle whose builder opts to instead live in a nearby thatched hut. The jargon of this school of thought is parodied in The Battle between the Old and the New Soap Cellars. This school was championed by a pastor who turned against it after a divine revelation that is critiqued in The Book on Adler. This school’s “assistant professors” and “Herr Professor” were criticized by a philosopher who also hated “the crowd” and “Christendom.” This school’s aphorism that “the truth is the whole” is replaced with truth as subjectivity in Concluding Unscientific Postscript by Søren Kierkegaard, who attacked it as “the system” and used its terminology in phrases like “infinite absolute negativity.” For 10 points, what school of thought split into “left” and “right” branches after the death of the author of The Philosophy of Right? | Hegelianism [accept absolute idealism; accept Left Hegelians or Right Hegelians; accept “the System” until “system” is read; prompt on dialectics, idealism, or speculative philosophy] | [
[
0,
180
],
[
181,
285
],
[
286,
412
],
[
413,
550
],
[
551,
807
],
[
808,
942
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
93,
-5
],
[
102,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
138,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
150,
10
],
[
156,
0
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-1_4 | This school’s “assistant professors” and “Herr Professor” were criticized by a philosopher who also hated “the crowd” and “Christendom.” | [
"absolute idealism",
"the System until system is read",
"Left Hegelians",
"Right Hegelians",
"Hegel",
"Hegelianism",
"System"
] | acf-co24-14-1 | 4 | This school of thought constitutes “an essay in the comical” according to a thinker who compared it to a massive castle whose builder opts to instead live in a nearby thatched hut. The jargon of this school of thought is parodied in The Battle between the Old and the New Soap Cellars. This school was championed by a pastor who turned against it after a divine revelation that is critiqued in The Book on Adler. This school’s “assistant professors” and “Herr Professor” were criticized by a philosopher who also hated “the crowd” and “Christendom.” This school’s aphorism that “the truth is the whole” is replaced with truth as subjectivity in Concluding Unscientific Postscript by Søren Kierkegaard, who attacked it as “the system” and used its terminology in phrases like “infinite absolute negativity.” For 10 points, what school of thought split into “left” and “right” branches after the death of the author of The Philosophy of Right? | Hegelianism [accept absolute idealism; accept Left Hegelians or Right Hegelians; accept “the System” until “system” is read; prompt on dialectics, idealism, or speculative philosophy] | [
[
0,
180
],
[
181,
285
],
[
286,
412
],
[
413,
550
],
[
551,
807
],
[
808,
942
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
93,
-5
],
[
102,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
138,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
150,
10
],
[
156,
0
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-1_5 | This school’s aphorism that “the truth is the whole” is replaced with truth as subjectivity in Concluding Unscientific Postscript by Søren Kierkegaard, who attacked it as “the system” and used its terminology in phrases like “infinite absolute negativity.” | [
"absolute idealism",
"the System until system is read",
"Left Hegelians",
"Right Hegelians",
"Hegel",
"Hegelianism",
"System"
] | acf-co24-14-1 | 5 | This school of thought constitutes “an essay in the comical” according to a thinker who compared it to a massive castle whose builder opts to instead live in a nearby thatched hut. The jargon of this school of thought is parodied in The Battle between the Old and the New Soap Cellars. This school was championed by a pastor who turned against it after a divine revelation that is critiqued in The Book on Adler. This school’s “assistant professors” and “Herr Professor” were criticized by a philosopher who also hated “the crowd” and “Christendom.” This school’s aphorism that “the truth is the whole” is replaced with truth as subjectivity in Concluding Unscientific Postscript by Søren Kierkegaard, who attacked it as “the system” and used its terminology in phrases like “infinite absolute negativity.” For 10 points, what school of thought split into “left” and “right” branches after the death of the author of The Philosophy of Right? | Hegelianism [accept absolute idealism; accept Left Hegelians or Right Hegelians; accept “the System” until “system” is read; prompt on dialectics, idealism, or speculative philosophy] | [
[
0,
180
],
[
181,
285
],
[
286,
412
],
[
413,
550
],
[
551,
807
],
[
808,
942
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
93,
-5
],
[
102,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
138,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
150,
10
],
[
156,
0
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-1_6 | For 10 points, what school of thought split into “left” and “right” branches after the death of the author of The Philosophy of Right? | [
"absolute idealism",
"the System until system is read",
"Left Hegelians",
"Right Hegelians",
"Hegel",
"Hegelianism",
"System"
] | acf-co24-14-1 | 6 | This school of thought constitutes “an essay in the comical” according to a thinker who compared it to a massive castle whose builder opts to instead live in a nearby thatched hut. The jargon of this school of thought is parodied in The Battle between the Old and the New Soap Cellars. This school was championed by a pastor who turned against it after a divine revelation that is critiqued in The Book on Adler. This school’s “assistant professors” and “Herr Professor” were criticized by a philosopher who also hated “the crowd” and “Christendom.” This school’s aphorism that “the truth is the whole” is replaced with truth as subjectivity in Concluding Unscientific Postscript by Søren Kierkegaard, who attacked it as “the system” and used its terminology in phrases like “infinite absolute negativity.” For 10 points, what school of thought split into “left” and “right” branches after the death of the author of The Philosophy of Right? | Hegelianism [accept absolute idealism; accept Left Hegelians or Right Hegelians; accept “the System” until “system” is read; prompt on dialectics, idealism, or speculative philosophy] | [
[
0,
180
],
[
181,
285
],
[
286,
412
],
[
413,
550
],
[
551,
807
],
[
808,
942
]
] | {
"category": "philosophy",
"category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy",
"category_main": "philosophy",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
93,
-5
],
[
102,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
131,
-5
],
[
138,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
143,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
144,
10
],
[
150,
10
],
[
156,
0
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
],
[
156,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"philosophy"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-2_1 | The Besford lab uses this compound often sourced from oysters to create functionalized nanoparticles. | [
"glycogen phosphorylase",
"glycogen storage diseases",
"glycogen"
] | acf-co24-14-2 | 1 | The Besford lab uses this compound often sourced from oysters to create functionalized nanoparticles. Type V enzymes break down this compound using the phosphate moiety of pyridoxal phosphate. An enzyme that breaks down this compound has an active “A” tetramer form and an inactive “B” dimer form that are found in different cell types. This compound is a more efficient carrier than tRNA or linear polyacrylamide in the ethanol precipitation of DNA. The breakdown of this compound is activated by AMP and the modification of an enzyme’s serine-14 residue by phosphorylase kinase. Hers’ disease and McArdle’s disease are among a class of disorders named for this compound’s irregular storage. This multibranched compound is synthesized by adding UDP-conjugated monomers to create alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 linkages. For 10 points, name this polymer of glucose found in liver and muscle cells. | glycogen [accept glycogen storage diseases or glycogen phosphorylase] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
192
],
[
193,
336
],
[
337,
451
],
[
452,
581
],
[
582,
693
],
[
694,
814
],
[
815,
891
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Chemistry",
"category_main": "science-chemistry",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
71,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
96,
10
],
[
100,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
122,
10
],
[
123,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"chemistry"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-2_2 | Type V enzymes break down this compound using the phosphate moiety of pyridoxal phosphate. | [
"glycogen phosphorylase",
"glycogen storage diseases",
"glycogen"
] | acf-co24-14-2 | 2 | The Besford lab uses this compound often sourced from oysters to create functionalized nanoparticles. Type V enzymes break down this compound using the phosphate moiety of pyridoxal phosphate. An enzyme that breaks down this compound has an active “A” tetramer form and an inactive “B” dimer form that are found in different cell types. This compound is a more efficient carrier than tRNA or linear polyacrylamide in the ethanol precipitation of DNA. The breakdown of this compound is activated by AMP and the modification of an enzyme’s serine-14 residue by phosphorylase kinase. Hers’ disease and McArdle’s disease are among a class of disorders named for this compound’s irregular storage. This multibranched compound is synthesized by adding UDP-conjugated monomers to create alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 linkages. For 10 points, name this polymer of glucose found in liver and muscle cells. | glycogen [accept glycogen storage diseases or glycogen phosphorylase] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
192
],
[
193,
336
],
[
337,
451
],
[
452,
581
],
[
582,
693
],
[
694,
814
],
[
815,
891
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Chemistry",
"category_main": "science-chemistry",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
71,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
96,
10
],
[
100,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
122,
10
],
[
123,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"chemistry"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-2_3 | An enzyme that breaks down this compound has an active “A” tetramer form and an inactive “B” dimer form that are found in different cell types. | [
"glycogen phosphorylase",
"glycogen storage diseases",
"glycogen"
] | acf-co24-14-2 | 3 | The Besford lab uses this compound often sourced from oysters to create functionalized nanoparticles. Type V enzymes break down this compound using the phosphate moiety of pyridoxal phosphate. An enzyme that breaks down this compound has an active “A” tetramer form and an inactive “B” dimer form that are found in different cell types. This compound is a more efficient carrier than tRNA or linear polyacrylamide in the ethanol precipitation of DNA. The breakdown of this compound is activated by AMP and the modification of an enzyme’s serine-14 residue by phosphorylase kinase. Hers’ disease and McArdle’s disease are among a class of disorders named for this compound’s irregular storage. This multibranched compound is synthesized by adding UDP-conjugated monomers to create alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 linkages. For 10 points, name this polymer of glucose found in liver and muscle cells. | glycogen [accept glycogen storage diseases or glycogen phosphorylase] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
192
],
[
193,
336
],
[
337,
451
],
[
452,
581
],
[
582,
693
],
[
694,
814
],
[
815,
891
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Chemistry",
"category_main": "science-chemistry",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
71,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
96,
10
],
[
100,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
122,
10
],
[
123,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"chemistry"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-2_4 | This compound is a more efficient carrier than tRNA or linear polyacrylamide in the ethanol precipitation of DNA. | [
"glycogen phosphorylase",
"glycogen storage diseases",
"glycogen"
] | acf-co24-14-2 | 4 | The Besford lab uses this compound often sourced from oysters to create functionalized nanoparticles. Type V enzymes break down this compound using the phosphate moiety of pyridoxal phosphate. An enzyme that breaks down this compound has an active “A” tetramer form and an inactive “B” dimer form that are found in different cell types. This compound is a more efficient carrier than tRNA or linear polyacrylamide in the ethanol precipitation of DNA. The breakdown of this compound is activated by AMP and the modification of an enzyme’s serine-14 residue by phosphorylase kinase. Hers’ disease and McArdle’s disease are among a class of disorders named for this compound’s irregular storage. This multibranched compound is synthesized by adding UDP-conjugated monomers to create alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 linkages. For 10 points, name this polymer of glucose found in liver and muscle cells. | glycogen [accept glycogen storage diseases or glycogen phosphorylase] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
192
],
[
193,
336
],
[
337,
451
],
[
452,
581
],
[
582,
693
],
[
694,
814
],
[
815,
891
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Chemistry",
"category_main": "science-chemistry",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
71,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
96,
10
],
[
100,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
122,
10
],
[
123,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"chemistry"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-2_5 | The breakdown of this compound is activated by AMP and the modification of an enzyme’s serine-14 residue by phosphorylase kinase. | [
"glycogen phosphorylase",
"glycogen storage diseases",
"glycogen"
] | acf-co24-14-2 | 5 | The Besford lab uses this compound often sourced from oysters to create functionalized nanoparticles. Type V enzymes break down this compound using the phosphate moiety of pyridoxal phosphate. An enzyme that breaks down this compound has an active “A” tetramer form and an inactive “B” dimer form that are found in different cell types. This compound is a more efficient carrier than tRNA or linear polyacrylamide in the ethanol precipitation of DNA. The breakdown of this compound is activated by AMP and the modification of an enzyme’s serine-14 residue by phosphorylase kinase. Hers’ disease and McArdle’s disease are among a class of disorders named for this compound’s irregular storage. This multibranched compound is synthesized by adding UDP-conjugated monomers to create alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 linkages. For 10 points, name this polymer of glucose found in liver and muscle cells. | glycogen [accept glycogen storage diseases or glycogen phosphorylase] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
192
],
[
193,
336
],
[
337,
451
],
[
452,
581
],
[
582,
693
],
[
694,
814
],
[
815,
891
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Chemistry",
"category_main": "science-chemistry",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
71,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
96,
10
],
[
100,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
122,
10
],
[
123,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"chemistry"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-2_6 | Hers’ disease and McArdle’s disease are among a class of disorders named for this compound’s irregular storage. | [
"glycogen phosphorylase",
"glycogen storage diseases",
"glycogen"
] | acf-co24-14-2 | 6 | The Besford lab uses this compound often sourced from oysters to create functionalized nanoparticles. Type V enzymes break down this compound using the phosphate moiety of pyridoxal phosphate. An enzyme that breaks down this compound has an active “A” tetramer form and an inactive “B” dimer form that are found in different cell types. This compound is a more efficient carrier than tRNA or linear polyacrylamide in the ethanol precipitation of DNA. The breakdown of this compound is activated by AMP and the modification of an enzyme’s serine-14 residue by phosphorylase kinase. Hers’ disease and McArdle’s disease are among a class of disorders named for this compound’s irregular storage. This multibranched compound is synthesized by adding UDP-conjugated monomers to create alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 linkages. For 10 points, name this polymer of glucose found in liver and muscle cells. | glycogen [accept glycogen storage diseases or glycogen phosphorylase] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
192
],
[
193,
336
],
[
337,
451
],
[
452,
581
],
[
582,
693
],
[
694,
814
],
[
815,
891
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Chemistry",
"category_main": "science-chemistry",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
71,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
96,
10
],
[
100,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
122,
10
],
[
123,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"chemistry"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-2_7 | This multibranched compound is synthesized by adding UDP-conjugated monomers to create alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 linkages. | [
"glycogen phosphorylase",
"glycogen storage diseases",
"glycogen"
] | acf-co24-14-2 | 7 | The Besford lab uses this compound often sourced from oysters to create functionalized nanoparticles. Type V enzymes break down this compound using the phosphate moiety of pyridoxal phosphate. An enzyme that breaks down this compound has an active “A” tetramer form and an inactive “B” dimer form that are found in different cell types. This compound is a more efficient carrier than tRNA or linear polyacrylamide in the ethanol precipitation of DNA. The breakdown of this compound is activated by AMP and the modification of an enzyme’s serine-14 residue by phosphorylase kinase. Hers’ disease and McArdle’s disease are among a class of disorders named for this compound’s irregular storage. This multibranched compound is synthesized by adding UDP-conjugated monomers to create alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 linkages. For 10 points, name this polymer of glucose found in liver and muscle cells. | glycogen [accept glycogen storage diseases or glycogen phosphorylase] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
192
],
[
193,
336
],
[
337,
451
],
[
452,
581
],
[
582,
693
],
[
694,
814
],
[
815,
891
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Chemistry",
"category_main": "science-chemistry",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
71,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
96,
10
],
[
100,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
122,
10
],
[
123,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"chemistry"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-2_8 | For 10 points, name this polymer of glucose found in liver and muscle cells. | [
"glycogen phosphorylase",
"glycogen storage diseases",
"glycogen"
] | acf-co24-14-2 | 8 | The Besford lab uses this compound often sourced from oysters to create functionalized nanoparticles. Type V enzymes break down this compound using the phosphate moiety of pyridoxal phosphate. An enzyme that breaks down this compound has an active “A” tetramer form and an inactive “B” dimer form that are found in different cell types. This compound is a more efficient carrier than tRNA or linear polyacrylamide in the ethanol precipitation of DNA. The breakdown of this compound is activated by AMP and the modification of an enzyme’s serine-14 residue by phosphorylase kinase. Hers’ disease and McArdle’s disease are among a class of disorders named for this compound’s irregular storage. This multibranched compound is synthesized by adding UDP-conjugated monomers to create alpha-1,4 and alpha-1,6 linkages. For 10 points, name this polymer of glucose found in liver and muscle cells. | glycogen [accept glycogen storage diseases or glycogen phosphorylase] | [
[
0,
101
],
[
102,
192
],
[
193,
336
],
[
337,
451
],
[
452,
581
],
[
582,
693
],
[
694,
814
],
[
815,
891
]
] | {
"category": "science",
"category_full": "Science - Chemistry",
"category_main": "science-chemistry",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
71,
10
],
[
92,
10
],
[
95,
10
],
[
96,
10
],
[
100,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
108,
10
],
[
113,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
117,
10
],
[
122,
10
],
[
123,
-5
],
[
123,
10
],
[
131,
10
],
[
138,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"chemistry"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-3_1 | In a set of poems titled for this practice, the speaker hopes for “clouds of thy sweet Vapour” to “circumcise” his eyes before asking “shall spirits thus my Mammularies Suck?” | [
"Meditation at Lagunitas",
"Preparatory Meditations",
"Meditations in an Emergency",
"meditating",
"meditations",
"meditation",
"Meditation",
"word forms like meditating"
] | acf-co24-14-3 | 1 | In a set of poems titled for this practice, the speaker hopes for “clouds of thy sweet Vapour” to “circumcise” his eyes before asking “shall spirits thus my Mammularies Suck?” Louis Martz’s work on the “poetry of” this practice traces Edward Baxter’s influence on a collection of over 200 poems titled for this practice, such as “I am the Living Bread,” that were discovered at Yale in the 1930s. This practice titles a poem that declares, “I can’t even enjoy a blade of grass unless I know there’s a subway handy, or a record store.” A poet who wrote several essays about Edward Taylor’s “preparatory” works titled for this practice also used it to title a poem that opens, “all the new thinking is about loss.” This practice “in an Emergency” titles Frank O’Hara’s follow-up to Lunch Poems. For 10 points, a Robert Hass poem set at Lagunitas is titled for what devotional practice? | meditations [or word forms like meditating; accept Preparatory Meditations or Meditations in an Emergency or “Meditation at Lagunitas”] | [
[
0,
175
],
[
176,
396
],
[
397,
535
],
[
536,
713
],
[
714,
793
],
[
794,
884
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
84,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
90,
-5
],
[
90,
10
],
[
103,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
137,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
152,
10
],
[
154,
0
],
[
154,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-3_2 | Louis Martz’s work on the “poetry of” this practice traces Edward Baxter’s influence on a collection of over 200 poems titled for this practice, such as “I am the Living Bread,” that were discovered at Yale in the 1930s. | [
"Meditation at Lagunitas",
"Preparatory Meditations",
"Meditations in an Emergency",
"meditating",
"meditations",
"meditation",
"Meditation",
"word forms like meditating"
] | acf-co24-14-3 | 2 | In a set of poems titled for this practice, the speaker hopes for “clouds of thy sweet Vapour” to “circumcise” his eyes before asking “shall spirits thus my Mammularies Suck?” Louis Martz’s work on the “poetry of” this practice traces Edward Baxter’s influence on a collection of over 200 poems titled for this practice, such as “I am the Living Bread,” that were discovered at Yale in the 1930s. This practice titles a poem that declares, “I can’t even enjoy a blade of grass unless I know there’s a subway handy, or a record store.” A poet who wrote several essays about Edward Taylor’s “preparatory” works titled for this practice also used it to title a poem that opens, “all the new thinking is about loss.” This practice “in an Emergency” titles Frank O’Hara’s follow-up to Lunch Poems. For 10 points, a Robert Hass poem set at Lagunitas is titled for what devotional practice? | meditations [or word forms like meditating; accept Preparatory Meditations or Meditations in an Emergency or “Meditation at Lagunitas”] | [
[
0,
175
],
[
176,
396
],
[
397,
535
],
[
536,
713
],
[
714,
793
],
[
794,
884
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
84,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
90,
-5
],
[
90,
10
],
[
103,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
137,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
152,
10
],
[
154,
0
],
[
154,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-3_3 | This practice titles a poem that declares, “I can’t even enjoy a blade of grass unless I know there’s a subway handy, or a record store.” | [
"Meditation at Lagunitas",
"Preparatory Meditations",
"Meditations in an Emergency",
"meditating",
"meditations",
"meditation",
"Meditation",
"word forms like meditating"
] | acf-co24-14-3 | 3 | In a set of poems titled for this practice, the speaker hopes for “clouds of thy sweet Vapour” to “circumcise” his eyes before asking “shall spirits thus my Mammularies Suck?” Louis Martz’s work on the “poetry of” this practice traces Edward Baxter’s influence on a collection of over 200 poems titled for this practice, such as “I am the Living Bread,” that were discovered at Yale in the 1930s. This practice titles a poem that declares, “I can’t even enjoy a blade of grass unless I know there’s a subway handy, or a record store.” A poet who wrote several essays about Edward Taylor’s “preparatory” works titled for this practice also used it to title a poem that opens, “all the new thinking is about loss.” This practice “in an Emergency” titles Frank O’Hara’s follow-up to Lunch Poems. For 10 points, a Robert Hass poem set at Lagunitas is titled for what devotional practice? | meditations [or word forms like meditating; accept Preparatory Meditations or Meditations in an Emergency or “Meditation at Lagunitas”] | [
[
0,
175
],
[
176,
396
],
[
397,
535
],
[
536,
713
],
[
714,
793
],
[
794,
884
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
84,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
90,
-5
],
[
90,
10
],
[
103,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
137,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
152,
10
],
[
154,
0
],
[
154,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-3_4 | A poet who wrote several essays about Edward Taylor’s “preparatory” works titled for this practice also used it to title a poem that opens, “all the new thinking is about loss.” | [
"Meditation at Lagunitas",
"Preparatory Meditations",
"Meditations in an Emergency",
"meditating",
"meditations",
"meditation",
"Meditation",
"word forms like meditating"
] | acf-co24-14-3 | 4 | In a set of poems titled for this practice, the speaker hopes for “clouds of thy sweet Vapour” to “circumcise” his eyes before asking “shall spirits thus my Mammularies Suck?” Louis Martz’s work on the “poetry of” this practice traces Edward Baxter’s influence on a collection of over 200 poems titled for this practice, such as “I am the Living Bread,” that were discovered at Yale in the 1930s. This practice titles a poem that declares, “I can’t even enjoy a blade of grass unless I know there’s a subway handy, or a record store.” A poet who wrote several essays about Edward Taylor’s “preparatory” works titled for this practice also used it to title a poem that opens, “all the new thinking is about loss.” This practice “in an Emergency” titles Frank O’Hara’s follow-up to Lunch Poems. For 10 points, a Robert Hass poem set at Lagunitas is titled for what devotional practice? | meditations [or word forms like meditating; accept Preparatory Meditations or Meditations in an Emergency or “Meditation at Lagunitas”] | [
[
0,
175
],
[
176,
396
],
[
397,
535
],
[
536,
713
],
[
714,
793
],
[
794,
884
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
84,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
90,
-5
],
[
90,
10
],
[
103,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
137,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
152,
10
],
[
154,
0
],
[
154,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-3_5 | This practice “in an Emergency” titles Frank O’Hara’s follow-up to Lunch Poems. | [
"Meditation at Lagunitas",
"Preparatory Meditations",
"Meditations in an Emergency",
"meditating",
"meditations",
"meditation",
"Meditation",
"word forms like meditating"
] | acf-co24-14-3 | 5 | In a set of poems titled for this practice, the speaker hopes for “clouds of thy sweet Vapour” to “circumcise” his eyes before asking “shall spirits thus my Mammularies Suck?” Louis Martz’s work on the “poetry of” this practice traces Edward Baxter’s influence on a collection of over 200 poems titled for this practice, such as “I am the Living Bread,” that were discovered at Yale in the 1930s. This practice titles a poem that declares, “I can’t even enjoy a blade of grass unless I know there’s a subway handy, or a record store.” A poet who wrote several essays about Edward Taylor’s “preparatory” works titled for this practice also used it to title a poem that opens, “all the new thinking is about loss.” This practice “in an Emergency” titles Frank O’Hara’s follow-up to Lunch Poems. For 10 points, a Robert Hass poem set at Lagunitas is titled for what devotional practice? | meditations [or word forms like meditating; accept Preparatory Meditations or Meditations in an Emergency or “Meditation at Lagunitas”] | [
[
0,
175
],
[
176,
396
],
[
397,
535
],
[
536,
713
],
[
714,
793
],
[
794,
884
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
84,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
90,
-5
],
[
90,
10
],
[
103,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
137,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
152,
10
],
[
154,
0
],
[
154,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-3_6 | For 10 points, a Robert Hass poem set at Lagunitas is titled for what devotional practice? | [
"Meditation at Lagunitas",
"Preparatory Meditations",
"Meditations in an Emergency",
"meditating",
"meditations",
"meditation",
"Meditation",
"word forms like meditating"
] | acf-co24-14-3 | 6 | In a set of poems titled for this practice, the speaker hopes for “clouds of thy sweet Vapour” to “circumcise” his eyes before asking “shall spirits thus my Mammularies Suck?” Louis Martz’s work on the “poetry of” this practice traces Edward Baxter’s influence on a collection of over 200 poems titled for this practice, such as “I am the Living Bread,” that were discovered at Yale in the 1930s. This practice titles a poem that declares, “I can’t even enjoy a blade of grass unless I know there’s a subway handy, or a record store.” A poet who wrote several essays about Edward Taylor’s “preparatory” works titled for this practice also used it to title a poem that opens, “all the new thinking is about loss.” This practice “in an Emergency” titles Frank O’Hara’s follow-up to Lunch Poems. For 10 points, a Robert Hass poem set at Lagunitas is titled for what devotional practice? | meditations [or word forms like meditating; accept Preparatory Meditations or Meditations in an Emergency or “Meditation at Lagunitas”] | [
[
0,
175
],
[
176,
396
],
[
397,
535
],
[
536,
713
],
[
714,
793
],
[
794,
884
]
] | {
"category": "literature",
"category_full": "Literature - American Literature",
"category_main": "literature-american-literature",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
84,
15
],
[
89,
10
],
[
90,
-5
],
[
90,
10
],
[
103,
-5
],
[
109,
10
],
[
112,
10
],
[
114,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
130,
10
],
[
137,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
152,
10
],
[
154,
0
],
[
154,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"american-literature"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-4_1 | This country’s 19th-century population boom is attributed to “peace, vaccines, and potatoes.” | [
"Konungariket Sverige",
"Kingdom of Sweden",
"Sweden",
"Sverige"
] | acf-co24-14-4 | 1 | This country’s 19th-century population boom is attributed to “peace, vaccines, and potatoes.” A feminist from this country influenced Frank Lloyd Wright with her theories of “collective motherliness,” “beauty for everyone,” and the “century of the child.” In this home country of Ellen Key, 30,000 farmers supported the funding of the “F-ship” by marching to its Royal Palace Yard, kicking off the “Courtyard Crisis.” This country’s second-largest city names a “system” for limiting per capita alcohol consumption that caught on in Scottish taverns in the 1890s. This country’s “parish granaries” failed to prevent its 1867 famine, which drove peasants to “bark bread” and was a factor in the wave of emigration that brought Joe Hill to the US. This is the northeasternmost of three countries whose culture was shaped by the late 19th-century Modern Breakthrough. For 10 points, name this country ruled by Oscar II and Gustav V. | Sweden [or Kingdom of Sweden or Konungariket Sverige] (The system is the Gothenburg System.) | [
[
0,
93
],
[
94,
255
],
[
256,
417
],
[
418,
563
],
[
564,
745
],
[
746,
864
],
[
865,
929
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - European History",
"category_main": "history-european-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
26,
15
],
[
62,
-5
],
[
62,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
65,
-5
],
[
78,
10
],
[
116,
-5
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
132,
-5
],
[
143,
-5
],
[
147,
0
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-4_2 | A feminist from this country influenced Frank Lloyd Wright with her theories of “collective motherliness,” “beauty for everyone,” and the “century of the child.” | [
"Konungariket Sverige",
"Kingdom of Sweden",
"Sweden",
"Sverige"
] | acf-co24-14-4 | 2 | This country’s 19th-century population boom is attributed to “peace, vaccines, and potatoes.” A feminist from this country influenced Frank Lloyd Wright with her theories of “collective motherliness,” “beauty for everyone,” and the “century of the child.” In this home country of Ellen Key, 30,000 farmers supported the funding of the “F-ship” by marching to its Royal Palace Yard, kicking off the “Courtyard Crisis.” This country’s second-largest city names a “system” for limiting per capita alcohol consumption that caught on in Scottish taverns in the 1890s. This country’s “parish granaries” failed to prevent its 1867 famine, which drove peasants to “bark bread” and was a factor in the wave of emigration that brought Joe Hill to the US. This is the northeasternmost of three countries whose culture was shaped by the late 19th-century Modern Breakthrough. For 10 points, name this country ruled by Oscar II and Gustav V. | Sweden [or Kingdom of Sweden or Konungariket Sverige] (The system is the Gothenburg System.) | [
[
0,
93
],
[
94,
255
],
[
256,
417
],
[
418,
563
],
[
564,
745
],
[
746,
864
],
[
865,
929
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - European History",
"category_main": "history-european-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
26,
15
],
[
62,
-5
],
[
62,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
65,
-5
],
[
78,
10
],
[
116,
-5
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
132,
-5
],
[
143,
-5
],
[
147,
0
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-4_3 | In this home country of Ellen Key, 30,000 farmers supported the funding of the “F-ship” by marching to its Royal Palace Yard, kicking off the “Courtyard Crisis.” | [
"Konungariket Sverige",
"Kingdom of Sweden",
"Sweden",
"Sverige"
] | acf-co24-14-4 | 3 | This country’s 19th-century population boom is attributed to “peace, vaccines, and potatoes.” A feminist from this country influenced Frank Lloyd Wright with her theories of “collective motherliness,” “beauty for everyone,” and the “century of the child.” In this home country of Ellen Key, 30,000 farmers supported the funding of the “F-ship” by marching to its Royal Palace Yard, kicking off the “Courtyard Crisis.” This country’s second-largest city names a “system” for limiting per capita alcohol consumption that caught on in Scottish taverns in the 1890s. This country’s “parish granaries” failed to prevent its 1867 famine, which drove peasants to “bark bread” and was a factor in the wave of emigration that brought Joe Hill to the US. This is the northeasternmost of three countries whose culture was shaped by the late 19th-century Modern Breakthrough. For 10 points, name this country ruled by Oscar II and Gustav V. | Sweden [or Kingdom of Sweden or Konungariket Sverige] (The system is the Gothenburg System.) | [
[
0,
93
],
[
94,
255
],
[
256,
417
],
[
418,
563
],
[
564,
745
],
[
746,
864
],
[
865,
929
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - European History",
"category_main": "history-european-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
26,
15
],
[
62,
-5
],
[
62,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
65,
-5
],
[
78,
10
],
[
116,
-5
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
132,
-5
],
[
143,
-5
],
[
147,
0
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-4_4 | This country’s second-largest city names a “system” for limiting per capita alcohol consumption that caught on in Scottish taverns in the 1890s. | [
"Konungariket Sverige",
"Kingdom of Sweden",
"Sweden",
"Sverige"
] | acf-co24-14-4 | 4 | This country’s 19th-century population boom is attributed to “peace, vaccines, and potatoes.” A feminist from this country influenced Frank Lloyd Wright with her theories of “collective motherliness,” “beauty for everyone,” and the “century of the child.” In this home country of Ellen Key, 30,000 farmers supported the funding of the “F-ship” by marching to its Royal Palace Yard, kicking off the “Courtyard Crisis.” This country’s second-largest city names a “system” for limiting per capita alcohol consumption that caught on in Scottish taverns in the 1890s. This country’s “parish granaries” failed to prevent its 1867 famine, which drove peasants to “bark bread” and was a factor in the wave of emigration that brought Joe Hill to the US. This is the northeasternmost of three countries whose culture was shaped by the late 19th-century Modern Breakthrough. For 10 points, name this country ruled by Oscar II and Gustav V. | Sweden [or Kingdom of Sweden or Konungariket Sverige] (The system is the Gothenburg System.) | [
[
0,
93
],
[
94,
255
],
[
256,
417
],
[
418,
563
],
[
564,
745
],
[
746,
864
],
[
865,
929
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - European History",
"category_main": "history-european-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
26,
15
],
[
62,
-5
],
[
62,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
65,
-5
],
[
78,
10
],
[
116,
-5
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
132,
-5
],
[
143,
-5
],
[
147,
0
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-4_5 | This country’s “parish granaries” failed to prevent its 1867 famine, which drove peasants to “bark bread” and was a factor in the wave of emigration that brought Joe Hill to the US. | [
"Konungariket Sverige",
"Kingdom of Sweden",
"Sweden",
"Sverige"
] | acf-co24-14-4 | 5 | This country’s 19th-century population boom is attributed to “peace, vaccines, and potatoes.” A feminist from this country influenced Frank Lloyd Wright with her theories of “collective motherliness,” “beauty for everyone,” and the “century of the child.” In this home country of Ellen Key, 30,000 farmers supported the funding of the “F-ship” by marching to its Royal Palace Yard, kicking off the “Courtyard Crisis.” This country’s second-largest city names a “system” for limiting per capita alcohol consumption that caught on in Scottish taverns in the 1890s. This country’s “parish granaries” failed to prevent its 1867 famine, which drove peasants to “bark bread” and was a factor in the wave of emigration that brought Joe Hill to the US. This is the northeasternmost of three countries whose culture was shaped by the late 19th-century Modern Breakthrough. For 10 points, name this country ruled by Oscar II and Gustav V. | Sweden [or Kingdom of Sweden or Konungariket Sverige] (The system is the Gothenburg System.) | [
[
0,
93
],
[
94,
255
],
[
256,
417
],
[
418,
563
],
[
564,
745
],
[
746,
864
],
[
865,
929
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - European History",
"category_main": "history-european-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
26,
15
],
[
62,
-5
],
[
62,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
65,
-5
],
[
78,
10
],
[
116,
-5
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
132,
-5
],
[
143,
-5
],
[
147,
0
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-4_6 | This is the northeasternmost of three countries whose culture was shaped by the late 19th-century Modern Breakthrough. | [
"Konungariket Sverige",
"Kingdom of Sweden",
"Sweden",
"Sverige"
] | acf-co24-14-4 | 6 | This country’s 19th-century population boom is attributed to “peace, vaccines, and potatoes.” A feminist from this country influenced Frank Lloyd Wright with her theories of “collective motherliness,” “beauty for everyone,” and the “century of the child.” In this home country of Ellen Key, 30,000 farmers supported the funding of the “F-ship” by marching to its Royal Palace Yard, kicking off the “Courtyard Crisis.” This country’s second-largest city names a “system” for limiting per capita alcohol consumption that caught on in Scottish taverns in the 1890s. This country’s “parish granaries” failed to prevent its 1867 famine, which drove peasants to “bark bread” and was a factor in the wave of emigration that brought Joe Hill to the US. This is the northeasternmost of three countries whose culture was shaped by the late 19th-century Modern Breakthrough. For 10 points, name this country ruled by Oscar II and Gustav V. | Sweden [or Kingdom of Sweden or Konungariket Sverige] (The system is the Gothenburg System.) | [
[
0,
93
],
[
94,
255
],
[
256,
417
],
[
418,
563
],
[
564,
745
],
[
746,
864
],
[
865,
929
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - European History",
"category_main": "history-european-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
26,
15
],
[
62,
-5
],
[
62,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
65,
-5
],
[
78,
10
],
[
116,
-5
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
132,
-5
],
[
143,
-5
],
[
147,
0
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-4_7 | For 10 points, name this country ruled by Oscar II and Gustav V. | [
"Konungariket Sverige",
"Kingdom of Sweden",
"Sweden",
"Sverige"
] | acf-co24-14-4 | 7 | This country’s 19th-century population boom is attributed to “peace, vaccines, and potatoes.” A feminist from this country influenced Frank Lloyd Wright with her theories of “collective motherliness,” “beauty for everyone,” and the “century of the child.” In this home country of Ellen Key, 30,000 farmers supported the funding of the “F-ship” by marching to its Royal Palace Yard, kicking off the “Courtyard Crisis.” This country’s second-largest city names a “system” for limiting per capita alcohol consumption that caught on in Scottish taverns in the 1890s. This country’s “parish granaries” failed to prevent its 1867 famine, which drove peasants to “bark bread” and was a factor in the wave of emigration that brought Joe Hill to the US. This is the northeasternmost of three countries whose culture was shaped by the late 19th-century Modern Breakthrough. For 10 points, name this country ruled by Oscar II and Gustav V. | Sweden [or Kingdom of Sweden or Konungariket Sverige] (The system is the Gothenburg System.) | [
[
0,
93
],
[
94,
255
],
[
256,
417
],
[
418,
563
],
[
564,
745
],
[
746,
864
],
[
865,
929
]
] | {
"category": "history",
"category_full": "History - European History",
"category_main": "history-european-history",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
26,
15
],
[
62,
-5
],
[
62,
15
],
[
62,
15
],
[
65,
-5
],
[
78,
10
],
[
116,
-5
],
[
116,
10
],
[
116,
10
],
[
125,
10
],
[
132,
-5
],
[
143,
-5
],
[
147,
0
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
],
[
147,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"european-history"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-5_1 | According to one artist, these items “represented” a dimension of time that he managed to enter with the Minus Objects series. | [
"mirrors",
"Mirror",
"mirror",
"Sky Mirror"
] | acf-co24-14-5 | 1 | According to one artist, these items “represented” a dimension of time that he managed to enter with the Minus Objects series. Douglas Gordon replaced the eyes and mouths of Bond Girls with these objects. These objects are present in the Self Deceit photographs by Francesca Woodman. The Dallas Cowboys own one of these objects commissioned by the Nottingham Playhouse. A man in a dark suit faces away from the viewer in Standing Man, the archetypal work in a series named for these objects by Michelangelo Pistoletto. A pink ribbon is draped over one of these objects held by Cupid in a painting named for a Yorkshire estate. The installation Chandelier of Grief plays with the mise en abyme effect that can be created by these objects, an example of which was created by Anish Kapoor and named for the Sky. For 10 points, identify these objects that Yayoi Kusama placed on walls, floors, and ceilings for the Infinity Room series. | mirrors [accept Sky Mirror] | [
[
0,
126
],
[
127,
204
],
[
205,
283
],
[
284,
369
],
[
370,
519
],
[
520,
627
],
[
628,
809
],
[
810,
933
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture",
"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
53,
-5
],
[
72,
15
],
[
85,
10
],
[
85,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
139,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
141,
-5
],
[
148,
-5
],
[
148,
10
],
[
159,
0
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-5_2 | Douglas Gordon replaced the eyes and mouths of Bond Girls with these objects. | [
"mirrors",
"Mirror",
"mirror",
"Sky Mirror"
] | acf-co24-14-5 | 2 | According to one artist, these items “represented” a dimension of time that he managed to enter with the Minus Objects series. Douglas Gordon replaced the eyes and mouths of Bond Girls with these objects. These objects are present in the Self Deceit photographs by Francesca Woodman. The Dallas Cowboys own one of these objects commissioned by the Nottingham Playhouse. A man in a dark suit faces away from the viewer in Standing Man, the archetypal work in a series named for these objects by Michelangelo Pistoletto. A pink ribbon is draped over one of these objects held by Cupid in a painting named for a Yorkshire estate. The installation Chandelier of Grief plays with the mise en abyme effect that can be created by these objects, an example of which was created by Anish Kapoor and named for the Sky. For 10 points, identify these objects that Yayoi Kusama placed on walls, floors, and ceilings for the Infinity Room series. | mirrors [accept Sky Mirror] | [
[
0,
126
],
[
127,
204
],
[
205,
283
],
[
284,
369
],
[
370,
519
],
[
520,
627
],
[
628,
809
],
[
810,
933
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture",
"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
53,
-5
],
[
72,
15
],
[
85,
10
],
[
85,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
139,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
141,
-5
],
[
148,
-5
],
[
148,
10
],
[
159,
0
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-5_3 | These objects are present in the Self Deceit photographs by Francesca Woodman. | [
"mirrors",
"Mirror",
"mirror",
"Sky Mirror"
] | acf-co24-14-5 | 3 | According to one artist, these items “represented” a dimension of time that he managed to enter with the Minus Objects series. Douglas Gordon replaced the eyes and mouths of Bond Girls with these objects. These objects are present in the Self Deceit photographs by Francesca Woodman. The Dallas Cowboys own one of these objects commissioned by the Nottingham Playhouse. A man in a dark suit faces away from the viewer in Standing Man, the archetypal work in a series named for these objects by Michelangelo Pistoletto. A pink ribbon is draped over one of these objects held by Cupid in a painting named for a Yorkshire estate. The installation Chandelier of Grief plays with the mise en abyme effect that can be created by these objects, an example of which was created by Anish Kapoor and named for the Sky. For 10 points, identify these objects that Yayoi Kusama placed on walls, floors, and ceilings for the Infinity Room series. | mirrors [accept Sky Mirror] | [
[
0,
126
],
[
127,
204
],
[
205,
283
],
[
284,
369
],
[
370,
519
],
[
520,
627
],
[
628,
809
],
[
810,
933
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture",
"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
53,
-5
],
[
72,
15
],
[
85,
10
],
[
85,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
139,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
141,
-5
],
[
148,
-5
],
[
148,
10
],
[
159,
0
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-5_4 | The Dallas Cowboys own one of these objects commissioned by the Nottingham Playhouse. | [
"mirrors",
"Mirror",
"mirror",
"Sky Mirror"
] | acf-co24-14-5 | 4 | According to one artist, these items “represented” a dimension of time that he managed to enter with the Minus Objects series. Douglas Gordon replaced the eyes and mouths of Bond Girls with these objects. These objects are present in the Self Deceit photographs by Francesca Woodman. The Dallas Cowboys own one of these objects commissioned by the Nottingham Playhouse. A man in a dark suit faces away from the viewer in Standing Man, the archetypal work in a series named for these objects by Michelangelo Pistoletto. A pink ribbon is draped over one of these objects held by Cupid in a painting named for a Yorkshire estate. The installation Chandelier of Grief plays with the mise en abyme effect that can be created by these objects, an example of which was created by Anish Kapoor and named for the Sky. For 10 points, identify these objects that Yayoi Kusama placed on walls, floors, and ceilings for the Infinity Room series. | mirrors [accept Sky Mirror] | [
[
0,
126
],
[
127,
204
],
[
205,
283
],
[
284,
369
],
[
370,
519
],
[
520,
627
],
[
628,
809
],
[
810,
933
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture",
"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
53,
-5
],
[
72,
15
],
[
85,
10
],
[
85,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
139,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
141,
-5
],
[
148,
-5
],
[
148,
10
],
[
159,
0
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-5_5 | A man in a dark suit faces away from the viewer in Standing Man, the archetypal work in a series named for these objects by Michelangelo Pistoletto. | [
"mirrors",
"Mirror",
"mirror",
"Sky Mirror"
] | acf-co24-14-5 | 5 | According to one artist, these items “represented” a dimension of time that he managed to enter with the Minus Objects series. Douglas Gordon replaced the eyes and mouths of Bond Girls with these objects. These objects are present in the Self Deceit photographs by Francesca Woodman. The Dallas Cowboys own one of these objects commissioned by the Nottingham Playhouse. A man in a dark suit faces away from the viewer in Standing Man, the archetypal work in a series named for these objects by Michelangelo Pistoletto. A pink ribbon is draped over one of these objects held by Cupid in a painting named for a Yorkshire estate. The installation Chandelier of Grief plays with the mise en abyme effect that can be created by these objects, an example of which was created by Anish Kapoor and named for the Sky. For 10 points, identify these objects that Yayoi Kusama placed on walls, floors, and ceilings for the Infinity Room series. | mirrors [accept Sky Mirror] | [
[
0,
126
],
[
127,
204
],
[
205,
283
],
[
284,
369
],
[
370,
519
],
[
520,
627
],
[
628,
809
],
[
810,
933
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture",
"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
53,
-5
],
[
72,
15
],
[
85,
10
],
[
85,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
139,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
141,
-5
],
[
148,
-5
],
[
148,
10
],
[
159,
0
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-5_6 | A pink ribbon is draped over one of these objects held by Cupid in a painting named for a Yorkshire estate. | [
"mirrors",
"Mirror",
"mirror",
"Sky Mirror"
] | acf-co24-14-5 | 6 | According to one artist, these items “represented” a dimension of time that he managed to enter with the Minus Objects series. Douglas Gordon replaced the eyes and mouths of Bond Girls with these objects. These objects are present in the Self Deceit photographs by Francesca Woodman. The Dallas Cowboys own one of these objects commissioned by the Nottingham Playhouse. A man in a dark suit faces away from the viewer in Standing Man, the archetypal work in a series named for these objects by Michelangelo Pistoletto. A pink ribbon is draped over one of these objects held by Cupid in a painting named for a Yorkshire estate. The installation Chandelier of Grief plays with the mise en abyme effect that can be created by these objects, an example of which was created by Anish Kapoor and named for the Sky. For 10 points, identify these objects that Yayoi Kusama placed on walls, floors, and ceilings for the Infinity Room series. | mirrors [accept Sky Mirror] | [
[
0,
126
],
[
127,
204
],
[
205,
283
],
[
284,
369
],
[
370,
519
],
[
520,
627
],
[
628,
809
],
[
810,
933
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture",
"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
53,
-5
],
[
72,
15
],
[
85,
10
],
[
85,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
139,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
141,
-5
],
[
148,
-5
],
[
148,
10
],
[
159,
0
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
]
} |
acf-co24-14-5_7 | The installation Chandelier of Grief plays with the mise en abyme effect that can be created by these objects, an example of which was created by Anish Kapoor and named for the Sky. | [
"mirrors",
"Mirror",
"mirror",
"Sky Mirror"
] | acf-co24-14-5 | 7 | According to one artist, these items “represented” a dimension of time that he managed to enter with the Minus Objects series. Douglas Gordon replaced the eyes and mouths of Bond Girls with these objects. These objects are present in the Self Deceit photographs by Francesca Woodman. The Dallas Cowboys own one of these objects commissioned by the Nottingham Playhouse. A man in a dark suit faces away from the viewer in Standing Man, the archetypal work in a series named for these objects by Michelangelo Pistoletto. A pink ribbon is draped over one of these objects held by Cupid in a painting named for a Yorkshire estate. The installation Chandelier of Grief plays with the mise en abyme effect that can be created by these objects, an example of which was created by Anish Kapoor and named for the Sky. For 10 points, identify these objects that Yayoi Kusama placed on walls, floors, and ceilings for the Infinity Room series. | mirrors [accept Sky Mirror] | [
[
0,
126
],
[
127,
204
],
[
205,
283
],
[
284,
369
],
[
370,
519
],
[
520,
627
],
[
628,
809
],
[
810,
933
]
] | {
"category": "fine-arts",
"category_full": "Fine Arts - Painting and Sculpture",
"category_main": "fine-arts-painting-and-sculpture",
"difficulty": "Open",
"human_buzz_positions": [
[
33,
-5
],
[
53,
-5
],
[
72,
15
],
[
85,
10
],
[
85,
10
],
[
106,
10
],
[
118,
10
],
[
124,
10
],
[
134,
10
],
[
137,
10
],
[
139,
-5
],
[
139,
10
],
[
141,
-5
],
[
148,
-5
],
[
148,
10
],
[
159,
0
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
],
[
160,
10
]
],
"packet": "Packet N. Editors 8",
"question_set": "2024-chicago-open",
"subcategory": [
"painting-and-sculpture"
]
} |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.