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acf-co24-14-5_8
For 10 points, identify these objects that Yayoi Kusama placed on walls, floors, and ceilings for the Infinity Room series.
[ "mirrors", "Mirror", "mirror", "Sky Mirror" ]
acf-co24-14-5
8
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-co24-14-6_1
In one therapeutic system, these phenomena name a “matrix” comprising arrows and circles labeled “P,” “A,” or “C,” representing “parent,” “adult,” and “child.”
[ "script theory", "scripts", "script", "rape script", "Scripts", "script matrix", "life script" ]
acf-co24-14-6
1
In one therapeutic system, these phenomena name a “matrix” comprising arrows and circles labeled “P,” “A,” or “C,” representing “parent,” “adult,” and “child.” These are the first title phenomena in a book that extended one of its co-author’s theories of “Conceptual Dependency” into an analysis of “Knowledge Structure.” The Transactional Analysis methodology of Eric Berne posits a form of these phenomena described by the word “life.” Alongside “Plans, Goals, and Understanding” these phenomena title an early book on AI by Schank and Abelson. These phenomena name an extension to affect theory developed by Silvan Tomkins, which focuses on sequences of actions linked by affects. Sexual crimes are more likely to be unacknowledged if they do not fit these preconceived templates for how they are expected to happen. For 10 points, name these programs for behavior that can be broken down into scenes.
scripts [or life script; or script matrix; or script theory; or rape script; accept Scripts, Plans, Goals, and Understanding: An Inquiry Into Human Knowledge Structures]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 321 ], [ 322, 438 ], [ 439, 547 ], [ 548, 684 ], [ 685, 820 ], [ 821, 905 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 60, -5 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 126, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-14-6_2
These are the first title phenomena in a book that extended one of its co-author’s theories of “Conceptual Dependency” into an analysis of “Knowledge Structure.”
[ "script theory", "scripts", "script", "rape script", "Scripts", "script matrix", "life script" ]
acf-co24-14-6
2
In one therapeutic system, these phenomena name a “matrix” comprising arrows and circles labeled “P,” “A,” or “C,” representing “parent,” “adult,” and “child.” These are the first title phenomena in a book that extended one of its co-author’s theories of “Conceptual Dependency” into an analysis of “Knowledge Structure.” The Transactional Analysis methodology of Eric Berne posits a form of these phenomena described by the word “life.” Alongside “Plans, Goals, and Understanding” these phenomena title an early book on AI by Schank and Abelson. These phenomena name an extension to affect theory developed by Silvan Tomkins, which focuses on sequences of actions linked by affects. Sexual crimes are more likely to be unacknowledged if they do not fit these preconceived templates for how they are expected to happen. For 10 points, name these programs for behavior that can be broken down into scenes.
scripts [or life script; or script matrix; or script theory; or rape script; accept Scripts, Plans, Goals, and Understanding: An Inquiry Into Human Knowledge Structures]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 321 ], [ 322, 438 ], [ 439, 547 ], [ 548, 684 ], [ 685, 820 ], [ 821, 905 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 60, -5 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 126, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-14-6_3
The Transactional Analysis methodology of Eric Berne posits a form of these phenomena described by the word “life.”
[ "script theory", "scripts", "script", "rape script", "Scripts", "script matrix", "life script" ]
acf-co24-14-6
3
In one therapeutic system, these phenomena name a “matrix” comprising arrows and circles labeled “P,” “A,” or “C,” representing “parent,” “adult,” and “child.” These are the first title phenomena in a book that extended one of its co-author’s theories of “Conceptual Dependency” into an analysis of “Knowledge Structure.” The Transactional Analysis methodology of Eric Berne posits a form of these phenomena described by the word “life.” Alongside “Plans, Goals, and Understanding” these phenomena title an early book on AI by Schank and Abelson. These phenomena name an extension to affect theory developed by Silvan Tomkins, which focuses on sequences of actions linked by affects. Sexual crimes are more likely to be unacknowledged if they do not fit these preconceived templates for how they are expected to happen. For 10 points, name these programs for behavior that can be broken down into scenes.
scripts [or life script; or script matrix; or script theory; or rape script; accept Scripts, Plans, Goals, and Understanding: An Inquiry Into Human Knowledge Structures]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 321 ], [ 322, 438 ], [ 439, 547 ], [ 548, 684 ], [ 685, 820 ], [ 821, 905 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 60, -5 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 126, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-14-6_4
Alongside “Plans, Goals, and Understanding” these phenomena title an early book on AI by Schank and Abelson.
[ "script theory", "scripts", "script", "rape script", "Scripts", "script matrix", "life script" ]
acf-co24-14-6
4
In one therapeutic system, these phenomena name a “matrix” comprising arrows and circles labeled “P,” “A,” or “C,” representing “parent,” “adult,” and “child.” These are the first title phenomena in a book that extended one of its co-author’s theories of “Conceptual Dependency” into an analysis of “Knowledge Structure.” The Transactional Analysis methodology of Eric Berne posits a form of these phenomena described by the word “life.” Alongside “Plans, Goals, and Understanding” these phenomena title an early book on AI by Schank and Abelson. These phenomena name an extension to affect theory developed by Silvan Tomkins, which focuses on sequences of actions linked by affects. Sexual crimes are more likely to be unacknowledged if they do not fit these preconceived templates for how they are expected to happen. For 10 points, name these programs for behavior that can be broken down into scenes.
scripts [or life script; or script matrix; or script theory; or rape script; accept Scripts, Plans, Goals, and Understanding: An Inquiry Into Human Knowledge Structures]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 321 ], [ 322, 438 ], [ 439, 547 ], [ 548, 684 ], [ 685, 820 ], [ 821, 905 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 60, -5 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 126, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-14-6_5
These phenomena name an extension to affect theory developed by Silvan Tomkins, which focuses on sequences of actions linked by affects.
[ "script theory", "scripts", "script", "rape script", "Scripts", "script matrix", "life script" ]
acf-co24-14-6
5
In one therapeutic system, these phenomena name a “matrix” comprising arrows and circles labeled “P,” “A,” or “C,” representing “parent,” “adult,” and “child.” These are the first title phenomena in a book that extended one of its co-author’s theories of “Conceptual Dependency” into an analysis of “Knowledge Structure.” The Transactional Analysis methodology of Eric Berne posits a form of these phenomena described by the word “life.” Alongside “Plans, Goals, and Understanding” these phenomena title an early book on AI by Schank and Abelson. These phenomena name an extension to affect theory developed by Silvan Tomkins, which focuses on sequences of actions linked by affects. Sexual crimes are more likely to be unacknowledged if they do not fit these preconceived templates for how they are expected to happen. For 10 points, name these programs for behavior that can be broken down into scenes.
scripts [or life script; or script matrix; or script theory; or rape script; accept Scripts, Plans, Goals, and Understanding: An Inquiry Into Human Knowledge Structures]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 321 ], [ 322, 438 ], [ 439, 547 ], [ 548, 684 ], [ 685, 820 ], [ 821, 905 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 60, -5 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 126, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-14-6_6
Sexual crimes are more likely to be unacknowledged if they do not fit these preconceived templates for how they are expected to happen.
[ "script theory", "scripts", "script", "rape script", "Scripts", "script matrix", "life script" ]
acf-co24-14-6
6
In one therapeutic system, these phenomena name a “matrix” comprising arrows and circles labeled “P,” “A,” or “C,” representing “parent,” “adult,” and “child.” These are the first title phenomena in a book that extended one of its co-author’s theories of “Conceptual Dependency” into an analysis of “Knowledge Structure.” The Transactional Analysis methodology of Eric Berne posits a form of these phenomena described by the word “life.” Alongside “Plans, Goals, and Understanding” these phenomena title an early book on AI by Schank and Abelson. These phenomena name an extension to affect theory developed by Silvan Tomkins, which focuses on sequences of actions linked by affects. Sexual crimes are more likely to be unacknowledged if they do not fit these preconceived templates for how they are expected to happen. For 10 points, name these programs for behavior that can be broken down into scenes.
scripts [or life script; or script matrix; or script theory; or rape script; accept Scripts, Plans, Goals, and Understanding: An Inquiry Into Human Knowledge Structures]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 321 ], [ 322, 438 ], [ 439, 547 ], [ 548, 684 ], [ 685, 820 ], [ 821, 905 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 60, -5 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 126, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-14-6_7
For 10 points, name these programs for behavior that can be broken down into scenes.
[ "script theory", "scripts", "script", "rape script", "Scripts", "script matrix", "life script" ]
acf-co24-14-6
7
In one therapeutic system, these phenomena name a “matrix” comprising arrows and circles labeled “P,” “A,” or “C,” representing “parent,” “adult,” and “child.” These are the first title phenomena in a book that extended one of its co-author’s theories of “Conceptual Dependency” into an analysis of “Knowledge Structure.” The Transactional Analysis methodology of Eric Berne posits a form of these phenomena described by the word “life.” Alongside “Plans, Goals, and Understanding” these phenomena title an early book on AI by Schank and Abelson. These phenomena name an extension to affect theory developed by Silvan Tomkins, which focuses on sequences of actions linked by affects. Sexual crimes are more likely to be unacknowledged if they do not fit these preconceived templates for how they are expected to happen. For 10 points, name these programs for behavior that can be broken down into scenes.
scripts [or life script; or script matrix; or script theory; or rape script; accept Scripts, Plans, Goals, and Understanding: An Inquiry Into Human Knowledge Structures]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 321 ], [ 322, 438 ], [ 439, 547 ], [ 548, 684 ], [ 685, 820 ], [ 821, 905 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 60, -5 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 126, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-14-7_1
Kashmiri Pandits distribute soaked walnuts on a variant of this festival called Herath.
[ "Shivarātri", "Shivratri", "Mahā Shivarātri" ]
acf-co24-14-7
1
Kashmiri Pandits distribute soaked walnuts on a variant of this festival called Herath. In a story about this festival, a hunter is rewarded for inadvertently honoring it by dropping leaves from a bel tree. This is the most common festival on which the Mahāmrityunjaya Mantra is recited. Pilgrims visit a set of twelve temples including Somnāth and Rameswaram during this festival, which occurs two weeks before Holi. During this festival, devotees smeared with vibhūti ash engage in night-long jāgaraṇa vigils, during which they recite the five-syllable panchākshara mantra using a japamāla of 108 rudrāksha beads. During this festival, an aniconic, rounded mūrti is given abhisheka as part of linga pūjā to commemorate the anniversary of its central deity dancing the tāṇḍava, drinking halāhala, and marrying Pārvatī. For 10 points, name this “Great Night” of Hinduism’s god of destruction.
Mahā Shivarātri [or Shivratri]
[ [ 0, 87 ], [ 88, 206 ], [ 207, 287 ], [ 288, 417 ], [ 418, 616 ], [ 617, 820 ], [ 821, 893 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 57, 15 ], [ 57, 15 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-14-7_2
In a story about this festival, a hunter is rewarded for inadvertently honoring it by dropping leaves from a bel tree.
[ "Shivarātri", "Shivratri", "Mahā Shivarātri" ]
acf-co24-14-7
2
Kashmiri Pandits distribute soaked walnuts on a variant of this festival called Herath. In a story about this festival, a hunter is rewarded for inadvertently honoring it by dropping leaves from a bel tree. This is the most common festival on which the Mahāmrityunjaya Mantra is recited. Pilgrims visit a set of twelve temples including Somnāth and Rameswaram during this festival, which occurs two weeks before Holi. During this festival, devotees smeared with vibhūti ash engage in night-long jāgaraṇa vigils, during which they recite the five-syllable panchākshara mantra using a japamāla of 108 rudrāksha beads. During this festival, an aniconic, rounded mūrti is given abhisheka as part of linga pūjā to commemorate the anniversary of its central deity dancing the tāṇḍava, drinking halāhala, and marrying Pārvatī. For 10 points, name this “Great Night” of Hinduism’s god of destruction.
Mahā Shivarātri [or Shivratri]
[ [ 0, 87 ], [ 88, 206 ], [ 207, 287 ], [ 288, 417 ], [ 418, 616 ], [ 617, 820 ], [ 821, 893 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 57, 15 ], [ 57, 15 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-14-7_3
This is the most common festival on which the Mahāmrityunjaya Mantra is recited.
[ "Shivarātri", "Shivratri", "Mahā Shivarātri" ]
acf-co24-14-7
3
Kashmiri Pandits distribute soaked walnuts on a variant of this festival called Herath. In a story about this festival, a hunter is rewarded for inadvertently honoring it by dropping leaves from a bel tree. This is the most common festival on which the Mahāmrityunjaya Mantra is recited. Pilgrims visit a set of twelve temples including Somnāth and Rameswaram during this festival, which occurs two weeks before Holi. During this festival, devotees smeared with vibhūti ash engage in night-long jāgaraṇa vigils, during which they recite the five-syllable panchākshara mantra using a japamāla of 108 rudrāksha beads. During this festival, an aniconic, rounded mūrti is given abhisheka as part of linga pūjā to commemorate the anniversary of its central deity dancing the tāṇḍava, drinking halāhala, and marrying Pārvatī. For 10 points, name this “Great Night” of Hinduism’s god of destruction.
Mahā Shivarātri [or Shivratri]
[ [ 0, 87 ], [ 88, 206 ], [ 207, 287 ], [ 288, 417 ], [ 418, 616 ], [ 617, 820 ], [ 821, 893 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 57, 15 ], [ 57, 15 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-14-7_4
Pilgrims visit a set of twelve temples including Somnāth and Rameswaram during this festival, which occurs two weeks before Holi.
[ "Shivarātri", "Shivratri", "Mahā Shivarātri" ]
acf-co24-14-7
4
Kashmiri Pandits distribute soaked walnuts on a variant of this festival called Herath. In a story about this festival, a hunter is rewarded for inadvertently honoring it by dropping leaves from a bel tree. This is the most common festival on which the Mahāmrityunjaya Mantra is recited. Pilgrims visit a set of twelve temples including Somnāth and Rameswaram during this festival, which occurs two weeks before Holi. During this festival, devotees smeared with vibhūti ash engage in night-long jāgaraṇa vigils, during which they recite the five-syllable panchākshara mantra using a japamāla of 108 rudrāksha beads. During this festival, an aniconic, rounded mūrti is given abhisheka as part of linga pūjā to commemorate the anniversary of its central deity dancing the tāṇḍava, drinking halāhala, and marrying Pārvatī. For 10 points, name this “Great Night” of Hinduism’s god of destruction.
Mahā Shivarātri [or Shivratri]
[ [ 0, 87 ], [ 88, 206 ], [ 207, 287 ], [ 288, 417 ], [ 418, 616 ], [ 617, 820 ], [ 821, 893 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 57, 15 ], [ 57, 15 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-14-7_5
During this festival, devotees smeared with vibhūti ash engage in night-long jāgaraṇa vigils, during which they recite the five-syllable panchākshara mantra using a japamāla of 108 rudrāksha beads.
[ "Shivarātri", "Shivratri", "Mahā Shivarātri" ]
acf-co24-14-7
5
Kashmiri Pandits distribute soaked walnuts on a variant of this festival called Herath. In a story about this festival, a hunter is rewarded for inadvertently honoring it by dropping leaves from a bel tree. This is the most common festival on which the Mahāmrityunjaya Mantra is recited. Pilgrims visit a set of twelve temples including Somnāth and Rameswaram during this festival, which occurs two weeks before Holi. During this festival, devotees smeared with vibhūti ash engage in night-long jāgaraṇa vigils, during which they recite the five-syllable panchākshara mantra using a japamāla of 108 rudrāksha beads. During this festival, an aniconic, rounded mūrti is given abhisheka as part of linga pūjā to commemorate the anniversary of its central deity dancing the tāṇḍava, drinking halāhala, and marrying Pārvatī. For 10 points, name this “Great Night” of Hinduism’s god of destruction.
Mahā Shivarātri [or Shivratri]
[ [ 0, 87 ], [ 88, 206 ], [ 207, 287 ], [ 288, 417 ], [ 418, 616 ], [ 617, 820 ], [ 821, 893 ] ]
{ "category": "religion", "category_full": "Religion - Religion", "category_main": "religion", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, 15 ], [ 57, 15 ], [ 57, 15 ], [ 87, -5 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 124, -5 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 0 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "religion" ] }
acf-co24-14-7_6
During this festival, an aniconic, rounded mūrti is given abhisheka as part of linga pūjā to commemorate the anniversary of its central deity dancing the tāṇḍava, drinking halāhala, and marrying Pārvatī.
[ "Shivarātri", "Shivratri", "Mahā Shivarātri" ]
acf-co24-14-7
6
Kashmiri Pandits distribute soaked walnuts on a variant of this festival called Herath. In a story about this festival, a hunter is rewarded for inadvertently honoring it by dropping leaves from a bel tree. This is the most common festival on which the Mahāmrityunjaya Mantra is recited. Pilgrims visit a set of twelve temples including Somnāth and Rameswaram during this festival, which occurs two weeks before Holi. During this festival, devotees smeared with vibhūti ash engage in night-long jāgaraṇa vigils, during which they recite the five-syllable panchākshara mantra using a japamāla of 108 rudrāksha beads. During this festival, an aniconic, rounded mūrti is given abhisheka as part of linga pūjā to commemorate the anniversary of its central deity dancing the tāṇḍava, drinking halāhala, and marrying Pārvatī. For 10 points, name this “Great Night” of Hinduism’s god of destruction.
Mahā Shivarātri [or Shivratri]
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acf-co24-14-7_7
For 10 points, name this “Great Night” of Hinduism’s god of destruction.
[ "Shivarātri", "Shivratri", "Mahā Shivarātri" ]
acf-co24-14-7
7
Kashmiri Pandits distribute soaked walnuts on a variant of this festival called Herath. In a story about this festival, a hunter is rewarded for inadvertently honoring it by dropping leaves from a bel tree. This is the most common festival on which the Mahāmrityunjaya Mantra is recited. Pilgrims visit a set of twelve temples including Somnāth and Rameswaram during this festival, which occurs two weeks before Holi. During this festival, devotees smeared with vibhūti ash engage in night-long jāgaraṇa vigils, during which they recite the five-syllable panchākshara mantra using a japamāla of 108 rudrāksha beads. During this festival, an aniconic, rounded mūrti is given abhisheka as part of linga pūjā to commemorate the anniversary of its central deity dancing the tāṇḍava, drinking halāhala, and marrying Pārvatī. For 10 points, name this “Great Night” of Hinduism’s god of destruction.
Mahā Shivarātri [or Shivratri]
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acf-co24-14-8_1
Since its 2005 FDA approval, a prodrug that competes with one of these compounds has been added to chemotherapy regimens to noticeably increase survival from T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
[ "nucleoside transporter", "nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors", "nucleosides", "nucleoside" ]
acf-co24-14-8
1
Since its 2005 FDA approval, a prodrug that competes with one of these compounds has been added to chemotherapy regimens to noticeably increase survival from T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. NBMPR inhibits a bidirectional transporter of these compounds, a family of which, exemplified by SLC28, uses a sodium gradient to move these compounds against their concentration. The pancreatic cancer drug gemcitabine is imported by transceptors that act on these compounds, which in humans are classified as either “concentrative” or “equilibrative.” The kinases TK1 and NME triply phosphorylate an antiviral drug resembling one of these compounds with a 3-prime azido group replacing a hydroxyl. A family of reverse transcriptase inhibitors, exemplified by AZT, disrupt DNA replication by acting as analogues of these compounds. For 10 points, name these phosphate-lacking metabolites consisting of a five-carbon sugar and a nitrogenous base.
nucleosides [accept nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors or nucleoside transporter; prompt on nucleobases; prompt on purines or pyrimidines; prompt on hENTs or hCNTs; reject “nucleotides” or “nucleic acids”]
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acf-co24-14-8_2
NBMPR inhibits a bidirectional transporter of these compounds, a family of which, exemplified by SLC28, uses a sodium gradient to move these compounds against their concentration.
[ "nucleoside transporter", "nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors", "nucleosides", "nucleoside" ]
acf-co24-14-8
2
Since its 2005 FDA approval, a prodrug that competes with one of these compounds has been added to chemotherapy regimens to noticeably increase survival from T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. NBMPR inhibits a bidirectional transporter of these compounds, a family of which, exemplified by SLC28, uses a sodium gradient to move these compounds against their concentration. The pancreatic cancer drug gemcitabine is imported by transceptors that act on these compounds, which in humans are classified as either “concentrative” or “equilibrative.” The kinases TK1 and NME triply phosphorylate an antiviral drug resembling one of these compounds with a 3-prime azido group replacing a hydroxyl. A family of reverse transcriptase inhibitors, exemplified by AZT, disrupt DNA replication by acting as analogues of these compounds. For 10 points, name these phosphate-lacking metabolites consisting of a five-carbon sugar and a nitrogenous base.
nucleosides [accept nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors or nucleoside transporter; prompt on nucleobases; prompt on purines or pyrimidines; prompt on hENTs or hCNTs; reject “nucleotides” or “nucleic acids”]
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acf-co24-14-8_3
The pancreatic cancer drug gemcitabine is imported by transceptors that act on these compounds, which in humans are classified as either “concentrative” or “equilibrative.”
[ "nucleoside transporter", "nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors", "nucleosides", "nucleoside" ]
acf-co24-14-8
3
Since its 2005 FDA approval, a prodrug that competes with one of these compounds has been added to chemotherapy regimens to noticeably increase survival from T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. NBMPR inhibits a bidirectional transporter of these compounds, a family of which, exemplified by SLC28, uses a sodium gradient to move these compounds against their concentration. The pancreatic cancer drug gemcitabine is imported by transceptors that act on these compounds, which in humans are classified as either “concentrative” or “equilibrative.” The kinases TK1 and NME triply phosphorylate an antiviral drug resembling one of these compounds with a 3-prime azido group replacing a hydroxyl. A family of reverse transcriptase inhibitors, exemplified by AZT, disrupt DNA replication by acting as analogues of these compounds. For 10 points, name these phosphate-lacking metabolites consisting of a five-carbon sugar and a nitrogenous base.
nucleosides [accept nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors or nucleoside transporter; prompt on nucleobases; prompt on purines or pyrimidines; prompt on hENTs or hCNTs; reject “nucleotides” or “nucleic acids”]
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acf-co24-14-8_4
The kinases TK1 and NME triply phosphorylate an antiviral drug resembling one of these compounds with a 3-prime azido group replacing a hydroxyl.
[ "nucleoside transporter", "nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors", "nucleosides", "nucleoside" ]
acf-co24-14-8
4
Since its 2005 FDA approval, a prodrug that competes with one of these compounds has been added to chemotherapy regimens to noticeably increase survival from T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. NBMPR inhibits a bidirectional transporter of these compounds, a family of which, exemplified by SLC28, uses a sodium gradient to move these compounds against their concentration. The pancreatic cancer drug gemcitabine is imported by transceptors that act on these compounds, which in humans are classified as either “concentrative” or “equilibrative.” The kinases TK1 and NME triply phosphorylate an antiviral drug resembling one of these compounds with a 3-prime azido group replacing a hydroxyl. A family of reverse transcriptase inhibitors, exemplified by AZT, disrupt DNA replication by acting as analogues of these compounds. For 10 points, name these phosphate-lacking metabolites consisting of a five-carbon sugar and a nitrogenous base.
nucleosides [accept nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors or nucleoside transporter; prompt on nucleobases; prompt on purines or pyrimidines; prompt on hENTs or hCNTs; reject “nucleotides” or “nucleic acids”]
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acf-co24-14-8_5
A family of reverse transcriptase inhibitors, exemplified by AZT, disrupt DNA replication by acting as analogues of these compounds.
[ "nucleoside transporter", "nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors", "nucleosides", "nucleoside" ]
acf-co24-14-8
5
Since its 2005 FDA approval, a prodrug that competes with one of these compounds has been added to chemotherapy regimens to noticeably increase survival from T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. NBMPR inhibits a bidirectional transporter of these compounds, a family of which, exemplified by SLC28, uses a sodium gradient to move these compounds against their concentration. The pancreatic cancer drug gemcitabine is imported by transceptors that act on these compounds, which in humans are classified as either “concentrative” or “equilibrative.” The kinases TK1 and NME triply phosphorylate an antiviral drug resembling one of these compounds with a 3-prime azido group replacing a hydroxyl. A family of reverse transcriptase inhibitors, exemplified by AZT, disrupt DNA replication by acting as analogues of these compounds. For 10 points, name these phosphate-lacking metabolites consisting of a five-carbon sugar and a nitrogenous base.
nucleosides [accept nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors or nucleoside transporter; prompt on nucleobases; prompt on purines or pyrimidines; prompt on hENTs or hCNTs; reject “nucleotides” or “nucleic acids”]
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acf-co24-14-8_6
For 10 points, name these phosphate-lacking metabolites consisting of a five-carbon sugar and a nitrogenous base.
[ "nucleoside transporter", "nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors", "nucleosides", "nucleoside" ]
acf-co24-14-8
6
Since its 2005 FDA approval, a prodrug that competes with one of these compounds has been added to chemotherapy regimens to noticeably increase survival from T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. NBMPR inhibits a bidirectional transporter of these compounds, a family of which, exemplified by SLC28, uses a sodium gradient to move these compounds against their concentration. The pancreatic cancer drug gemcitabine is imported by transceptors that act on these compounds, which in humans are classified as either “concentrative” or “equilibrative.” The kinases TK1 and NME triply phosphorylate an antiviral drug resembling one of these compounds with a 3-prime azido group replacing a hydroxyl. A family of reverse transcriptase inhibitors, exemplified by AZT, disrupt DNA replication by acting as analogues of these compounds. For 10 points, name these phosphate-lacking metabolites consisting of a five-carbon sugar and a nitrogenous base.
nucleosides [accept nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors or nucleoside transporter; prompt on nucleobases; prompt on purines or pyrimidines; prompt on hENTs or hCNTs; reject “nucleotides” or “nucleic acids”]
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acf-co24-14-9_1
This military action caused the “Dovecote” and “Rock” plans to falter, in part because the “totality of the tank” doctrine failed to account for the suitcase-like Sagger missile launchers used during it.
[ "Badr", "Suez", "breach Bar-Lev", "descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal", "crossing", "‘Amaliyat Badr", "the crossing", "crossing Suez", "Sinai", "attack", "ubūr", "Bar-Lev", "breach", "al-‘ubūr", "attack Sinai", "Operation Badr" ]
acf-co24-14-9
1
This military action caused the “Dovecote” and “Rock” plans to falter, in part because the “totality of the tank” doctrine failed to account for the suitcase-like Sagger missile launchers used during it. The popularity of this action led the “open door” policy of Law 43 to be styled as an “economic” successor to it. During the 8th annual parade celebrating this action, followers of the author of The Neglected Obligation pulled up in front of an honorary podium in a military truck to throw grenades at its architect. The self-styled “hero” of this action was mockingly asked “where’s our breakfast?” by protesters during the 1977 “bread riots.” During this action, high-pressure water cannons blasted away sand walls. For 10 points, identify this surprise attack that opened the Yom Kippur War, in which Anwar Sadat’s army breached the Bar-Lev Line and used pontoon bridges to enter Sinai.
Operation Badr [or “the crossing”; or al-‘ubūr; or ‘Amaliyat Badr; accept descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal; accept descriptions of breaching of the Bar-Lev Line until “Bar” is read; accept descriptions of an Egyptian surprise attack on Sinai Peninsula until “Sinai” is read; prompt on beginning of the Yom Kippur War, October War, or Ramadan War until “Yom” is read; prompt on descriptions of an Egyptian campaign against Israel] (Sadat was assassinated by followers of Muhammad Abd al-Salam Faraj.)
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acf-co24-14-9_2
The popularity of this action led the “open door” policy of Law 43 to be styled as an “economic” successor to it.
[ "Badr", "Suez", "breach Bar-Lev", "descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal", "crossing", "‘Amaliyat Badr", "the crossing", "crossing Suez", "Sinai", "attack", "ubūr", "Bar-Lev", "breach", "al-‘ubūr", "attack Sinai", "Operation Badr" ]
acf-co24-14-9
2
This military action caused the “Dovecote” and “Rock” plans to falter, in part because the “totality of the tank” doctrine failed to account for the suitcase-like Sagger missile launchers used during it. The popularity of this action led the “open door” policy of Law 43 to be styled as an “economic” successor to it. During the 8th annual parade celebrating this action, followers of the author of The Neglected Obligation pulled up in front of an honorary podium in a military truck to throw grenades at its architect. The self-styled “hero” of this action was mockingly asked “where’s our breakfast?” by protesters during the 1977 “bread riots.” During this action, high-pressure water cannons blasted away sand walls. For 10 points, identify this surprise attack that opened the Yom Kippur War, in which Anwar Sadat’s army breached the Bar-Lev Line and used pontoon bridges to enter Sinai.
Operation Badr [or “the crossing”; or al-‘ubūr; or ‘Amaliyat Badr; accept descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal; accept descriptions of breaching of the Bar-Lev Line until “Bar” is read; accept descriptions of an Egyptian surprise attack on Sinai Peninsula until “Sinai” is read; prompt on beginning of the Yom Kippur War, October War, or Ramadan War until “Yom” is read; prompt on descriptions of an Egyptian campaign against Israel] (Sadat was assassinated by followers of Muhammad Abd al-Salam Faraj.)
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acf-co24-14-9_3
During the 8th annual parade celebrating this action, followers of the author of The Neglected Obligation pulled up in front of an honorary podium in a military truck to throw grenades at its architect.
[ "Badr", "Suez", "breach Bar-Lev", "descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal", "crossing", "‘Amaliyat Badr", "the crossing", "crossing Suez", "Sinai", "attack", "ubūr", "Bar-Lev", "breach", "al-‘ubūr", "attack Sinai", "Operation Badr" ]
acf-co24-14-9
3
This military action caused the “Dovecote” and “Rock” plans to falter, in part because the “totality of the tank” doctrine failed to account for the suitcase-like Sagger missile launchers used during it. The popularity of this action led the “open door” policy of Law 43 to be styled as an “economic” successor to it. During the 8th annual parade celebrating this action, followers of the author of The Neglected Obligation pulled up in front of an honorary podium in a military truck to throw grenades at its architect. The self-styled “hero” of this action was mockingly asked “where’s our breakfast?” by protesters during the 1977 “bread riots.” During this action, high-pressure water cannons blasted away sand walls. For 10 points, identify this surprise attack that opened the Yom Kippur War, in which Anwar Sadat’s army breached the Bar-Lev Line and used pontoon bridges to enter Sinai.
Operation Badr [or “the crossing”; or al-‘ubūr; or ‘Amaliyat Badr; accept descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal; accept descriptions of breaching of the Bar-Lev Line until “Bar” is read; accept descriptions of an Egyptian surprise attack on Sinai Peninsula until “Sinai” is read; prompt on beginning of the Yom Kippur War, October War, or Ramadan War until “Yom” is read; prompt on descriptions of an Egyptian campaign against Israel] (Sadat was assassinated by followers of Muhammad Abd al-Salam Faraj.)
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acf-co24-14-9_4
The self-styled “hero” of this action was mockingly asked “where’s our breakfast?” by protesters during the 1977 “bread riots.”
[ "Badr", "Suez", "breach Bar-Lev", "descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal", "crossing", "‘Amaliyat Badr", "the crossing", "crossing Suez", "Sinai", "attack", "ubūr", "Bar-Lev", "breach", "al-‘ubūr", "attack Sinai", "Operation Badr" ]
acf-co24-14-9
4
This military action caused the “Dovecote” and “Rock” plans to falter, in part because the “totality of the tank” doctrine failed to account for the suitcase-like Sagger missile launchers used during it. The popularity of this action led the “open door” policy of Law 43 to be styled as an “economic” successor to it. During the 8th annual parade celebrating this action, followers of the author of The Neglected Obligation pulled up in front of an honorary podium in a military truck to throw grenades at its architect. The self-styled “hero” of this action was mockingly asked “where’s our breakfast?” by protesters during the 1977 “bread riots.” During this action, high-pressure water cannons blasted away sand walls. For 10 points, identify this surprise attack that opened the Yom Kippur War, in which Anwar Sadat’s army breached the Bar-Lev Line and used pontoon bridges to enter Sinai.
Operation Badr [or “the crossing”; or al-‘ubūr; or ‘Amaliyat Badr; accept descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal; accept descriptions of breaching of the Bar-Lev Line until “Bar” is read; accept descriptions of an Egyptian surprise attack on Sinai Peninsula until “Sinai” is read; prompt on beginning of the Yom Kippur War, October War, or Ramadan War until “Yom” is read; prompt on descriptions of an Egyptian campaign against Israel] (Sadat was assassinated by followers of Muhammad Abd al-Salam Faraj.)
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acf-co24-14-9_5
During this action, high-pressure water cannons blasted away sand walls.
[ "Badr", "Suez", "breach Bar-Lev", "descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal", "crossing", "‘Amaliyat Badr", "the crossing", "crossing Suez", "Sinai", "attack", "ubūr", "Bar-Lev", "breach", "al-‘ubūr", "attack Sinai", "Operation Badr" ]
acf-co24-14-9
5
This military action caused the “Dovecote” and “Rock” plans to falter, in part because the “totality of the tank” doctrine failed to account for the suitcase-like Sagger missile launchers used during it. The popularity of this action led the “open door” policy of Law 43 to be styled as an “economic” successor to it. During the 8th annual parade celebrating this action, followers of the author of The Neglected Obligation pulled up in front of an honorary podium in a military truck to throw grenades at its architect. The self-styled “hero” of this action was mockingly asked “where’s our breakfast?” by protesters during the 1977 “bread riots.” During this action, high-pressure water cannons blasted away sand walls. For 10 points, identify this surprise attack that opened the Yom Kippur War, in which Anwar Sadat’s army breached the Bar-Lev Line and used pontoon bridges to enter Sinai.
Operation Badr [or “the crossing”; or al-‘ubūr; or ‘Amaliyat Badr; accept descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal; accept descriptions of breaching of the Bar-Lev Line until “Bar” is read; accept descriptions of an Egyptian surprise attack on Sinai Peninsula until “Sinai” is read; prompt on beginning of the Yom Kippur War, October War, or Ramadan War until “Yom” is read; prompt on descriptions of an Egyptian campaign against Israel] (Sadat was assassinated by followers of Muhammad Abd al-Salam Faraj.)
[ [ 0, 203 ], [ 204, 317 ], [ 318, 521 ], [ 522, 649 ], [ 650, 722 ], [ 723, 894 ] ]
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acf-co24-14-9_6
For 10 points, identify this surprise attack that opened the Yom Kippur War, in which Anwar Sadat’s army breached the Bar-Lev Line and used pontoon bridges to enter Sinai.
[ "Badr", "Suez", "breach Bar-Lev", "descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal", "crossing", "‘Amaliyat Badr", "the crossing", "crossing Suez", "Sinai", "attack", "ubūr", "Bar-Lev", "breach", "al-‘ubūr", "attack Sinai", "Operation Badr" ]
acf-co24-14-9
6
This military action caused the “Dovecote” and “Rock” plans to falter, in part because the “totality of the tank” doctrine failed to account for the suitcase-like Sagger missile launchers used during it. The popularity of this action led the “open door” policy of Law 43 to be styled as an “economic” successor to it. During the 8th annual parade celebrating this action, followers of the author of The Neglected Obligation pulled up in front of an honorary podium in a military truck to throw grenades at its architect. The self-styled “hero” of this action was mockingly asked “where’s our breakfast?” by protesters during the 1977 “bread riots.” During this action, high-pressure water cannons blasted away sand walls. For 10 points, identify this surprise attack that opened the Yom Kippur War, in which Anwar Sadat’s army breached the Bar-Lev Line and used pontoon bridges to enter Sinai.
Operation Badr [or “the crossing”; or al-‘ubūr; or ‘Amaliyat Badr; accept descriptions of the Egyptian crossing of the Suez Canal; accept descriptions of breaching of the Bar-Lev Line until “Bar” is read; accept descriptions of an Egyptian surprise attack on Sinai Peninsula until “Sinai” is read; prompt on beginning of the Yom Kippur War, October War, or Ramadan War until “Yom” is read; prompt on descriptions of an Egyptian campaign against Israel] (Sadat was assassinated by followers of Muhammad Abd al-Salam Faraj.)
[ [ 0, 203 ], [ 204, 317 ], [ 318, 521 ], [ 522, 649 ], [ 650, 722 ], [ 723, 894 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - World History", "category_main": "history-world-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, 15 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 99, -5 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 129, -5 ], [ 129, -5 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 146, 0 ], [ 146, 0 ], [ 146, 10 ], [ 146, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-10_1
This character theorizes a figure who, like God, “remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible… indifferent, paring his fingernails.”
[ "Stephen Dedalus", "Dedalus", "Stephen" ]
acf-co24-14-10
1
This character theorizes a figure who, like God, “remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible… indifferent, paring his fingernails.” This character declares “Aristotle has not defined pity and terror; I have” and uses a wastebasket to illustrate the roles of integritas and claritas in an aesthetic theory he calls “applied Aquinas.” This character retorts that his country is an “old sow that eats her farrow” when Davin declares that “a man’s country” comes before poetry. This character writes of a “eucharistic hymn” in a villanelle that asks, “Are you not weary of ardent ways?” This character asks an “old artificer” to “stand me now and ever in good stead” after resolving to “encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience” and forge the “uncreated conscience of my race.” For 10 points, name this protagonist of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce.
Stephen Dedalus [or Stephen Dedalus]
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{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-10_2
This character declares “Aristotle has not defined pity and terror; I have” and uses a wastebasket to illustrate the roles of integritas and claritas in an aesthetic theory he calls “applied Aquinas.”
[ "Stephen Dedalus", "Dedalus", "Stephen" ]
acf-co24-14-10
2
This character theorizes a figure who, like God, “remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible… indifferent, paring his fingernails.” This character declares “Aristotle has not defined pity and terror; I have” and uses a wastebasket to illustrate the roles of integritas and claritas in an aesthetic theory he calls “applied Aquinas.” This character retorts that his country is an “old sow that eats her farrow” when Davin declares that “a man’s country” comes before poetry. This character writes of a “eucharistic hymn” in a villanelle that asks, “Are you not weary of ardent ways?” This character asks an “old artificer” to “stand me now and ever in good stead” after resolving to “encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience” and forge the “uncreated conscience of my race.” For 10 points, name this protagonist of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce.
Stephen Dedalus [or Stephen Dedalus]
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{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-10_3
This character retorts that his country is an “old sow that eats her farrow” when Davin declares that “a man’s country” comes before poetry.
[ "Stephen Dedalus", "Dedalus", "Stephen" ]
acf-co24-14-10
3
This character theorizes a figure who, like God, “remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible… indifferent, paring his fingernails.” This character declares “Aristotle has not defined pity and terror; I have” and uses a wastebasket to illustrate the roles of integritas and claritas in an aesthetic theory he calls “applied Aquinas.” This character retorts that his country is an “old sow that eats her farrow” when Davin declares that “a man’s country” comes before poetry. This character writes of a “eucharistic hymn” in a villanelle that asks, “Are you not weary of ardent ways?” This character asks an “old artificer” to “stand me now and ever in good stead” after resolving to “encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience” and forge the “uncreated conscience of my race.” For 10 points, name this protagonist of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce.
Stephen Dedalus [or Stephen Dedalus]
[ [ 0, 157 ], [ 158, 358 ], [ 359, 500 ], [ 501, 609 ], [ 610, 818 ], [ 819, 914 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-10_4
This character writes of a “eucharistic hymn” in a villanelle that asks, “Are you not weary of ardent ways?”
[ "Stephen Dedalus", "Dedalus", "Stephen" ]
acf-co24-14-10
4
This character theorizes a figure who, like God, “remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible… indifferent, paring his fingernails.” This character declares “Aristotle has not defined pity and terror; I have” and uses a wastebasket to illustrate the roles of integritas and claritas in an aesthetic theory he calls “applied Aquinas.” This character retorts that his country is an “old sow that eats her farrow” when Davin declares that “a man’s country” comes before poetry. This character writes of a “eucharistic hymn” in a villanelle that asks, “Are you not weary of ardent ways?” This character asks an “old artificer” to “stand me now and ever in good stead” after resolving to “encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience” and forge the “uncreated conscience of my race.” For 10 points, name this protagonist of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce.
Stephen Dedalus [or Stephen Dedalus]
[ [ 0, 157 ], [ 158, 358 ], [ 359, 500 ], [ 501, 609 ], [ 610, 818 ], [ 819, 914 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-10_5
This character asks an “old artificer” to “stand me now and ever in good stead” after resolving to “encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience” and forge the “uncreated conscience of my race.”
[ "Stephen Dedalus", "Dedalus", "Stephen" ]
acf-co24-14-10
5
This character theorizes a figure who, like God, “remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible… indifferent, paring his fingernails.” This character declares “Aristotle has not defined pity and terror; I have” and uses a wastebasket to illustrate the roles of integritas and claritas in an aesthetic theory he calls “applied Aquinas.” This character retorts that his country is an “old sow that eats her farrow” when Davin declares that “a man’s country” comes before poetry. This character writes of a “eucharistic hymn” in a villanelle that asks, “Are you not weary of ardent ways?” This character asks an “old artificer” to “stand me now and ever in good stead” after resolving to “encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience” and forge the “uncreated conscience of my race.” For 10 points, name this protagonist of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce.
Stephen Dedalus [or Stephen Dedalus]
[ [ 0, 157 ], [ 158, 358 ], [ 359, 500 ], [ 501, 609 ], [ 610, 818 ], [ 819, 914 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-10_6
For 10 points, name this protagonist of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce.
[ "Stephen Dedalus", "Dedalus", "Stephen" ]
acf-co24-14-10
6
This character theorizes a figure who, like God, “remains within or behind or beyond or above his handiwork, invisible… indifferent, paring his fingernails.” This character declares “Aristotle has not defined pity and terror; I have” and uses a wastebasket to illustrate the roles of integritas and claritas in an aesthetic theory he calls “applied Aquinas.” This character retorts that his country is an “old sow that eats her farrow” when Davin declares that “a man’s country” comes before poetry. This character writes of a “eucharistic hymn” in a villanelle that asks, “Are you not weary of ardent ways?” This character asks an “old artificer” to “stand me now and ever in good stead” after resolving to “encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience” and forge the “uncreated conscience of my race.” For 10 points, name this protagonist of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce.
Stephen Dedalus [or Stephen Dedalus]
[ [ 0, 157 ], [ 158, 358 ], [ 359, 500 ], [ 501, 609 ], [ 610, 818 ], [ 819, 914 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 25, 15 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 132, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 144, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 148, 10 ], [ 152, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-11_1
Noticing a certain symmetry of the simplicial k-module in Hochschild homology allows a generalization to a homology named for this property over objects with this property in an abelian category.
[ "monogenous", "cyclic", "word forms like cyclicity", "primary cyclic" ]
acf-co24-14-11
1
Noticing a certain symmetry of the simplicial k-module in Hochschild homology allows a generalization to a homology named for this property over objects with this property in an abelian category. If a Galois extension has this property, field elements of unit norm are characterized by Hilbert’s Theorem 90. Considering the Frobenius endomorphism shows that the Galois group of a finite field has this property. The multiplicative group of integers modulo n has this property if and only if n is one, two, four, or either one or two times a power of an odd prime. By a fundamental structure theorem, any finitely generated abelian group is the direct sum of groups with this property, which represent rotational symmetries of a polygon. For 10 points, name this property of groups such as the integers modulo n that are generated by a single element.
cyclic [accept word forms like cyclicity; accept primary cyclic or monogenous]
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acf-co24-14-11_2
If a Galois extension has this property, field elements of unit norm are characterized by Hilbert’s Theorem 90.
[ "monogenous", "cyclic", "word forms like cyclicity", "primary cyclic" ]
acf-co24-14-11
2
Noticing a certain symmetry of the simplicial k-module in Hochschild homology allows a generalization to a homology named for this property over objects with this property in an abelian category. If a Galois extension has this property, field elements of unit norm are characterized by Hilbert’s Theorem 90. Considering the Frobenius endomorphism shows that the Galois group of a finite field has this property. The multiplicative group of integers modulo n has this property if and only if n is one, two, four, or either one or two times a power of an odd prime. By a fundamental structure theorem, any finitely generated abelian group is the direct sum of groups with this property, which represent rotational symmetries of a polygon. For 10 points, name this property of groups such as the integers modulo n that are generated by a single element.
cyclic [accept word forms like cyclicity; accept primary cyclic or monogenous]
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acf-co24-14-11_3
Considering the Frobenius endomorphism shows that the Galois group of a finite field has this property.
[ "monogenous", "cyclic", "word forms like cyclicity", "primary cyclic" ]
acf-co24-14-11
3
Noticing a certain symmetry of the simplicial k-module in Hochschild homology allows a generalization to a homology named for this property over objects with this property in an abelian category. If a Galois extension has this property, field elements of unit norm are characterized by Hilbert’s Theorem 90. Considering the Frobenius endomorphism shows that the Galois group of a finite field has this property. The multiplicative group of integers modulo n has this property if and only if n is one, two, four, or either one or two times a power of an odd prime. By a fundamental structure theorem, any finitely generated abelian group is the direct sum of groups with this property, which represent rotational symmetries of a polygon. For 10 points, name this property of groups such as the integers modulo n that are generated by a single element.
cyclic [accept word forms like cyclicity; accept primary cyclic or monogenous]
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acf-co24-14-11_4
The multiplicative group of integers modulo n has this property if and only if n is one, two, four, or either one or two times a power of an odd prime.
[ "monogenous", "cyclic", "word forms like cyclicity", "primary cyclic" ]
acf-co24-14-11
4
Noticing a certain symmetry of the simplicial k-module in Hochschild homology allows a generalization to a homology named for this property over objects with this property in an abelian category. If a Galois extension has this property, field elements of unit norm are characterized by Hilbert’s Theorem 90. Considering the Frobenius endomorphism shows that the Galois group of a finite field has this property. The multiplicative group of integers modulo n has this property if and only if n is one, two, four, or either one or two times a power of an odd prime. By a fundamental structure theorem, any finitely generated abelian group is the direct sum of groups with this property, which represent rotational symmetries of a polygon. For 10 points, name this property of groups such as the integers modulo n that are generated by a single element.
cyclic [accept word forms like cyclicity; accept primary cyclic or monogenous]
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acf-co24-14-11_5
By a fundamental structure theorem, any finitely generated abelian group is the direct sum of groups with this property, which represent rotational symmetries of a polygon.
[ "monogenous", "cyclic", "word forms like cyclicity", "primary cyclic" ]
acf-co24-14-11
5
Noticing a certain symmetry of the simplicial k-module in Hochschild homology allows a generalization to a homology named for this property over objects with this property in an abelian category. If a Galois extension has this property, field elements of unit norm are characterized by Hilbert’s Theorem 90. Considering the Frobenius endomorphism shows that the Galois group of a finite field has this property. The multiplicative group of integers modulo n has this property if and only if n is one, two, four, or either one or two times a power of an odd prime. By a fundamental structure theorem, any finitely generated abelian group is the direct sum of groups with this property, which represent rotational symmetries of a polygon. For 10 points, name this property of groups such as the integers modulo n that are generated by a single element.
cyclic [accept word forms like cyclicity; accept primary cyclic or monogenous]
[ [ 0, 195 ], [ 196, 307 ], [ 308, 411 ], [ 412, 564 ], [ 565, 737 ], [ 738, 851 ] ]
{ "category": "other-science-(math)", "category_full": "Other Science (Math) - Other Science (Math)", "category_main": "other-science-(math)", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 60, -5 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 120, -5 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 123, -5 ], [ 126, -5 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 141, 10 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 0 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-science-(math)" ] }
acf-co24-14-11_6
For 10 points, name this property of groups such as the integers modulo n that are generated by a single element.
[ "monogenous", "cyclic", "word forms like cyclicity", "primary cyclic" ]
acf-co24-14-11
6
Noticing a certain symmetry of the simplicial k-module in Hochschild homology allows a generalization to a homology named for this property over objects with this property in an abelian category. If a Galois extension has this property, field elements of unit norm are characterized by Hilbert’s Theorem 90. Considering the Frobenius endomorphism shows that the Galois group of a finite field has this property. The multiplicative group of integers modulo n has this property if and only if n is one, two, four, or either one or two times a power of an odd prime. By a fundamental structure theorem, any finitely generated abelian group is the direct sum of groups with this property, which represent rotational symmetries of a polygon. For 10 points, name this property of groups such as the integers modulo n that are generated by a single element.
cyclic [accept word forms like cyclicity; accept primary cyclic or monogenous]
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acf-co24-14-12_1
Vendulka repeatedly refuses to do this action because she thinks it would disturb the ghost of Lukáš’s dead wife in an opera titled for this action by Smetana.
[ "The Kiss", "Hubička", "kissing", "bacio", "Kiss", "Il bacio", "word forms", "kiss" ]
acf-co24-14-12
1
Vendulka repeatedly refuses to do this action because she thinks it would disturb the ghost of Lukáš’s dead wife in an opera titled for this action by Smetana. In Rusalka’s final scene, the Prince begs the title water nymph to perform this action, knowing it will kill him. This action titles a popular “vocal waltz” by Luigi Arditi. This action names a gentle E major theme introduced in the Act I duet “Già nella notte densa” that returns twice in Act IV during Otello’s entrance and suicide. A repeated note and a rising fourth represent this action just as the orchestra builds to a “sickening” 8-note polytonal chord that resolves to C-sharp major. While stabbing Baron Scarpia, Tosca shouts, “this is Tosca’s” this word. After experiencing fear for the first time, Siegfried does this action to wake Brünnhilde. For 10 points, what action does Salome do to Jochaanan’s plated, severed head?
kissing [or word forms; accept bacio or “Il bacio” or The Kiss or Hubička; prompt on “Libej mne”]
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, -5 ], [ 65, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-14-12_2
In Rusalka’s final scene, the Prince begs the title water nymph to perform this action, knowing it will kill him.
[ "The Kiss", "Hubička", "kissing", "bacio", "Kiss", "Il bacio", "word forms", "kiss" ]
acf-co24-14-12
2
Vendulka repeatedly refuses to do this action because she thinks it would disturb the ghost of Lukáš’s dead wife in an opera titled for this action by Smetana. In Rusalka’s final scene, the Prince begs the title water nymph to perform this action, knowing it will kill him. This action titles a popular “vocal waltz” by Luigi Arditi. This action names a gentle E major theme introduced in the Act I duet “Già nella notte densa” that returns twice in Act IV during Otello’s entrance and suicide. A repeated note and a rising fourth represent this action just as the orchestra builds to a “sickening” 8-note polytonal chord that resolves to C-sharp major. While stabbing Baron Scarpia, Tosca shouts, “this is Tosca’s” this word. After experiencing fear for the first time, Siegfried does this action to wake Brünnhilde. For 10 points, what action does Salome do to Jochaanan’s plated, severed head?
kissing [or word forms; accept bacio or “Il bacio” or The Kiss or Hubička; prompt on “Libej mne”]
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{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, -5 ], [ 65, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-14-12_3
This action titles a popular “vocal waltz” by Luigi Arditi.
[ "The Kiss", "Hubička", "kissing", "bacio", "Kiss", "Il bacio", "word forms", "kiss" ]
acf-co24-14-12
3
Vendulka repeatedly refuses to do this action because she thinks it would disturb the ghost of Lukáš’s dead wife in an opera titled for this action by Smetana. In Rusalka’s final scene, the Prince begs the title water nymph to perform this action, knowing it will kill him. This action titles a popular “vocal waltz” by Luigi Arditi. This action names a gentle E major theme introduced in the Act I duet “Già nella notte densa” that returns twice in Act IV during Otello’s entrance and suicide. A repeated note and a rising fourth represent this action just as the orchestra builds to a “sickening” 8-note polytonal chord that resolves to C-sharp major. While stabbing Baron Scarpia, Tosca shouts, “this is Tosca’s” this word. After experiencing fear for the first time, Siegfried does this action to wake Brünnhilde. For 10 points, what action does Salome do to Jochaanan’s plated, severed head?
kissing [or word forms; accept bacio or “Il bacio” or The Kiss or Hubička; prompt on “Libej mne”]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 273 ], [ 274, 333 ], [ 334, 495 ], [ 496, 654 ], [ 655, 727 ], [ 728, 818 ], [ 819, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, -5 ], [ 65, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-14-12_4
This action names a gentle E major theme introduced in the Act I duet “Già nella notte densa” that returns twice in Act IV during Otello’s entrance and suicide.
[ "The Kiss", "Hubička", "kissing", "bacio", "Kiss", "Il bacio", "word forms", "kiss" ]
acf-co24-14-12
4
Vendulka repeatedly refuses to do this action because she thinks it would disturb the ghost of Lukáš’s dead wife in an opera titled for this action by Smetana. In Rusalka’s final scene, the Prince begs the title water nymph to perform this action, knowing it will kill him. This action titles a popular “vocal waltz” by Luigi Arditi. This action names a gentle E major theme introduced in the Act I duet “Già nella notte densa” that returns twice in Act IV during Otello’s entrance and suicide. A repeated note and a rising fourth represent this action just as the orchestra builds to a “sickening” 8-note polytonal chord that resolves to C-sharp major. While stabbing Baron Scarpia, Tosca shouts, “this is Tosca’s” this word. After experiencing fear for the first time, Siegfried does this action to wake Brünnhilde. For 10 points, what action does Salome do to Jochaanan’s plated, severed head?
kissing [or word forms; accept bacio or “Il bacio” or The Kiss or Hubička; prompt on “Libej mne”]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 273 ], [ 274, 333 ], [ 334, 495 ], [ 496, 654 ], [ 655, 727 ], [ 728, 818 ], [ 819, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, -5 ], [ 65, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-14-12_5
A repeated note and a rising fourth represent this action just as the orchestra builds to a “sickening” 8-note polytonal chord that resolves to C-sharp major.
[ "The Kiss", "Hubička", "kissing", "bacio", "Kiss", "Il bacio", "word forms", "kiss" ]
acf-co24-14-12
5
Vendulka repeatedly refuses to do this action because she thinks it would disturb the ghost of Lukáš’s dead wife in an opera titled for this action by Smetana. In Rusalka’s final scene, the Prince begs the title water nymph to perform this action, knowing it will kill him. This action titles a popular “vocal waltz” by Luigi Arditi. This action names a gentle E major theme introduced in the Act I duet “Già nella notte densa” that returns twice in Act IV during Otello’s entrance and suicide. A repeated note and a rising fourth represent this action just as the orchestra builds to a “sickening” 8-note polytonal chord that resolves to C-sharp major. While stabbing Baron Scarpia, Tosca shouts, “this is Tosca’s” this word. After experiencing fear for the first time, Siegfried does this action to wake Brünnhilde. For 10 points, what action does Salome do to Jochaanan’s plated, severed head?
kissing [or word forms; accept bacio or “Il bacio” or The Kiss or Hubička; prompt on “Libej mne”]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 273 ], [ 274, 333 ], [ 334, 495 ], [ 496, 654 ], [ 655, 727 ], [ 728, 818 ], [ 819, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, -5 ], [ 65, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-14-12_6
While stabbing Baron Scarpia, Tosca shouts, “this is Tosca’s” this word.
[ "The Kiss", "Hubička", "kissing", "bacio", "Kiss", "Il bacio", "word forms", "kiss" ]
acf-co24-14-12
6
Vendulka repeatedly refuses to do this action because she thinks it would disturb the ghost of Lukáš’s dead wife in an opera titled for this action by Smetana. In Rusalka’s final scene, the Prince begs the title water nymph to perform this action, knowing it will kill him. This action titles a popular “vocal waltz” by Luigi Arditi. This action names a gentle E major theme introduced in the Act I duet “Già nella notte densa” that returns twice in Act IV during Otello’s entrance and suicide. A repeated note and a rising fourth represent this action just as the orchestra builds to a “sickening” 8-note polytonal chord that resolves to C-sharp major. While stabbing Baron Scarpia, Tosca shouts, “this is Tosca’s” this word. After experiencing fear for the first time, Siegfried does this action to wake Brünnhilde. For 10 points, what action does Salome do to Jochaanan’s plated, severed head?
kissing [or word forms; accept bacio or “Il bacio” or The Kiss or Hubička; prompt on “Libej mne”]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 273 ], [ 274, 333 ], [ 334, 495 ], [ 496, 654 ], [ 655, 727 ], [ 728, 818 ], [ 819, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, -5 ], [ 65, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-14-12_7
After experiencing fear for the first time, Siegfried does this action to wake Brünnhilde.
[ "The Kiss", "Hubička", "kissing", "bacio", "Kiss", "Il bacio", "word forms", "kiss" ]
acf-co24-14-12
7
Vendulka repeatedly refuses to do this action because she thinks it would disturb the ghost of Lukáš’s dead wife in an opera titled for this action by Smetana. In Rusalka’s final scene, the Prince begs the title water nymph to perform this action, knowing it will kill him. This action titles a popular “vocal waltz” by Luigi Arditi. This action names a gentle E major theme introduced in the Act I duet “Già nella notte densa” that returns twice in Act IV during Otello’s entrance and suicide. A repeated note and a rising fourth represent this action just as the orchestra builds to a “sickening” 8-note polytonal chord that resolves to C-sharp major. While stabbing Baron Scarpia, Tosca shouts, “this is Tosca’s” this word. After experiencing fear for the first time, Siegfried does this action to wake Brünnhilde. For 10 points, what action does Salome do to Jochaanan’s plated, severed head?
kissing [or word forms; accept bacio or “Il bacio” or The Kiss or Hubička; prompt on “Libej mne”]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 273 ], [ 274, 333 ], [ 334, 495 ], [ 496, 654 ], [ 655, 727 ], [ 728, 818 ], [ 819, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, -5 ], [ 65, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-14-12_8
For 10 points, what action does Salome do to Jochaanan’s plated, severed head?
[ "The Kiss", "Hubička", "kissing", "bacio", "Kiss", "Il bacio", "word forms", "kiss" ]
acf-co24-14-12
8
Vendulka repeatedly refuses to do this action because she thinks it would disturb the ghost of Lukáš’s dead wife in an opera titled for this action by Smetana. In Rusalka’s final scene, the Prince begs the title water nymph to perform this action, knowing it will kill him. This action titles a popular “vocal waltz” by Luigi Arditi. This action names a gentle E major theme introduced in the Act I duet “Già nella notte densa” that returns twice in Act IV during Otello’s entrance and suicide. A repeated note and a rising fourth represent this action just as the orchestra builds to a “sickening” 8-note polytonal chord that resolves to C-sharp major. While stabbing Baron Scarpia, Tosca shouts, “this is Tosca’s” this word. After experiencing fear for the first time, Siegfried does this action to wake Brünnhilde. For 10 points, what action does Salome do to Jochaanan’s plated, severed head?
kissing [or word forms; accept bacio or “Il bacio” or The Kiss or Hubička; prompt on “Libej mne”]
[ [ 0, 159 ], [ 160, 273 ], [ 274, 333 ], [ 334, 495 ], [ 496, 654 ], [ 655, 727 ], [ 728, 818 ], [ 819, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 62, -5 ], [ 65, 15 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 105, -5 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 112, -5 ], [ 114, -5 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ], [ 147, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ], [ 151, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-14-13_1
An envoy claimed that these objects matter less than virtue after a king insolently asked about their weight and size.
[ "Tripod", "bronze vessels", "dǐng", "tripods", "Nine Tripods", "Jiǔ Dǐng", "dǐng until read", "bronze", "tripod", "ritual bronzes", "ting", "cauldrons", "cauldron", "Dǐng" ]
acf-co24-14-13
1
An envoy claimed that these objects matter less than virtue after a king insolently asked about their weight and size. The caches of these objects found in the 19th century are thought to have been buried by nobles fleeing west from “barbarians” who worshiped dog totems. The Basic Annals claim that a group of these objects was reduced in number from nine to eight when a king captured them and accidentally dropped one in a river. A 2022 study revealed the mix of jin and xi used in a recipe for these objects from the Artificers’ Record. These objects typically feature a zoomorphic design later identified with the gluttonous evil spirit tāotiè. The most prestigious of these objects often had two handles and three legs. For 10 points, Shang and Zhou kings were buried with what ornate ritual vessels, also called dǐng, during China’s “age” named for their material?
ritual bronzes [accept ting or dǐng until read; or cauldrons; or tripods; or bronze vessels; accept Jiǔ Dǐng or Nine Tripods; prompt on vessels or grave goods until “vessels” is read] (The first clue refers to Wángsūn Mǎn’s speech to King Zhuāng of Chǔ, as reported in the Spring and Autumn Annals. The second clue refers to the Quǎnróng.)
[ [ 0, 118 ], [ 119, 271 ], [ 272, 432 ], [ 433, 541 ], [ 542, 650 ], [ 651, 726 ], [ 727, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 70, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 141, -5 ], [ 143, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-13_2
The caches of these objects found in the 19th century are thought to have been buried by nobles fleeing west from “barbarians” who worshiped dog totems.
[ "Tripod", "bronze vessels", "dǐng", "tripods", "Nine Tripods", "Jiǔ Dǐng", "dǐng until read", "bronze", "tripod", "ritual bronzes", "ting", "cauldrons", "cauldron", "Dǐng" ]
acf-co24-14-13
2
An envoy claimed that these objects matter less than virtue after a king insolently asked about their weight and size. The caches of these objects found in the 19th century are thought to have been buried by nobles fleeing west from “barbarians” who worshiped dog totems. The Basic Annals claim that a group of these objects was reduced in number from nine to eight when a king captured them and accidentally dropped one in a river. A 2022 study revealed the mix of jin and xi used in a recipe for these objects from the Artificers’ Record. These objects typically feature a zoomorphic design later identified with the gluttonous evil spirit tāotiè. The most prestigious of these objects often had two handles and three legs. For 10 points, Shang and Zhou kings were buried with what ornate ritual vessels, also called dǐng, during China’s “age” named for their material?
ritual bronzes [accept ting or dǐng until read; or cauldrons; or tripods; or bronze vessels; accept Jiǔ Dǐng or Nine Tripods; prompt on vessels or grave goods until “vessels” is read] (The first clue refers to Wángsūn Mǎn’s speech to King Zhuāng of Chǔ, as reported in the Spring and Autumn Annals. The second clue refers to the Quǎnróng.)
[ [ 0, 118 ], [ 119, 271 ], [ 272, 432 ], [ 433, 541 ], [ 542, 650 ], [ 651, 726 ], [ 727, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 70, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 141, -5 ], [ 143, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-13_3
The Basic Annals claim that a group of these objects was reduced in number from nine to eight when a king captured them and accidentally dropped one in a river.
[ "Tripod", "bronze vessels", "dǐng", "tripods", "Nine Tripods", "Jiǔ Dǐng", "dǐng until read", "bronze", "tripod", "ritual bronzes", "ting", "cauldrons", "cauldron", "Dǐng" ]
acf-co24-14-13
3
An envoy claimed that these objects matter less than virtue after a king insolently asked about their weight and size. The caches of these objects found in the 19th century are thought to have been buried by nobles fleeing west from “barbarians” who worshiped dog totems. The Basic Annals claim that a group of these objects was reduced in number from nine to eight when a king captured them and accidentally dropped one in a river. A 2022 study revealed the mix of jin and xi used in a recipe for these objects from the Artificers’ Record. These objects typically feature a zoomorphic design later identified with the gluttonous evil spirit tāotiè. The most prestigious of these objects often had two handles and three legs. For 10 points, Shang and Zhou kings were buried with what ornate ritual vessels, also called dǐng, during China’s “age” named for their material?
ritual bronzes [accept ting or dǐng until read; or cauldrons; or tripods; or bronze vessels; accept Jiǔ Dǐng or Nine Tripods; prompt on vessels or grave goods until “vessels” is read] (The first clue refers to Wángsūn Mǎn’s speech to King Zhuāng of Chǔ, as reported in the Spring and Autumn Annals. The second clue refers to the Quǎnróng.)
[ [ 0, 118 ], [ 119, 271 ], [ 272, 432 ], [ 433, 541 ], [ 542, 650 ], [ 651, 726 ], [ 727, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 70, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 141, -5 ], [ 143, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-13_4
A 2022 study revealed the mix of jin and xi used in a recipe for these objects from the Artificers’ Record.
[ "Tripod", "bronze vessels", "dǐng", "tripods", "Nine Tripods", "Jiǔ Dǐng", "dǐng until read", "bronze", "tripod", "ritual bronzes", "ting", "cauldrons", "cauldron", "Dǐng" ]
acf-co24-14-13
4
An envoy claimed that these objects matter less than virtue after a king insolently asked about their weight and size. The caches of these objects found in the 19th century are thought to have been buried by nobles fleeing west from “barbarians” who worshiped dog totems. The Basic Annals claim that a group of these objects was reduced in number from nine to eight when a king captured them and accidentally dropped one in a river. A 2022 study revealed the mix of jin and xi used in a recipe for these objects from the Artificers’ Record. These objects typically feature a zoomorphic design later identified with the gluttonous evil spirit tāotiè. The most prestigious of these objects often had two handles and three legs. For 10 points, Shang and Zhou kings were buried with what ornate ritual vessels, also called dǐng, during China’s “age” named for their material?
ritual bronzes [accept ting or dǐng until read; or cauldrons; or tripods; or bronze vessels; accept Jiǔ Dǐng or Nine Tripods; prompt on vessels or grave goods until “vessels” is read] (The first clue refers to Wángsūn Mǎn’s speech to King Zhuāng of Chǔ, as reported in the Spring and Autumn Annals. The second clue refers to the Quǎnróng.)
[ [ 0, 118 ], [ 119, 271 ], [ 272, 432 ], [ 433, 541 ], [ 542, 650 ], [ 651, 726 ], [ 727, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 70, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 141, -5 ], [ 143, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-13_5
These objects typically feature a zoomorphic design later identified with the gluttonous evil spirit tāotiè.
[ "Tripod", "bronze vessels", "dǐng", "tripods", "Nine Tripods", "Jiǔ Dǐng", "dǐng until read", "bronze", "tripod", "ritual bronzes", "ting", "cauldrons", "cauldron", "Dǐng" ]
acf-co24-14-13
5
An envoy claimed that these objects matter less than virtue after a king insolently asked about their weight and size. The caches of these objects found in the 19th century are thought to have been buried by nobles fleeing west from “barbarians” who worshiped dog totems. The Basic Annals claim that a group of these objects was reduced in number from nine to eight when a king captured them and accidentally dropped one in a river. A 2022 study revealed the mix of jin and xi used in a recipe for these objects from the Artificers’ Record. These objects typically feature a zoomorphic design later identified with the gluttonous evil spirit tāotiè. The most prestigious of these objects often had two handles and three legs. For 10 points, Shang and Zhou kings were buried with what ornate ritual vessels, also called dǐng, during China’s “age” named for their material?
ritual bronzes [accept ting or dǐng until read; or cauldrons; or tripods; or bronze vessels; accept Jiǔ Dǐng or Nine Tripods; prompt on vessels or grave goods until “vessels” is read] (The first clue refers to Wángsūn Mǎn’s speech to King Zhuāng of Chǔ, as reported in the Spring and Autumn Annals. The second clue refers to the Quǎnróng.)
[ [ 0, 118 ], [ 119, 271 ], [ 272, 432 ], [ 433, 541 ], [ 542, 650 ], [ 651, 726 ], [ 727, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 70, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 141, -5 ], [ 143, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-13_6
The most prestigious of these objects often had two handles and three legs.
[ "Tripod", "bronze vessels", "dǐng", "tripods", "Nine Tripods", "Jiǔ Dǐng", "dǐng until read", "bronze", "tripod", "ritual bronzes", "ting", "cauldrons", "cauldron", "Dǐng" ]
acf-co24-14-13
6
An envoy claimed that these objects matter less than virtue after a king insolently asked about their weight and size. The caches of these objects found in the 19th century are thought to have been buried by nobles fleeing west from “barbarians” who worshiped dog totems. The Basic Annals claim that a group of these objects was reduced in number from nine to eight when a king captured them and accidentally dropped one in a river. A 2022 study revealed the mix of jin and xi used in a recipe for these objects from the Artificers’ Record. These objects typically feature a zoomorphic design later identified with the gluttonous evil spirit tāotiè. The most prestigious of these objects often had two handles and three legs. For 10 points, Shang and Zhou kings were buried with what ornate ritual vessels, also called dǐng, during China’s “age” named for their material?
ritual bronzes [accept ting or dǐng until read; or cauldrons; or tripods; or bronze vessels; accept Jiǔ Dǐng or Nine Tripods; prompt on vessels or grave goods until “vessels” is read] (The first clue refers to Wángsūn Mǎn’s speech to King Zhuāng of Chǔ, as reported in the Spring and Autumn Annals. The second clue refers to the Quǎnróng.)
[ [ 0, 118 ], [ 119, 271 ], [ 272, 432 ], [ 433, 541 ], [ 542, 650 ], [ 651, 726 ], [ 727, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 70, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 141, -5 ], [ 143, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-13_7
For 10 points, Shang and Zhou kings were buried with what ornate ritual vessels, also called dǐng, during China’s “age” named for their material?
[ "Tripod", "bronze vessels", "dǐng", "tripods", "Nine Tripods", "Jiǔ Dǐng", "dǐng until read", "bronze", "tripod", "ritual bronzes", "ting", "cauldrons", "cauldron", "Dǐng" ]
acf-co24-14-13
7
An envoy claimed that these objects matter less than virtue after a king insolently asked about their weight and size. The caches of these objects found in the 19th century are thought to have been buried by nobles fleeing west from “barbarians” who worshiped dog totems. The Basic Annals claim that a group of these objects was reduced in number from nine to eight when a king captured them and accidentally dropped one in a river. A 2022 study revealed the mix of jin and xi used in a recipe for these objects from the Artificers’ Record. These objects typically feature a zoomorphic design later identified with the gluttonous evil spirit tāotiè. The most prestigious of these objects often had two handles and three legs. For 10 points, Shang and Zhou kings were buried with what ornate ritual vessels, also called dǐng, during China’s “age” named for their material?
ritual bronzes [accept ting or dǐng until read; or cauldrons; or tripods; or bronze vessels; accept Jiǔ Dǐng or Nine Tripods; prompt on vessels or grave goods until “vessels” is read] (The first clue refers to Wángsūn Mǎn’s speech to King Zhuāng of Chǔ, as reported in the Spring and Autumn Annals. The second clue refers to the Quǎnróng.)
[ [ 0, 118 ], [ 119, 271 ], [ 272, 432 ], [ 433, 541 ], [ 542, 650 ], [ 651, 726 ], [ 727, 872 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 70, -5 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 77, 15 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 141, -5 ], [ 143, -5 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-14_1
In the 2010s, politicians from this city were wiretapped in the massive “middle world” investigation.
[ "Roma", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-14-14
1
In the 2010s, politicians from this city were wiretapped in the massive “middle world” investigation. Hood-wearing gapistas make illegal, nocturnal repairs to the potholes that cover 80 percent of this city’s streets. Metonyms for dysfunction in this city include an incomplete, sail-shaped sports complex designed by Calatrava and its fire-prone ATAC buses. Following the collapse of a national unity government in 2022, this city planned to build a waste-to-energy plant that would fix its perennial garbage fire problem, a symbol of its degrado. Wild boars invaded the streets of this capital city before its 2021 mayoral elections, which were won by a member of the center-left Democratic Party, or PD. This city’s first female mayor, Virginia Raggi, was a member of the Five Star Movement. For 10 points, name this capital city where a planned Archaeological Walk will give visitors access to the Imperial Fora.
Rome [or Roma]
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 217 ], [ 218, 358 ], [ 359, 549 ], [ 550, 707 ], [ 708, 795 ], [ 796, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 76, 10 ], [ 84, -5 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }
acf-co24-14-14_2
Hood-wearing gapistas make illegal, nocturnal repairs to the potholes that cover 80 percent of this city’s streets.
[ "Roma", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-14-14
2
In the 2010s, politicians from this city were wiretapped in the massive “middle world” investigation. Hood-wearing gapistas make illegal, nocturnal repairs to the potholes that cover 80 percent of this city’s streets. Metonyms for dysfunction in this city include an incomplete, sail-shaped sports complex designed by Calatrava and its fire-prone ATAC buses. Following the collapse of a national unity government in 2022, this city planned to build a waste-to-energy plant that would fix its perennial garbage fire problem, a symbol of its degrado. Wild boars invaded the streets of this capital city before its 2021 mayoral elections, which were won by a member of the center-left Democratic Party, or PD. This city’s first female mayor, Virginia Raggi, was a member of the Five Star Movement. For 10 points, name this capital city where a planned Archaeological Walk will give visitors access to the Imperial Fora.
Rome [or Roma]
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 217 ], [ 218, 358 ], [ 359, 549 ], [ 550, 707 ], [ 708, 795 ], [ 796, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 76, 10 ], [ 84, -5 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }
acf-co24-14-14_3
Metonyms for dysfunction in this city include an incomplete, sail-shaped sports complex designed by Calatrava and its fire-prone ATAC buses.
[ "Roma", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-14-14
3
In the 2010s, politicians from this city were wiretapped in the massive “middle world” investigation. Hood-wearing gapistas make illegal, nocturnal repairs to the potholes that cover 80 percent of this city’s streets. Metonyms for dysfunction in this city include an incomplete, sail-shaped sports complex designed by Calatrava and its fire-prone ATAC buses. Following the collapse of a national unity government in 2022, this city planned to build a waste-to-energy plant that would fix its perennial garbage fire problem, a symbol of its degrado. Wild boars invaded the streets of this capital city before its 2021 mayoral elections, which were won by a member of the center-left Democratic Party, or PD. This city’s first female mayor, Virginia Raggi, was a member of the Five Star Movement. For 10 points, name this capital city where a planned Archaeological Walk will give visitors access to the Imperial Fora.
Rome [or Roma]
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 217 ], [ 218, 358 ], [ 359, 549 ], [ 550, 707 ], [ 708, 795 ], [ 796, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 76, 10 ], [ 84, -5 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }
acf-co24-14-14_4
Following the collapse of a national unity government in 2022, this city planned to build a waste-to-energy plant that would fix its perennial garbage fire problem, a symbol of its degrado.
[ "Roma", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-14-14
4
In the 2010s, politicians from this city were wiretapped in the massive “middle world” investigation. Hood-wearing gapistas make illegal, nocturnal repairs to the potholes that cover 80 percent of this city’s streets. Metonyms for dysfunction in this city include an incomplete, sail-shaped sports complex designed by Calatrava and its fire-prone ATAC buses. Following the collapse of a national unity government in 2022, this city planned to build a waste-to-energy plant that would fix its perennial garbage fire problem, a symbol of its degrado. Wild boars invaded the streets of this capital city before its 2021 mayoral elections, which were won by a member of the center-left Democratic Party, or PD. This city’s first female mayor, Virginia Raggi, was a member of the Five Star Movement. For 10 points, name this capital city where a planned Archaeological Walk will give visitors access to the Imperial Fora.
Rome [or Roma]
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 217 ], [ 218, 358 ], [ 359, 549 ], [ 550, 707 ], [ 708, 795 ], [ 796, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 76, 10 ], [ 84, -5 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }
acf-co24-14-14_5
Wild boars invaded the streets of this capital city before its 2021 mayoral elections, which were won by a member of the center-left Democratic Party, or PD.
[ "Roma", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-14-14
5
In the 2010s, politicians from this city were wiretapped in the massive “middle world” investigation. Hood-wearing gapistas make illegal, nocturnal repairs to the potholes that cover 80 percent of this city’s streets. Metonyms for dysfunction in this city include an incomplete, sail-shaped sports complex designed by Calatrava and its fire-prone ATAC buses. Following the collapse of a national unity government in 2022, this city planned to build a waste-to-energy plant that would fix its perennial garbage fire problem, a symbol of its degrado. Wild boars invaded the streets of this capital city before its 2021 mayoral elections, which were won by a member of the center-left Democratic Party, or PD. This city’s first female mayor, Virginia Raggi, was a member of the Five Star Movement. For 10 points, name this capital city where a planned Archaeological Walk will give visitors access to the Imperial Fora.
Rome [or Roma]
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 217 ], [ 218, 358 ], [ 359, 549 ], [ 550, 707 ], [ 708, 795 ], [ 796, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 76, 10 ], [ 84, -5 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }
acf-co24-14-14_6
This city’s first female mayor, Virginia Raggi, was a member of the Five Star Movement.
[ "Roma", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-14-14
6
In the 2010s, politicians from this city were wiretapped in the massive “middle world” investigation. Hood-wearing gapistas make illegal, nocturnal repairs to the potholes that cover 80 percent of this city’s streets. Metonyms for dysfunction in this city include an incomplete, sail-shaped sports complex designed by Calatrava and its fire-prone ATAC buses. Following the collapse of a national unity government in 2022, this city planned to build a waste-to-energy plant that would fix its perennial garbage fire problem, a symbol of its degrado. Wild boars invaded the streets of this capital city before its 2021 mayoral elections, which were won by a member of the center-left Democratic Party, or PD. This city’s first female mayor, Virginia Raggi, was a member of the Five Star Movement. For 10 points, name this capital city where a planned Archaeological Walk will give visitors access to the Imperial Fora.
Rome [or Roma]
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 217 ], [ 218, 358 ], [ 359, 549 ], [ 550, 707 ], [ 708, 795 ], [ 796, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 76, 10 ], [ 84, -5 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }
acf-co24-14-14_7
For 10 points, name this capital city where a planned Archaeological Walk will give visitors access to the Imperial Fora.
[ "Roma", "Rome" ]
acf-co24-14-14
7
In the 2010s, politicians from this city were wiretapped in the massive “middle world” investigation. Hood-wearing gapistas make illegal, nocturnal repairs to the potholes that cover 80 percent of this city’s streets. Metonyms for dysfunction in this city include an incomplete, sail-shaped sports complex designed by Calatrava and its fire-prone ATAC buses. Following the collapse of a national unity government in 2022, this city planned to build a waste-to-energy plant that would fix its perennial garbage fire problem, a symbol of its degrado. Wild boars invaded the streets of this capital city before its 2021 mayoral elections, which were won by a member of the center-left Democratic Party, or PD. This city’s first female mayor, Virginia Raggi, was a member of the Five Star Movement. For 10 points, name this capital city where a planned Archaeological Walk will give visitors access to the Imperial Fora.
Rome [or Roma]
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 217 ], [ 218, 358 ], [ 359, 549 ], [ 550, 707 ], [ 708, 795 ], [ 796, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 76, 10 ], [ 84, -5 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 107, -5 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 114, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }
acf-co24-14-15_1
In this story, an old man faints after the “companions” bring him before the “lord of perception.”
[ "Za-nehet", "Tale of Sinuhe", "Story of Sinuhe", "Sinuhe", "other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story", "Sanehat", "Sanhath", "Za-nehet in place of Sinuhe" ]
acf-co24-14-15
1
In this story, an old man faints after the “companions” bring him before the “lord of perception.” After his “senses were disturbed, [his] arms spread out, and trembling came over every part of [him],” a character in this story passes the Walls of the Prince and is given boiled milk by a wanderer. Along with the Loyalist Instruction, this story is taken as an exemplar of the “king-guided” individual’s role in “connective justice” in Jan Assmann’s book on the “mind” of its country. While living among the “Asiatics,” the protagonist of this story defeats the champion of Retenu in a duel that may be the source for David’s combat with Goliath. Mika Waltari’s magnum opus retells this story, whose title character flees his homeland in a panic but returns as an old man during the reign of Senusret I. For 10 points, name this story that presents an autobiographical account of the title Middle Kingdom nobleman.
“Story of Sinuhe” [accept “Tale of Sinuhe” or other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story; accept Sanehat or Sanhath or Za-nehet in place of “Sinuhe”]
[ [ 0, 98 ], [ 99, 298 ], [ 299, 485 ], [ 486, 648 ], [ 649, 805 ], [ 806, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 87, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-15_2
After his “senses were disturbed, [his] arms spread out, and trembling came over every part of [him],” a character in this story passes the Walls of the Prince and is given boiled milk by a wanderer.
[ "Za-nehet", "Tale of Sinuhe", "Story of Sinuhe", "Sinuhe", "other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story", "Sanehat", "Sanhath", "Za-nehet in place of Sinuhe" ]
acf-co24-14-15
2
In this story, an old man faints after the “companions” bring him before the “lord of perception.” After his “senses were disturbed, [his] arms spread out, and trembling came over every part of [him],” a character in this story passes the Walls of the Prince and is given boiled milk by a wanderer. Along with the Loyalist Instruction, this story is taken as an exemplar of the “king-guided” individual’s role in “connective justice” in Jan Assmann’s book on the “mind” of its country. While living among the “Asiatics,” the protagonist of this story defeats the champion of Retenu in a duel that may be the source for David’s combat with Goliath. Mika Waltari’s magnum opus retells this story, whose title character flees his homeland in a panic but returns as an old man during the reign of Senusret I. For 10 points, name this story that presents an autobiographical account of the title Middle Kingdom nobleman.
“Story of Sinuhe” [accept “Tale of Sinuhe” or other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story; accept Sanehat or Sanhath or Za-nehet in place of “Sinuhe”]
[ [ 0, 98 ], [ 99, 298 ], [ 299, 485 ], [ 486, 648 ], [ 649, 805 ], [ 806, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 87, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-15_3
Along with the Loyalist Instruction, this story is taken as an exemplar of the “king-guided” individual’s role in “connective justice” in Jan Assmann’s book on the “mind” of its country.
[ "Za-nehet", "Tale of Sinuhe", "Story of Sinuhe", "Sinuhe", "other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story", "Sanehat", "Sanhath", "Za-nehet in place of Sinuhe" ]
acf-co24-14-15
3
In this story, an old man faints after the “companions” bring him before the “lord of perception.” After his “senses were disturbed, [his] arms spread out, and trembling came over every part of [him],” a character in this story passes the Walls of the Prince and is given boiled milk by a wanderer. Along with the Loyalist Instruction, this story is taken as an exemplar of the “king-guided” individual’s role in “connective justice” in Jan Assmann’s book on the “mind” of its country. While living among the “Asiatics,” the protagonist of this story defeats the champion of Retenu in a duel that may be the source for David’s combat with Goliath. Mika Waltari’s magnum opus retells this story, whose title character flees his homeland in a panic but returns as an old man during the reign of Senusret I. For 10 points, name this story that presents an autobiographical account of the title Middle Kingdom nobleman.
“Story of Sinuhe” [accept “Tale of Sinuhe” or other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story; accept Sanehat or Sanhath or Za-nehet in place of “Sinuhe”]
[ [ 0, 98 ], [ 99, 298 ], [ 299, 485 ], [ 486, 648 ], [ 649, 805 ], [ 806, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 87, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-15_4
While living among the “Asiatics,” the protagonist of this story defeats the champion of Retenu in a duel that may be the source for David’s combat with Goliath.
[ "Za-nehet", "Tale of Sinuhe", "Story of Sinuhe", "Sinuhe", "other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story", "Sanehat", "Sanhath", "Za-nehet in place of Sinuhe" ]
acf-co24-14-15
4
In this story, an old man faints after the “companions” bring him before the “lord of perception.” After his “senses were disturbed, [his] arms spread out, and trembling came over every part of [him],” a character in this story passes the Walls of the Prince and is given boiled milk by a wanderer. Along with the Loyalist Instruction, this story is taken as an exemplar of the “king-guided” individual’s role in “connective justice” in Jan Assmann’s book on the “mind” of its country. While living among the “Asiatics,” the protagonist of this story defeats the champion of Retenu in a duel that may be the source for David’s combat with Goliath. Mika Waltari’s magnum opus retells this story, whose title character flees his homeland in a panic but returns as an old man during the reign of Senusret I. For 10 points, name this story that presents an autobiographical account of the title Middle Kingdom nobleman.
“Story of Sinuhe” [accept “Tale of Sinuhe” or other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story; accept Sanehat or Sanhath or Za-nehet in place of “Sinuhe”]
[ [ 0, 98 ], [ 99, 298 ], [ 299, 485 ], [ 486, 648 ], [ 649, 805 ], [ 806, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 87, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-15_5
Mika Waltari’s magnum opus retells this story, whose title character flees his homeland in a panic but returns as an old man during the reign of Senusret I.
[ "Za-nehet", "Tale of Sinuhe", "Story of Sinuhe", "Sinuhe", "other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story", "Sanehat", "Sanhath", "Za-nehet in place of Sinuhe" ]
acf-co24-14-15
5
In this story, an old man faints after the “companions” bring him before the “lord of perception.” After his “senses were disturbed, [his] arms spread out, and trembling came over every part of [him],” a character in this story passes the Walls of the Prince and is given boiled milk by a wanderer. Along with the Loyalist Instruction, this story is taken as an exemplar of the “king-guided” individual’s role in “connective justice” in Jan Assmann’s book on the “mind” of its country. While living among the “Asiatics,” the protagonist of this story defeats the champion of Retenu in a duel that may be the source for David’s combat with Goliath. Mika Waltari’s magnum opus retells this story, whose title character flees his homeland in a panic but returns as an old man during the reign of Senusret I. For 10 points, name this story that presents an autobiographical account of the title Middle Kingdom nobleman.
“Story of Sinuhe” [accept “Tale of Sinuhe” or other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story; accept Sanehat or Sanhath or Za-nehet in place of “Sinuhe”]
[ [ 0, 98 ], [ 99, 298 ], [ 299, 485 ], [ 486, 648 ], [ 649, 805 ], [ 806, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 87, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-15_6
For 10 points, name this story that presents an autobiographical account of the title Middle Kingdom nobleman.
[ "Za-nehet", "Tale of Sinuhe", "Story of Sinuhe", "Sinuhe", "other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story", "Sanehat", "Sanhath", "Za-nehet in place of Sinuhe" ]
acf-co24-14-15
6
In this story, an old man faints after the “companions” bring him before the “lord of perception.” After his “senses were disturbed, [his] arms spread out, and trembling came over every part of [him],” a character in this story passes the Walls of the Prince and is given boiled milk by a wanderer. Along with the Loyalist Instruction, this story is taken as an exemplar of the “king-guided” individual’s role in “connective justice” in Jan Assmann’s book on the “mind” of its country. While living among the “Asiatics,” the protagonist of this story defeats the champion of Retenu in a duel that may be the source for David’s combat with Goliath. Mika Waltari’s magnum opus retells this story, whose title character flees his homeland in a panic but returns as an old man during the reign of Senusret I. For 10 points, name this story that presents an autobiographical account of the title Middle Kingdom nobleman.
“Story of Sinuhe” [accept “Tale of Sinuhe” or other answers indicating Sinuhe’s story; accept Sanehat or Sanhath or Za-nehet in place of “Sinuhe”]
[ [ 0, 98 ], [ 99, 298 ], [ 299, 485 ], [ 486, 648 ], [ 649, 805 ], [ 806, 916 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 87, 10 ], [ 87, 10 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 103, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 0 ], [ 156, 10 ], [ 156, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-16_1
A 1998 paper showing that two materials have this property from Gil Lonzarich’s group endorsed finding this property “at the edge of magnetic order.”
[ "heavy fermion superconductors", "superconduct", "heavy electron superconductors", "superconducting", "superconductor", "high temperature superconductors", "unconventional superconductors", "d-wave superconductors" ]
acf-co24-14-16
1
A 1998 paper showing that two materials have this property from Gil Lonzarich’s group endorsed finding this property “at the edge of magnetic order.” Those materials are in the same class as cerium copper silicide, which was shown to have this property by Steglich et al. in 1979. In 2018, Jarillo-Herrero’s group demonstrated this property near a Mott insulator state in a material with a specific superlattice that drastically reduced the Fermi velocity. It’s not antiferromagnetism, but Anderson proposed an explanation for this property in terms of resonating valence bonds, in which superexchange through intermediate atoms provided coupling between spins. That account was devised for a system with d-wave symmetry arising from planes of copper and oxygen atoms. For 10 points, the BCS theory of Cooper pairs provides the “conventional” explanation for the behavior of what property?
superconducting [accept high temperature superconductors; accept heavy fermion superconductors or heavy electron superconductors; accept d-wave superconductors; accept unconventional superconductors; prompt on heavy fermions or heavy electrons; prompt on magic angle bilayer graphene by asking “what property does bilayer graphene display at the magic angle?”]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 280 ], [ 281, 456 ], [ 457, 662 ], [ 663, 769 ], [ 770, 890 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 83, 15 ], [ 87, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-14-16_2
Those materials are in the same class as cerium copper silicide, which was shown to have this property by Steglich et al. in 1979.
[ "heavy fermion superconductors", "superconduct", "heavy electron superconductors", "superconducting", "superconductor", "high temperature superconductors", "unconventional superconductors", "d-wave superconductors" ]
acf-co24-14-16
2
A 1998 paper showing that two materials have this property from Gil Lonzarich’s group endorsed finding this property “at the edge of magnetic order.” Those materials are in the same class as cerium copper silicide, which was shown to have this property by Steglich et al. in 1979. In 2018, Jarillo-Herrero’s group demonstrated this property near a Mott insulator state in a material with a specific superlattice that drastically reduced the Fermi velocity. It’s not antiferromagnetism, but Anderson proposed an explanation for this property in terms of resonating valence bonds, in which superexchange through intermediate atoms provided coupling between spins. That account was devised for a system with d-wave symmetry arising from planes of copper and oxygen atoms. For 10 points, the BCS theory of Cooper pairs provides the “conventional” explanation for the behavior of what property?
superconducting [accept high temperature superconductors; accept heavy fermion superconductors or heavy electron superconductors; accept d-wave superconductors; accept unconventional superconductors; prompt on heavy fermions or heavy electrons; prompt on magic angle bilayer graphene by asking “what property does bilayer graphene display at the magic angle?”]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 280 ], [ 281, 456 ], [ 457, 662 ], [ 663, 769 ], [ 770, 890 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 83, 15 ], [ 87, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-14-16_3
In 2018, Jarillo-Herrero’s group demonstrated this property near a Mott insulator state in a material with a specific superlattice that drastically reduced the Fermi velocity.
[ "heavy fermion superconductors", "superconduct", "heavy electron superconductors", "superconducting", "superconductor", "high temperature superconductors", "unconventional superconductors", "d-wave superconductors" ]
acf-co24-14-16
3
A 1998 paper showing that two materials have this property from Gil Lonzarich’s group endorsed finding this property “at the edge of magnetic order.” Those materials are in the same class as cerium copper silicide, which was shown to have this property by Steglich et al. in 1979. In 2018, Jarillo-Herrero’s group demonstrated this property near a Mott insulator state in a material with a specific superlattice that drastically reduced the Fermi velocity. It’s not antiferromagnetism, but Anderson proposed an explanation for this property in terms of resonating valence bonds, in which superexchange through intermediate atoms provided coupling between spins. That account was devised for a system with d-wave symmetry arising from planes of copper and oxygen atoms. For 10 points, the BCS theory of Cooper pairs provides the “conventional” explanation for the behavior of what property?
superconducting [accept high temperature superconductors; accept heavy fermion superconductors or heavy electron superconductors; accept d-wave superconductors; accept unconventional superconductors; prompt on heavy fermions or heavy electrons; prompt on magic angle bilayer graphene by asking “what property does bilayer graphene display at the magic angle?”]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 280 ], [ 281, 456 ], [ 457, 662 ], [ 663, 769 ], [ 770, 890 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 83, 15 ], [ 87, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-14-16_4
It’s not antiferromagnetism, but Anderson proposed an explanation for this property in terms of resonating valence bonds, in which superexchange through intermediate atoms provided coupling between spins.
[ "heavy fermion superconductors", "superconduct", "heavy electron superconductors", "superconducting", "superconductor", "high temperature superconductors", "unconventional superconductors", "d-wave superconductors" ]
acf-co24-14-16
4
A 1998 paper showing that two materials have this property from Gil Lonzarich’s group endorsed finding this property “at the edge of magnetic order.” Those materials are in the same class as cerium copper silicide, which was shown to have this property by Steglich et al. in 1979. In 2018, Jarillo-Herrero’s group demonstrated this property near a Mott insulator state in a material with a specific superlattice that drastically reduced the Fermi velocity. It’s not antiferromagnetism, but Anderson proposed an explanation for this property in terms of resonating valence bonds, in which superexchange through intermediate atoms provided coupling between spins. That account was devised for a system with d-wave symmetry arising from planes of copper and oxygen atoms. For 10 points, the BCS theory of Cooper pairs provides the “conventional” explanation for the behavior of what property?
superconducting [accept high temperature superconductors; accept heavy fermion superconductors or heavy electron superconductors; accept d-wave superconductors; accept unconventional superconductors; prompt on heavy fermions or heavy electrons; prompt on magic angle bilayer graphene by asking “what property does bilayer graphene display at the magic angle?”]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 280 ], [ 281, 456 ], [ 457, 662 ], [ 663, 769 ], [ 770, 890 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 83, 15 ], [ 87, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-14-16_5
That account was devised for a system with d-wave symmetry arising from planes of copper and oxygen atoms.
[ "heavy fermion superconductors", "superconduct", "heavy electron superconductors", "superconducting", "superconductor", "high temperature superconductors", "unconventional superconductors", "d-wave superconductors" ]
acf-co24-14-16
5
A 1998 paper showing that two materials have this property from Gil Lonzarich’s group endorsed finding this property “at the edge of magnetic order.” Those materials are in the same class as cerium copper silicide, which was shown to have this property by Steglich et al. in 1979. In 2018, Jarillo-Herrero’s group demonstrated this property near a Mott insulator state in a material with a specific superlattice that drastically reduced the Fermi velocity. It’s not antiferromagnetism, but Anderson proposed an explanation for this property in terms of resonating valence bonds, in which superexchange through intermediate atoms provided coupling between spins. That account was devised for a system with d-wave symmetry arising from planes of copper and oxygen atoms. For 10 points, the BCS theory of Cooper pairs provides the “conventional” explanation for the behavior of what property?
superconducting [accept high temperature superconductors; accept heavy fermion superconductors or heavy electron superconductors; accept d-wave superconductors; accept unconventional superconductors; prompt on heavy fermions or heavy electrons; prompt on magic angle bilayer graphene by asking “what property does bilayer graphene display at the magic angle?”]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 280 ], [ 281, 456 ], [ 457, 662 ], [ 663, 769 ], [ 770, 890 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 83, 15 ], [ 87, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-14-16_6
For 10 points, the BCS theory of Cooper pairs provides the “conventional” explanation for the behavior of what property?
[ "heavy fermion superconductors", "superconduct", "heavy electron superconductors", "superconducting", "superconductor", "high temperature superconductors", "unconventional superconductors", "d-wave superconductors" ]
acf-co24-14-16
6
A 1998 paper showing that two materials have this property from Gil Lonzarich’s group endorsed finding this property “at the edge of magnetic order.” Those materials are in the same class as cerium copper silicide, which was shown to have this property by Steglich et al. in 1979. In 2018, Jarillo-Herrero’s group demonstrated this property near a Mott insulator state in a material with a specific superlattice that drastically reduced the Fermi velocity. It’s not antiferromagnetism, but Anderson proposed an explanation for this property in terms of resonating valence bonds, in which superexchange through intermediate atoms provided coupling between spins. That account was devised for a system with d-wave symmetry arising from planes of copper and oxygen atoms. For 10 points, the BCS theory of Cooper pairs provides the “conventional” explanation for the behavior of what property?
superconducting [accept high temperature superconductors; accept heavy fermion superconductors or heavy electron superconductors; accept d-wave superconductors; accept unconventional superconductors; prompt on heavy fermions or heavy electrons; prompt on magic angle bilayer graphene by asking “what property does bilayer graphene display at the magic angle?”]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 280 ], [ 281, 456 ], [ 457, 662 ], [ 663, 769 ], [ 770, 890 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 52, 15 ], [ 59, 15 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 83, 15 ], [ 87, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 112, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 137, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-14-17_1
A Black sailor who settled near the north end of this geographical area, James D. Saules, clashed with locals in the Cockstock affair.
[ "Willamette", "Willamette River", "Willamette Valley" ]
acf-co24-14-17
1
A Black sailor who settled near the north end of this geographical area, James D. Saules, clashed with locals in the Cockstock affair. A “meridian” and “baseline” named for this geographical area defined the grid along which land patents were issued under the Donation Land Claim Act. In the 1850s, this specific geographical area’s native people, like the Clackamas and Kalapuya, were forcibly moved to the Grand Ronde Reservation, where they’ve more recently called for the return of this area’s namesake meteorite. The north end of the Siskiyou Trail ran through this geographical area, whose town of Champoeg was the site of 1840s “wolf meetings” that formed its region’s first provisional government. This valley was the endpoint of a route that passed landmarks like Fort Kearney and Chimney Rock. For 10 points, what fertile valley was the final destination for settlers on the Oregon Trail?
Willamette (“will-AM-it”) Valley [or Willamette River; prompt on Pacific Northwest or Oregon]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 284 ], [ 285, 518 ], [ 519, 706 ], [ 707, 804 ], [ 805, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, -5 ], [ 76, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, 0 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-17_2
A “meridian” and “baseline” named for this geographical area defined the grid along which land patents were issued under the Donation Land Claim Act.
[ "Willamette", "Willamette River", "Willamette Valley" ]
acf-co24-14-17
2
A Black sailor who settled near the north end of this geographical area, James D. Saules, clashed with locals in the Cockstock affair. A “meridian” and “baseline” named for this geographical area defined the grid along which land patents were issued under the Donation Land Claim Act. In the 1850s, this specific geographical area’s native people, like the Clackamas and Kalapuya, were forcibly moved to the Grand Ronde Reservation, where they’ve more recently called for the return of this area’s namesake meteorite. The north end of the Siskiyou Trail ran through this geographical area, whose town of Champoeg was the site of 1840s “wolf meetings” that formed its region’s first provisional government. This valley was the endpoint of a route that passed landmarks like Fort Kearney and Chimney Rock. For 10 points, what fertile valley was the final destination for settlers on the Oregon Trail?
Willamette (“will-AM-it”) Valley [or Willamette River; prompt on Pacific Northwest or Oregon]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 284 ], [ 285, 518 ], [ 519, 706 ], [ 707, 804 ], [ 805, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, -5 ], [ 76, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, 0 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-17_3
In the 1850s, this specific geographical area’s native people, like the Clackamas and Kalapuya, were forcibly moved to the Grand Ronde Reservation, where they’ve more recently called for the return of this area’s namesake meteorite.
[ "Willamette", "Willamette River", "Willamette Valley" ]
acf-co24-14-17
3
A Black sailor who settled near the north end of this geographical area, James D. Saules, clashed with locals in the Cockstock affair. A “meridian” and “baseline” named for this geographical area defined the grid along which land patents were issued under the Donation Land Claim Act. In the 1850s, this specific geographical area’s native people, like the Clackamas and Kalapuya, were forcibly moved to the Grand Ronde Reservation, where they’ve more recently called for the return of this area’s namesake meteorite. The north end of the Siskiyou Trail ran through this geographical area, whose town of Champoeg was the site of 1840s “wolf meetings” that formed its region’s first provisional government. This valley was the endpoint of a route that passed landmarks like Fort Kearney and Chimney Rock. For 10 points, what fertile valley was the final destination for settlers on the Oregon Trail?
Willamette (“will-AM-it”) Valley [or Willamette River; prompt on Pacific Northwest or Oregon]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 284 ], [ 285, 518 ], [ 519, 706 ], [ 707, 804 ], [ 805, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, -5 ], [ 76, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, 0 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-17_4
The north end of the Siskiyou Trail ran through this geographical area, whose town of Champoeg was the site of 1840s “wolf meetings” that formed its region’s first provisional government.
[ "Willamette", "Willamette River", "Willamette Valley" ]
acf-co24-14-17
4
A Black sailor who settled near the north end of this geographical area, James D. Saules, clashed with locals in the Cockstock affair. A “meridian” and “baseline” named for this geographical area defined the grid along which land patents were issued under the Donation Land Claim Act. In the 1850s, this specific geographical area’s native people, like the Clackamas and Kalapuya, were forcibly moved to the Grand Ronde Reservation, where they’ve more recently called for the return of this area’s namesake meteorite. The north end of the Siskiyou Trail ran through this geographical area, whose town of Champoeg was the site of 1840s “wolf meetings” that formed its region’s first provisional government. This valley was the endpoint of a route that passed landmarks like Fort Kearney and Chimney Rock. For 10 points, what fertile valley was the final destination for settlers on the Oregon Trail?
Willamette (“will-AM-it”) Valley [or Willamette River; prompt on Pacific Northwest or Oregon]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 284 ], [ 285, 518 ], [ 519, 706 ], [ 707, 804 ], [ 805, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, -5 ], [ 76, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, 0 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-17_5
This valley was the endpoint of a route that passed landmarks like Fort Kearney and Chimney Rock.
[ "Willamette", "Willamette River", "Willamette Valley" ]
acf-co24-14-17
5
A Black sailor who settled near the north end of this geographical area, James D. Saules, clashed with locals in the Cockstock affair. A “meridian” and “baseline” named for this geographical area defined the grid along which land patents were issued under the Donation Land Claim Act. In the 1850s, this specific geographical area’s native people, like the Clackamas and Kalapuya, were forcibly moved to the Grand Ronde Reservation, where they’ve more recently called for the return of this area’s namesake meteorite. The north end of the Siskiyou Trail ran through this geographical area, whose town of Champoeg was the site of 1840s “wolf meetings” that formed its region’s first provisional government. This valley was the endpoint of a route that passed landmarks like Fort Kearney and Chimney Rock. For 10 points, what fertile valley was the final destination for settlers on the Oregon Trail?
Willamette (“will-AM-it”) Valley [or Willamette River; prompt on Pacific Northwest or Oregon]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 284 ], [ 285, 518 ], [ 519, 706 ], [ 707, 804 ], [ 805, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, -5 ], [ 76, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, 0 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-17_6
For 10 points, what fertile valley was the final destination for settlers on the Oregon Trail?
[ "Willamette", "Willamette River", "Willamette Valley" ]
acf-co24-14-17
6
A Black sailor who settled near the north end of this geographical area, James D. Saules, clashed with locals in the Cockstock affair. A “meridian” and “baseline” named for this geographical area defined the grid along which land patents were issued under the Donation Land Claim Act. In the 1850s, this specific geographical area’s native people, like the Clackamas and Kalapuya, were forcibly moved to the Grand Ronde Reservation, where they’ve more recently called for the return of this area’s namesake meteorite. The north end of the Siskiyou Trail ran through this geographical area, whose town of Champoeg was the site of 1840s “wolf meetings” that formed its region’s first provisional government. This valley was the endpoint of a route that passed landmarks like Fort Kearney and Chimney Rock. For 10 points, what fertile valley was the final destination for settlers on the Oregon Trail?
Willamette (“will-AM-it”) Valley [or Willamette River; prompt on Pacific Northwest or Oregon]
[ [ 0, 134 ], [ 135, 284 ], [ 285, 518 ], [ 519, 706 ], [ 707, 804 ], [ 805, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - American History", "category_main": "history-american-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 59, -5 ], [ 76, 15 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 81, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 95, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 128, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 145, 0 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ], [ 145, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-history" ] }
acf-co24-14-18_1
A book by this person often uses the hyphenated term “fleeting-improvised-men” and inspired Harry Smith’s film Heaven and Earth Magic with its notion of the “forecourts of heaven.”
[ "Schreber Garden", "Schreber", "Judge Schreber", "Daniel Paul Schreber", "Schreber Schreber", "The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten," ]
acf-co24-14-18
1
A book by this person often uses the hyphenated term “fleeting-improvised-men” and inspired Harry Smith’s film Heaven and Earth Magic with its notion of the “forecourts of heaven.” Alice Miller’s book on “poisonous pedagogy” cites Morton Schatzman’s work on the “soul murder” of this person by his father, a doctor who invented the community garden. The first paragraph of Anti-Oedipus proclaims that this man has a “solar anus,” referring to his belief that “searing” and “blessing” rays were preparing him to become God’s wife. Two chapters about this man end Elias Canetti’s book Crowds and Power. A 1911 book on this man’s “case” attributes his condition to infantile sexual fantasies via a dubious reading of his Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. For 10 points, name this German judge whose paranoid schizophrenia was analyzed second-hand by Freud.
Daniel Paul Schreber [or Judge Schreber; accept The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten, or Schreber Garden]
[ [ 0, 180 ], [ 181, 349 ], [ 350, 530 ], [ 531, 601 ], [ 602, 749 ], [ 750, 851 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 12, 15 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 66, 15 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 120, -5 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-co24-14-18_2
Alice Miller’s book on “poisonous pedagogy” cites Morton Schatzman’s work on the “soul murder” of this person by his father, a doctor who invented the community garden.
[ "Schreber Garden", "Schreber", "Judge Schreber", "Daniel Paul Schreber", "Schreber Schreber", "The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten," ]
acf-co24-14-18
2
A book by this person often uses the hyphenated term “fleeting-improvised-men” and inspired Harry Smith’s film Heaven and Earth Magic with its notion of the “forecourts of heaven.” Alice Miller’s book on “poisonous pedagogy” cites Morton Schatzman’s work on the “soul murder” of this person by his father, a doctor who invented the community garden. The first paragraph of Anti-Oedipus proclaims that this man has a “solar anus,” referring to his belief that “searing” and “blessing” rays were preparing him to become God’s wife. Two chapters about this man end Elias Canetti’s book Crowds and Power. A 1911 book on this man’s “case” attributes his condition to infantile sexual fantasies via a dubious reading of his Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. For 10 points, name this German judge whose paranoid schizophrenia was analyzed second-hand by Freud.
Daniel Paul Schreber [or Judge Schreber; accept The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten, or Schreber Garden]
[ [ 0, 180 ], [ 181, 349 ], [ 350, 530 ], [ 531, 601 ], [ 602, 749 ], [ 750, 851 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 12, 15 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 66, 15 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 120, -5 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-co24-14-18_3
The first paragraph of Anti-Oedipus proclaims that this man has a “solar anus,” referring to his belief that “searing” and “blessing” rays were preparing him to become God’s wife.
[ "Schreber Garden", "Schreber", "Judge Schreber", "Daniel Paul Schreber", "Schreber Schreber", "The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten," ]
acf-co24-14-18
3
A book by this person often uses the hyphenated term “fleeting-improvised-men” and inspired Harry Smith’s film Heaven and Earth Magic with its notion of the “forecourts of heaven.” Alice Miller’s book on “poisonous pedagogy” cites Morton Schatzman’s work on the “soul murder” of this person by his father, a doctor who invented the community garden. The first paragraph of Anti-Oedipus proclaims that this man has a “solar anus,” referring to his belief that “searing” and “blessing” rays were preparing him to become God’s wife. Two chapters about this man end Elias Canetti’s book Crowds and Power. A 1911 book on this man’s “case” attributes his condition to infantile sexual fantasies via a dubious reading of his Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. For 10 points, name this German judge whose paranoid schizophrenia was analyzed second-hand by Freud.
Daniel Paul Schreber [or Judge Schreber; accept The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten, or Schreber Garden]
[ [ 0, 180 ], [ 181, 349 ], [ 350, 530 ], [ 531, 601 ], [ 602, 749 ], [ 750, 851 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 12, 15 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 66, 15 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 120, -5 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-co24-14-18_4
Two chapters about this man end Elias Canetti’s book Crowds and Power.
[ "Schreber Garden", "Schreber", "Judge Schreber", "Daniel Paul Schreber", "Schreber Schreber", "The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten," ]
acf-co24-14-18
4
A book by this person often uses the hyphenated term “fleeting-improvised-men” and inspired Harry Smith’s film Heaven and Earth Magic with its notion of the “forecourts of heaven.” Alice Miller’s book on “poisonous pedagogy” cites Morton Schatzman’s work on the “soul murder” of this person by his father, a doctor who invented the community garden. The first paragraph of Anti-Oedipus proclaims that this man has a “solar anus,” referring to his belief that “searing” and “blessing” rays were preparing him to become God’s wife. Two chapters about this man end Elias Canetti’s book Crowds and Power. A 1911 book on this man’s “case” attributes his condition to infantile sexual fantasies via a dubious reading of his Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. For 10 points, name this German judge whose paranoid schizophrenia was analyzed second-hand by Freud.
Daniel Paul Schreber [or Judge Schreber; accept The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten, or Schreber Garden]
[ [ 0, 180 ], [ 181, 349 ], [ 350, 530 ], [ 531, 601 ], [ 602, 749 ], [ 750, 851 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 12, 15 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 66, 15 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 120, -5 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-co24-14-18_5
A 1911 book on this man’s “case” attributes his condition to infantile sexual fantasies via a dubious reading of his Memoirs of My Nervous Illness.
[ "Schreber Garden", "Schreber", "Judge Schreber", "Daniel Paul Schreber", "Schreber Schreber", "The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten," ]
acf-co24-14-18
5
A book by this person often uses the hyphenated term “fleeting-improvised-men” and inspired Harry Smith’s film Heaven and Earth Magic with its notion of the “forecourts of heaven.” Alice Miller’s book on “poisonous pedagogy” cites Morton Schatzman’s work on the “soul murder” of this person by his father, a doctor who invented the community garden. The first paragraph of Anti-Oedipus proclaims that this man has a “solar anus,” referring to his belief that “searing” and “blessing” rays were preparing him to become God’s wife. Two chapters about this man end Elias Canetti’s book Crowds and Power. A 1911 book on this man’s “case” attributes his condition to infantile sexual fantasies via a dubious reading of his Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. For 10 points, name this German judge whose paranoid schizophrenia was analyzed second-hand by Freud.
Daniel Paul Schreber [or Judge Schreber; accept The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten, or Schreber Garden]
[ [ 0, 180 ], [ 181, 349 ], [ 350, 530 ], [ 531, 601 ], [ 602, 749 ], [ 750, 851 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 12, 15 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 66, 15 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 120, -5 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-co24-14-18_6
For 10 points, name this German judge whose paranoid schizophrenia was analyzed second-hand by Freud.
[ "Schreber Garden", "Schreber", "Judge Schreber", "Daniel Paul Schreber", "Schreber Schreber", "The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten," ]
acf-co24-14-18
6
A book by this person often uses the hyphenated term “fleeting-improvised-men” and inspired Harry Smith’s film Heaven and Earth Magic with its notion of the “forecourts of heaven.” Alice Miller’s book on “poisonous pedagogy” cites Morton Schatzman’s work on the “soul murder” of this person by his father, a doctor who invented the community garden. The first paragraph of Anti-Oedipus proclaims that this man has a “solar anus,” referring to his belief that “searing” and “blessing” rays were preparing him to become God’s wife. Two chapters about this man end Elias Canetti’s book Crowds and Power. A 1911 book on this man’s “case” attributes his condition to infantile sexual fantasies via a dubious reading of his Memoirs of My Nervous Illness. For 10 points, name this German judge whose paranoid schizophrenia was analyzed second-hand by Freud.
Daniel Paul Schreber [or Judge Schreber; accept The Schreber Case, Schrebergarten, or Schreber Garden]
[ [ 0, 180 ], [ 181, 349 ], [ 350, 530 ], [ 531, 601 ], [ 602, 749 ], [ 750, 851 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 12, 15 ], [ 66, -5 ], [ 66, 15 ], [ 75, 15 ], [ 89, -5 ], [ 117, -5 ], [ 120, -5 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 127, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ], [ 136, 0 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-co24-14-19_1
In a book by this author’s nephew, this author yells “don’t strike!” before being murdered in a cellar.
[ "Snorri Sturluson", "Snorri" ]
acf-co24-14-19
1
In a book by this author’s nephew, this author yells “don’t strike!” before being murdered in a cellar. In a book by this author, a man “seeds” a plain with gold to slow a pursuing king who “grovels like a pig” to grab a ring. This author advised against “driven” phrases with more than six determinants in a commentary on a poem he wrote using “court meter” and 94 other verse forms. In a story recorded by this author, a character repeatedly wakes to wonder whether a leaf, bird droppings, or an acorn fell on his head as a traveler strikes it. A book by this author opens with a euhemerized account in which a king marries the Sibyl and leaves Troy to settle in Europe. A poetic guidebook by this author summarizes myths to explain kennings like “Sif’s hair.” For 10 points, name this author credited with writing the Heimskringla, as well as the Skáldskaparmál and the rest of the Prose Edda.
Snorri Sturluson [prompt on Sturluson] (The first sentence is from the Íslendinga saga, the section of the Sturlunga Saga by Sturla Thordarson. The following clues refer to rekit, dróttkvætt, Háttatal, Snorri’s version of the Hrólfr Kraki story, and the story of Thor and Skrymir.)
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 226 ], [ 227, 384 ], [ 385, 547 ], [ 548, 673 ], [ 674, 763 ], [ 764, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 78, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-19_2
In a book by this author, a man “seeds” a plain with gold to slow a pursuing king who “grovels like a pig” to grab a ring.
[ "Snorri Sturluson", "Snorri" ]
acf-co24-14-19
2
In a book by this author’s nephew, this author yells “don’t strike!” before being murdered in a cellar. In a book by this author, a man “seeds” a plain with gold to slow a pursuing king who “grovels like a pig” to grab a ring. This author advised against “driven” phrases with more than six determinants in a commentary on a poem he wrote using “court meter” and 94 other verse forms. In a story recorded by this author, a character repeatedly wakes to wonder whether a leaf, bird droppings, or an acorn fell on his head as a traveler strikes it. A book by this author opens with a euhemerized account in which a king marries the Sibyl and leaves Troy to settle in Europe. A poetic guidebook by this author summarizes myths to explain kennings like “Sif’s hair.” For 10 points, name this author credited with writing the Heimskringla, as well as the Skáldskaparmál and the rest of the Prose Edda.
Snorri Sturluson [prompt on Sturluson] (The first sentence is from the Íslendinga saga, the section of the Sturlunga Saga by Sturla Thordarson. The following clues refer to rekit, dróttkvætt, Háttatal, Snorri’s version of the Hrólfr Kraki story, and the story of Thor and Skrymir.)
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 226 ], [ 227, 384 ], [ 385, 547 ], [ 548, 673 ], [ 674, 763 ], [ 764, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 78, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-19_3
This author advised against “driven” phrases with more than six determinants in a commentary on a poem he wrote using “court meter” and 94 other verse forms.
[ "Snorri Sturluson", "Snorri" ]
acf-co24-14-19
3
In a book by this author’s nephew, this author yells “don’t strike!” before being murdered in a cellar. In a book by this author, a man “seeds” a plain with gold to slow a pursuing king who “grovels like a pig” to grab a ring. This author advised against “driven” phrases with more than six determinants in a commentary on a poem he wrote using “court meter” and 94 other verse forms. In a story recorded by this author, a character repeatedly wakes to wonder whether a leaf, bird droppings, or an acorn fell on his head as a traveler strikes it. A book by this author opens with a euhemerized account in which a king marries the Sibyl and leaves Troy to settle in Europe. A poetic guidebook by this author summarizes myths to explain kennings like “Sif’s hair.” For 10 points, name this author credited with writing the Heimskringla, as well as the Skáldskaparmál and the rest of the Prose Edda.
Snorri Sturluson [prompt on Sturluson] (The first sentence is from the Íslendinga saga, the section of the Sturlunga Saga by Sturla Thordarson. The following clues refer to rekit, dróttkvætt, Háttatal, Snorri’s version of the Hrólfr Kraki story, and the story of Thor and Skrymir.)
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 226 ], [ 227, 384 ], [ 385, 547 ], [ 548, 673 ], [ 674, 763 ], [ 764, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 78, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-19_4
In a story recorded by this author, a character repeatedly wakes to wonder whether a leaf, bird droppings, or an acorn fell on his head as a traveler strikes it.
[ "Snorri Sturluson", "Snorri" ]
acf-co24-14-19
4
In a book by this author’s nephew, this author yells “don’t strike!” before being murdered in a cellar. In a book by this author, a man “seeds” a plain with gold to slow a pursuing king who “grovels like a pig” to grab a ring. This author advised against “driven” phrases with more than six determinants in a commentary on a poem he wrote using “court meter” and 94 other verse forms. In a story recorded by this author, a character repeatedly wakes to wonder whether a leaf, bird droppings, or an acorn fell on his head as a traveler strikes it. A book by this author opens with a euhemerized account in which a king marries the Sibyl and leaves Troy to settle in Europe. A poetic guidebook by this author summarizes myths to explain kennings like “Sif’s hair.” For 10 points, name this author credited with writing the Heimskringla, as well as the Skáldskaparmál and the rest of the Prose Edda.
Snorri Sturluson [prompt on Sturluson] (The first sentence is from the Íslendinga saga, the section of the Sturlunga Saga by Sturla Thordarson. The following clues refer to rekit, dróttkvætt, Háttatal, Snorri’s version of the Hrólfr Kraki story, and the story of Thor and Skrymir.)
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 226 ], [ 227, 384 ], [ 385, 547 ], [ 548, 673 ], [ 674, 763 ], [ 764, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 78, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-19_5
A book by this author opens with a euhemerized account in which a king marries the Sibyl and leaves Troy to settle in Europe.
[ "Snorri Sturluson", "Snorri" ]
acf-co24-14-19
5
In a book by this author’s nephew, this author yells “don’t strike!” before being murdered in a cellar. In a book by this author, a man “seeds” a plain with gold to slow a pursuing king who “grovels like a pig” to grab a ring. This author advised against “driven” phrases with more than six determinants in a commentary on a poem he wrote using “court meter” and 94 other verse forms. In a story recorded by this author, a character repeatedly wakes to wonder whether a leaf, bird droppings, or an acorn fell on his head as a traveler strikes it. A book by this author opens with a euhemerized account in which a king marries the Sibyl and leaves Troy to settle in Europe. A poetic guidebook by this author summarizes myths to explain kennings like “Sif’s hair.” For 10 points, name this author credited with writing the Heimskringla, as well as the Skáldskaparmál and the rest of the Prose Edda.
Snorri Sturluson [prompt on Sturluson] (The first sentence is from the Íslendinga saga, the section of the Sturlunga Saga by Sturla Thordarson. The following clues refer to rekit, dróttkvætt, Háttatal, Snorri’s version of the Hrólfr Kraki story, and the story of Thor and Skrymir.)
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 226 ], [ 227, 384 ], [ 385, 547 ], [ 548, 673 ], [ 674, 763 ], [ 764, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 78, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-19_6
A poetic guidebook by this author summarizes myths to explain kennings like “Sif’s hair.”
[ "Snorri Sturluson", "Snorri" ]
acf-co24-14-19
6
In a book by this author’s nephew, this author yells “don’t strike!” before being murdered in a cellar. In a book by this author, a man “seeds” a plain with gold to slow a pursuing king who “grovels like a pig” to grab a ring. This author advised against “driven” phrases with more than six determinants in a commentary on a poem he wrote using “court meter” and 94 other verse forms. In a story recorded by this author, a character repeatedly wakes to wonder whether a leaf, bird droppings, or an acorn fell on his head as a traveler strikes it. A book by this author opens with a euhemerized account in which a king marries the Sibyl and leaves Troy to settle in Europe. A poetic guidebook by this author summarizes myths to explain kennings like “Sif’s hair.” For 10 points, name this author credited with writing the Heimskringla, as well as the Skáldskaparmál and the rest of the Prose Edda.
Snorri Sturluson [prompt on Sturluson] (The first sentence is from the Íslendinga saga, the section of the Sturlunga Saga by Sturla Thordarson. The following clues refer to rekit, dróttkvætt, Háttatal, Snorri’s version of the Hrólfr Kraki story, and the story of Thor and Skrymir.)
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 226 ], [ 227, 384 ], [ 385, 547 ], [ 548, 673 ], [ 674, 763 ], [ 764, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 78, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-19_7
For 10 points, name this author credited with writing the Heimskringla, as well as the Skáldskaparmál and the rest of the Prose Edda.
[ "Snorri Sturluson", "Snorri" ]
acf-co24-14-19
7
In a book by this author’s nephew, this author yells “don’t strike!” before being murdered in a cellar. In a book by this author, a man “seeds” a plain with gold to slow a pursuing king who “grovels like a pig” to grab a ring. This author advised against “driven” phrases with more than six determinants in a commentary on a poem he wrote using “court meter” and 94 other verse forms. In a story recorded by this author, a character repeatedly wakes to wonder whether a leaf, bird droppings, or an acorn fell on his head as a traveler strikes it. A book by this author opens with a euhemerized account in which a king marries the Sibyl and leaves Troy to settle in Europe. A poetic guidebook by this author summarizes myths to explain kennings like “Sif’s hair.” For 10 points, name this author credited with writing the Heimskringla, as well as the Skáldskaparmál and the rest of the Prose Edda.
Snorri Sturluson [prompt on Sturluson] (The first sentence is from the Íslendinga saga, the section of the Sturlunga Saga by Sturla Thordarson. The following clues refer to rekit, dróttkvætt, Háttatal, Snorri’s version of the Hrólfr Kraki story, and the story of Thor and Skrymir.)
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 226 ], [ 227, 384 ], [ 385, 547 ], [ 548, 673 ], [ 674, 763 ], [ 764, 897 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 78, 15 ], [ 92, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 125, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 139, 10 ], [ 142, -5 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 142, 10 ], [ 149, 10 ], [ 150, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ], [ 163, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-14-20_1
The lawns around one of these structures contain a former part of it whose failed renovation earned it the nickname “Smith’s Folly.”
[ "minars", "Charminar Minar", "Minar", "Charminar", "Mināra", "minarets", "Qutub Minar", "Charminar, Qutb Minar,", "Malwiya", "minar", "minaret", "Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until Malwiya is read" ]
acf-co24-14-20
1
The lawns around one of these structures contain a former part of it whose failed renovation earned it the nickname “Smith’s Folly.” Michel Pinseau included a laser in his design for one of these structures adorned with seafoam-colored tiles. According to legend, a monarch covered up his laziness by claiming his tinkering with paper was a design for one of these structures. One of these structures inspired Philip Johnson’s 1976 design for an all-white building in Dallas’s Thanks-Giving Square. One of these structures in Seville was converted into the Giralda. Indian instances of these structures include four that comprise an iconic monument of Hyderabad and a brick one in Delhi’s Qutb complex. Ziggurats may have inspired the Malwiya, a spiral-shaped sort of this structure in Samarra. For 10 points, name these towers from which muezzins call for prayer.
minarets [or minars; accept Charminar, Qutb Minar, or Qutub Minar; accept Malwiya or Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until “Malwiya” is read; prompt on mosques; prompt on towers, pillars, or bell towers] (Pinseau designed the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca. The ruler is Ibn Tulun, the namesake of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo. The Great Mosque of Samarra contains a spiral-shaped minaret.)
[ [ 0, 132 ], [ 133, 242 ], [ 243, 376 ], [ 377, 498 ], [ 499, 566 ], [ 567, 703 ], [ 704, 795 ], [ 796, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 77, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-14-20_2
Michel Pinseau included a laser in his design for one of these structures adorned with seafoam-colored tiles.
[ "minars", "Charminar Minar", "Minar", "Charminar", "Mināra", "minarets", "Qutub Minar", "Charminar, Qutb Minar,", "Malwiya", "minar", "minaret", "Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until Malwiya is read" ]
acf-co24-14-20
2
The lawns around one of these structures contain a former part of it whose failed renovation earned it the nickname “Smith’s Folly.” Michel Pinseau included a laser in his design for one of these structures adorned with seafoam-colored tiles. According to legend, a monarch covered up his laziness by claiming his tinkering with paper was a design for one of these structures. One of these structures inspired Philip Johnson’s 1976 design for an all-white building in Dallas’s Thanks-Giving Square. One of these structures in Seville was converted into the Giralda. Indian instances of these structures include four that comprise an iconic monument of Hyderabad and a brick one in Delhi’s Qutb complex. Ziggurats may have inspired the Malwiya, a spiral-shaped sort of this structure in Samarra. For 10 points, name these towers from which muezzins call for prayer.
minarets [or minars; accept Charminar, Qutb Minar, or Qutub Minar; accept Malwiya or Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until “Malwiya” is read; prompt on mosques; prompt on towers, pillars, or bell towers] (Pinseau designed the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca. The ruler is Ibn Tulun, the namesake of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo. The Great Mosque of Samarra contains a spiral-shaped minaret.)
[ [ 0, 132 ], [ 133, 242 ], [ 243, 376 ], [ 377, 498 ], [ 499, 566 ], [ 567, 703 ], [ 704, 795 ], [ 796, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 77, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-14-20_3
According to legend, a monarch covered up his laziness by claiming his tinkering with paper was a design for one of these structures.
[ "minars", "Charminar Minar", "Minar", "Charminar", "Mināra", "minarets", "Qutub Minar", "Charminar, Qutb Minar,", "Malwiya", "minar", "minaret", "Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until Malwiya is read" ]
acf-co24-14-20
3
The lawns around one of these structures contain a former part of it whose failed renovation earned it the nickname “Smith’s Folly.” Michel Pinseau included a laser in his design for one of these structures adorned with seafoam-colored tiles. According to legend, a monarch covered up his laziness by claiming his tinkering with paper was a design for one of these structures. One of these structures inspired Philip Johnson’s 1976 design for an all-white building in Dallas’s Thanks-Giving Square. One of these structures in Seville was converted into the Giralda. Indian instances of these structures include four that comprise an iconic monument of Hyderabad and a brick one in Delhi’s Qutb complex. Ziggurats may have inspired the Malwiya, a spiral-shaped sort of this structure in Samarra. For 10 points, name these towers from which muezzins call for prayer.
minarets [or minars; accept Charminar, Qutb Minar, or Qutub Minar; accept Malwiya or Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until “Malwiya” is read; prompt on mosques; prompt on towers, pillars, or bell towers] (Pinseau designed the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca. The ruler is Ibn Tulun, the namesake of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo. The Great Mosque of Samarra contains a spiral-shaped minaret.)
[ [ 0, 132 ], [ 133, 242 ], [ 243, 376 ], [ 377, 498 ], [ 499, 566 ], [ 567, 703 ], [ 704, 795 ], [ 796, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 77, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-14-20_4
One of these structures inspired Philip Johnson’s 1976 design for an all-white building in Dallas’s Thanks-Giving Square.
[ "minars", "Charminar Minar", "Minar", "Charminar", "Mināra", "minarets", "Qutub Minar", "Charminar, Qutb Minar,", "Malwiya", "minar", "minaret", "Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until Malwiya is read" ]
acf-co24-14-20
4
The lawns around one of these structures contain a former part of it whose failed renovation earned it the nickname “Smith’s Folly.” Michel Pinseau included a laser in his design for one of these structures adorned with seafoam-colored tiles. According to legend, a monarch covered up his laziness by claiming his tinkering with paper was a design for one of these structures. One of these structures inspired Philip Johnson’s 1976 design for an all-white building in Dallas’s Thanks-Giving Square. One of these structures in Seville was converted into the Giralda. Indian instances of these structures include four that comprise an iconic monument of Hyderabad and a brick one in Delhi’s Qutb complex. Ziggurats may have inspired the Malwiya, a spiral-shaped sort of this structure in Samarra. For 10 points, name these towers from which muezzins call for prayer.
minarets [or minars; accept Charminar, Qutb Minar, or Qutub Minar; accept Malwiya or Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until “Malwiya” is read; prompt on mosques; prompt on towers, pillars, or bell towers] (Pinseau designed the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca. The ruler is Ibn Tulun, the namesake of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo. The Great Mosque of Samarra contains a spiral-shaped minaret.)
[ [ 0, 132 ], [ 133, 242 ], [ 243, 376 ], [ 377, 498 ], [ 499, 566 ], [ 567, 703 ], [ 704, 795 ], [ 796, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 77, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-14-20_5
One of these structures in Seville was converted into the Giralda.
[ "minars", "Charminar Minar", "Minar", "Charminar", "Mināra", "minarets", "Qutub Minar", "Charminar, Qutb Minar,", "Malwiya", "minar", "minaret", "Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until Malwiya is read" ]
acf-co24-14-20
5
The lawns around one of these structures contain a former part of it whose failed renovation earned it the nickname “Smith’s Folly.” Michel Pinseau included a laser in his design for one of these structures adorned with seafoam-colored tiles. According to legend, a monarch covered up his laziness by claiming his tinkering with paper was a design for one of these structures. One of these structures inspired Philip Johnson’s 1976 design for an all-white building in Dallas’s Thanks-Giving Square. One of these structures in Seville was converted into the Giralda. Indian instances of these structures include four that comprise an iconic monument of Hyderabad and a brick one in Delhi’s Qutb complex. Ziggurats may have inspired the Malwiya, a spiral-shaped sort of this structure in Samarra. For 10 points, name these towers from which muezzins call for prayer.
minarets [or minars; accept Charminar, Qutb Minar, or Qutub Minar; accept Malwiya or Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until “Malwiya” is read; prompt on mosques; prompt on towers, pillars, or bell towers] (Pinseau designed the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca. The ruler is Ibn Tulun, the namesake of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo. The Great Mosque of Samarra contains a spiral-shaped minaret.)
[ [ 0, 132 ], [ 133, 242 ], [ 243, 376 ], [ 377, 498 ], [ 499, 566 ], [ 567, 703 ], [ 704, 795 ], [ 796, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 77, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-14-20_6
Indian instances of these structures include four that comprise an iconic monument of Hyderabad and a brick one in Delhi’s Qutb complex.
[ "minars", "Charminar Minar", "Minar", "Charminar", "Mināra", "minarets", "Qutub Minar", "Charminar, Qutb Minar,", "Malwiya", "minar", "minaret", "Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until Malwiya is read" ]
acf-co24-14-20
6
The lawns around one of these structures contain a former part of it whose failed renovation earned it the nickname “Smith’s Folly.” Michel Pinseau included a laser in his design for one of these structures adorned with seafoam-colored tiles. According to legend, a monarch covered up his laziness by claiming his tinkering with paper was a design for one of these structures. One of these structures inspired Philip Johnson’s 1976 design for an all-white building in Dallas’s Thanks-Giving Square. One of these structures in Seville was converted into the Giralda. Indian instances of these structures include four that comprise an iconic monument of Hyderabad and a brick one in Delhi’s Qutb complex. Ziggurats may have inspired the Malwiya, a spiral-shaped sort of this structure in Samarra. For 10 points, name these towers from which muezzins call for prayer.
minarets [or minars; accept Charminar, Qutb Minar, or Qutub Minar; accept Malwiya or Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until “Malwiya” is read; prompt on mosques; prompt on towers, pillars, or bell towers] (Pinseau designed the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca. The ruler is Ibn Tulun, the namesake of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo. The Great Mosque of Samarra contains a spiral-shaped minaret.)
[ [ 0, 132 ], [ 133, 242 ], [ 243, 376 ], [ 377, 498 ], [ 499, 566 ], [ 567, 703 ], [ 704, 795 ], [ 796, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 77, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-14-20_7
Ziggurats may have inspired the Malwiya, a spiral-shaped sort of this structure in Samarra.
[ "minars", "Charminar Minar", "Minar", "Charminar", "Mināra", "minarets", "Qutub Minar", "Charminar, Qutb Minar,", "Malwiya", "minar", "minaret", "Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until Malwiya is read" ]
acf-co24-14-20
7
The lawns around one of these structures contain a former part of it whose failed renovation earned it the nickname “Smith’s Folly.” Michel Pinseau included a laser in his design for one of these structures adorned with seafoam-colored tiles. According to legend, a monarch covered up his laziness by claiming his tinkering with paper was a design for one of these structures. One of these structures inspired Philip Johnson’s 1976 design for an all-white building in Dallas’s Thanks-Giving Square. One of these structures in Seville was converted into the Giralda. Indian instances of these structures include four that comprise an iconic monument of Hyderabad and a brick one in Delhi’s Qutb complex. Ziggurats may have inspired the Malwiya, a spiral-shaped sort of this structure in Samarra. For 10 points, name these towers from which muezzins call for prayer.
minarets [or minars; accept Charminar, Qutb Minar, or Qutub Minar; accept Malwiya or Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until “Malwiya” is read; prompt on mosques; prompt on towers, pillars, or bell towers] (Pinseau designed the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca. The ruler is Ibn Tulun, the namesake of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo. The Great Mosque of Samarra contains a spiral-shaped minaret.)
[ [ 0, 132 ], [ 133, 242 ], [ 243, 376 ], [ 377, 498 ], [ 499, 566 ], [ 567, 703 ], [ 704, 795 ], [ 796, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 77, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-14-20_8
For 10 points, name these towers from which muezzins call for prayer.
[ "minars", "Charminar Minar", "Minar", "Charminar", "Mināra", "minarets", "Qutub Minar", "Charminar, Qutb Minar,", "Malwiya", "minar", "minaret", "Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until Malwiya is read" ]
acf-co24-14-20
8
The lawns around one of these structures contain a former part of it whose failed renovation earned it the nickname “Smith’s Folly.” Michel Pinseau included a laser in his design for one of these structures adorned with seafoam-colored tiles. According to legend, a monarch covered up his laziness by claiming his tinkering with paper was a design for one of these structures. One of these structures inspired Philip Johnson’s 1976 design for an all-white building in Dallas’s Thanks-Giving Square. One of these structures in Seville was converted into the Giralda. Indian instances of these structures include four that comprise an iconic monument of Hyderabad and a brick one in Delhi’s Qutb complex. Ziggurats may have inspired the Malwiya, a spiral-shaped sort of this structure in Samarra. For 10 points, name these towers from which muezzins call for prayer.
minarets [or minars; accept Charminar, Qutb Minar, or Qutub Minar; accept Malwiya or Al-Minārat al-Malwiyyah until “Malwiya” is read; prompt on mosques; prompt on towers, pillars, or bell towers] (Pinseau designed the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca. The ruler is Ibn Tulun, the namesake of the Mosque of Ibn Tulun in Cairo. The Great Mosque of Samarra contains a spiral-shaped minaret.)
[ [ 0, 132 ], [ 133, 242 ], [ 243, 376 ], [ 377, 498 ], [ 499, 566 ], [ 567, 703 ], [ 704, 795 ], [ 796, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 37, -5 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 77, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 94, -5 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 94, 10 ], [ 97, -5 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 109, -5 ], [ 110, -5 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ], [ 138, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet N. Editors 8", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }