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acf-co24-15-1_1
A student in a café angrily points at a map after overhearing this place’s name and the word “crime” in a novel that calls an event here the “hinge” of its century and a “change of front on the part of the Universe.”
[ "the Waterloo battlefield", "Hougoumont", "Waterloo", "Mont Saint-Jean", "Battle of Waterloo" ]
acf-co24-15-1
1
A student in a café angrily points at a map after overhearing this place’s name and the word “crime” in a novel that calls an event here the “hinge” of its century and a “change of front on the part of the Universe.” A 17-year-old gets drunk by buying four glasses of brandy from a cantinière at this place, which he reaches after being imprisoned for claiming to be the barometer salesman Vasi. A 19-chapter digression set at this place uses a dash to represent the word “Merde!” spoken by the “titan” Cambronne and includes a scene in which Pontmercy asks the innkeeper Thénardier to check his pockets, not realizing he has already robbed him. At this place, a boy with diamonds sewn into his coat has his horse stolen and tries to shoot a trooper in a chaotic sequence that inspired Tolstoy’s depiction of Borodino. For 10 points, name this site of a battle depicted in Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables and Stendhal’s The Charterhouse of Parma.
Waterloo [accept Battle of Waterloo or the Waterloo battlefield; accept Mont Saint-Jean or Hougoumont; prompt on Wallonia or Belgium or battefield]
[ [ 0, 216 ], [ 217, 395 ], [ 396, 480 ], [ 481, 646 ], [ 647, 819 ], [ 820, 944 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 72, -5 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-1_2
A 17-year-old gets drunk by buying four glasses of brandy from a cantinière at this place, which he reaches after being imprisoned for claiming to be the barometer salesman Vasi.
[ "the Waterloo battlefield", "Hougoumont", "Waterloo", "Mont Saint-Jean", "Battle of Waterloo" ]
acf-co24-15-1
2
A student in a café angrily points at a map after overhearing this place’s name and the word “crime” in a novel that calls an event here the “hinge” of its century and a “change of front on the part of the Universe.” A 17-year-old gets drunk by buying four glasses of brandy from a cantinière at this place, which he reaches after being imprisoned for claiming to be the barometer salesman Vasi. A 19-chapter digression set at this place uses a dash to represent the word “Merde!” spoken by the “titan” Cambronne and includes a scene in which Pontmercy asks the innkeeper Thénardier to check his pockets, not realizing he has already robbed him. At this place, a boy with diamonds sewn into his coat has his horse stolen and tries to shoot a trooper in a chaotic sequence that inspired Tolstoy’s depiction of Borodino. For 10 points, name this site of a battle depicted in Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables and Stendhal’s The Charterhouse of Parma.
Waterloo [accept Battle of Waterloo or the Waterloo battlefield; accept Mont Saint-Jean or Hougoumont; prompt on Wallonia or Belgium or battefield]
[ [ 0, 216 ], [ 217, 395 ], [ 396, 480 ], [ 481, 646 ], [ 647, 819 ], [ 820, 944 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 72, -5 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-1_3
A 19-chapter digression set at this place uses a dash to represent the word “Merde!”
[ "the Waterloo battlefield", "Hougoumont", "Waterloo", "Mont Saint-Jean", "Battle of Waterloo" ]
acf-co24-15-1
3
A student in a café angrily points at a map after overhearing this place’s name and the word “crime” in a novel that calls an event here the “hinge” of its century and a “change of front on the part of the Universe.” A 17-year-old gets drunk by buying four glasses of brandy from a cantinière at this place, which he reaches after being imprisoned for claiming to be the barometer salesman Vasi. A 19-chapter digression set at this place uses a dash to represent the word “Merde!” spoken by the “titan” Cambronne and includes a scene in which Pontmercy asks the innkeeper Thénardier to check his pockets, not realizing he has already robbed him. At this place, a boy with diamonds sewn into his coat has his horse stolen and tries to shoot a trooper in a chaotic sequence that inspired Tolstoy’s depiction of Borodino. For 10 points, name this site of a battle depicted in Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables and Stendhal’s The Charterhouse of Parma.
Waterloo [accept Battle of Waterloo or the Waterloo battlefield; accept Mont Saint-Jean or Hougoumont; prompt on Wallonia or Belgium or battefield]
[ [ 0, 216 ], [ 217, 395 ], [ 396, 480 ], [ 481, 646 ], [ 647, 819 ], [ 820, 944 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 72, -5 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-1_4
spoken by the “titan” Cambronne and includes a scene in which Pontmercy asks the innkeeper Thénardier to check his pockets, not realizing he has already robbed him.
[ "the Waterloo battlefield", "Hougoumont", "Waterloo", "Mont Saint-Jean", "Battle of Waterloo" ]
acf-co24-15-1
4
A student in a café angrily points at a map after overhearing this place’s name and the word “crime” in a novel that calls an event here the “hinge” of its century and a “change of front on the part of the Universe.” A 17-year-old gets drunk by buying four glasses of brandy from a cantinière at this place, which he reaches after being imprisoned for claiming to be the barometer salesman Vasi. A 19-chapter digression set at this place uses a dash to represent the word “Merde!” spoken by the “titan” Cambronne and includes a scene in which Pontmercy asks the innkeeper Thénardier to check his pockets, not realizing he has already robbed him. At this place, a boy with diamonds sewn into his coat has his horse stolen and tries to shoot a trooper in a chaotic sequence that inspired Tolstoy’s depiction of Borodino. For 10 points, name this site of a battle depicted in Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables and Stendhal’s The Charterhouse of Parma.
Waterloo [accept Battle of Waterloo or the Waterloo battlefield; accept Mont Saint-Jean or Hougoumont; prompt on Wallonia or Belgium or battefield]
[ [ 0, 216 ], [ 217, 395 ], [ 396, 480 ], [ 481, 646 ], [ 647, 819 ], [ 820, 944 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 72, -5 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-1_5
At this place, a boy with diamonds sewn into his coat has his horse stolen and tries to shoot a trooper in a chaotic sequence that inspired Tolstoy’s depiction of Borodino.
[ "the Waterloo battlefield", "Hougoumont", "Waterloo", "Mont Saint-Jean", "Battle of Waterloo" ]
acf-co24-15-1
5
A student in a café angrily points at a map after overhearing this place’s name and the word “crime” in a novel that calls an event here the “hinge” of its century and a “change of front on the part of the Universe.” A 17-year-old gets drunk by buying four glasses of brandy from a cantinière at this place, which he reaches after being imprisoned for claiming to be the barometer salesman Vasi. A 19-chapter digression set at this place uses a dash to represent the word “Merde!” spoken by the “titan” Cambronne and includes a scene in which Pontmercy asks the innkeeper Thénardier to check his pockets, not realizing he has already robbed him. At this place, a boy with diamonds sewn into his coat has his horse stolen and tries to shoot a trooper in a chaotic sequence that inspired Tolstoy’s depiction of Borodino. For 10 points, name this site of a battle depicted in Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables and Stendhal’s The Charterhouse of Parma.
Waterloo [accept Battle of Waterloo or the Waterloo battlefield; accept Mont Saint-Jean or Hougoumont; prompt on Wallonia or Belgium or battefield]
[ [ 0, 216 ], [ 217, 395 ], [ 396, 480 ], [ 481, 646 ], [ 647, 819 ], [ 820, 944 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 72, -5 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-1_6
For 10 points, name this site of a battle depicted in Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables and Stendhal’s The Charterhouse of Parma.
[ "the Waterloo battlefield", "Hougoumont", "Waterloo", "Mont Saint-Jean", "Battle of Waterloo" ]
acf-co24-15-1
6
A student in a café angrily points at a map after overhearing this place’s name and the word “crime” in a novel that calls an event here the “hinge” of its century and a “change of front on the part of the Universe.” A 17-year-old gets drunk by buying four glasses of brandy from a cantinière at this place, which he reaches after being imprisoned for claiming to be the barometer salesman Vasi. A 19-chapter digression set at this place uses a dash to represent the word “Merde!” spoken by the “titan” Cambronne and includes a scene in which Pontmercy asks the innkeeper Thénardier to check his pockets, not realizing he has already robbed him. At this place, a boy with diamonds sewn into his coat has his horse stolen and tries to shoot a trooper in a chaotic sequence that inspired Tolstoy’s depiction of Borodino. For 10 points, name this site of a battle depicted in Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables and Stendhal’s The Charterhouse of Parma.
Waterloo [accept Battle of Waterloo or the Waterloo battlefield; accept Mont Saint-Jean or Hougoumont; prompt on Wallonia or Belgium or battefield]
[ [ 0, 216 ], [ 217, 395 ], [ 396, 480 ], [ 481, 646 ], [ 647, 819 ], [ 820, 944 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - European Literature", "category_main": "literature-european-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 72, -5 ], [ 167, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-2_1
Wertheim showed that systems named for this noun have an exact solution for the Percus–Yevick equation.
[ "hard spheres", "spheres", "spherical", "spherical harmonics", "mean spherical model", "mean spherical approximation", "sphere", "spherical model" ]
acf-co24-15-2
1
Wertheim showed that systems named for this noun have an exact solution for the Percus–Yevick equation. A useful approximation model for ion energies in the primitive model is described by this word and “mean.” Berlin and Kac extended the Ising model to create a model of ferromagnetism named for this word. This is the second word of a model described by the Carnahan–Starling equation of state, which includes B-sub-2 equals “four times particle volume” among its analytical solutions for the first three virial coefficients. This is also the first word of a type of function that solves for the angular component of the wavefunction of the hydrogen atom. Those functions denoted “Y-sub-l-super-m” are “harmonics” described by this word. For 10 points, the kinetic theory of gases assumes that all molecules are what idealized “hard” shape with a consistent radius?
spheres [or spherical; accept hard spheres; accept spherical harmonics; accept spherical model; accept mean spherical approximation or mean spherical model]
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 210 ], [ 211, 307 ], [ 308, 529 ], [ 530, 659 ], [ 660, 741 ], [ 742, 869 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 46, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-15-2_2
A useful approximation model for ion energies in the primitive model is described by this word and “mean.”
[ "hard spheres", "spheres", "spherical", "spherical harmonics", "mean spherical model", "mean spherical approximation", "sphere", "spherical model" ]
acf-co24-15-2
2
Wertheim showed that systems named for this noun have an exact solution for the Percus–Yevick equation. A useful approximation model for ion energies in the primitive model is described by this word and “mean.” Berlin and Kac extended the Ising model to create a model of ferromagnetism named for this word. This is the second word of a model described by the Carnahan–Starling equation of state, which includes B-sub-2 equals “four times particle volume” among its analytical solutions for the first three virial coefficients. This is also the first word of a type of function that solves for the angular component of the wavefunction of the hydrogen atom. Those functions denoted “Y-sub-l-super-m” are “harmonics” described by this word. For 10 points, the kinetic theory of gases assumes that all molecules are what idealized “hard” shape with a consistent radius?
spheres [or spherical; accept hard spheres; accept spherical harmonics; accept spherical model; accept mean spherical approximation or mean spherical model]
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 210 ], [ 211, 307 ], [ 308, 529 ], [ 530, 659 ], [ 660, 741 ], [ 742, 869 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 46, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-15-2_3
Berlin and Kac extended the Ising model to create a model of ferromagnetism named for this word.
[ "hard spheres", "spheres", "spherical", "spherical harmonics", "mean spherical model", "mean spherical approximation", "sphere", "spherical model" ]
acf-co24-15-2
3
Wertheim showed that systems named for this noun have an exact solution for the Percus–Yevick equation. A useful approximation model for ion energies in the primitive model is described by this word and “mean.” Berlin and Kac extended the Ising model to create a model of ferromagnetism named for this word. This is the second word of a model described by the Carnahan–Starling equation of state, which includes B-sub-2 equals “four times particle volume” among its analytical solutions for the first three virial coefficients. This is also the first word of a type of function that solves for the angular component of the wavefunction of the hydrogen atom. Those functions denoted “Y-sub-l-super-m” are “harmonics” described by this word. For 10 points, the kinetic theory of gases assumes that all molecules are what idealized “hard” shape with a consistent radius?
spheres [or spherical; accept hard spheres; accept spherical harmonics; accept spherical model; accept mean spherical approximation or mean spherical model]
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 210 ], [ 211, 307 ], [ 308, 529 ], [ 530, 659 ], [ 660, 741 ], [ 742, 869 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 46, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-15-2_4
This is the second word of a model described by the Carnahan–Starling equation of state, which includes B-sub-2 equals “four times particle volume” among its analytical solutions for the first three virial coefficients.
[ "hard spheres", "spheres", "spherical", "spherical harmonics", "mean spherical model", "mean spherical approximation", "sphere", "spherical model" ]
acf-co24-15-2
4
Wertheim showed that systems named for this noun have an exact solution for the Percus–Yevick equation. A useful approximation model for ion energies in the primitive model is described by this word and “mean.” Berlin and Kac extended the Ising model to create a model of ferromagnetism named for this word. This is the second word of a model described by the Carnahan–Starling equation of state, which includes B-sub-2 equals “four times particle volume” among its analytical solutions for the first three virial coefficients. This is also the first word of a type of function that solves for the angular component of the wavefunction of the hydrogen atom. Those functions denoted “Y-sub-l-super-m” are “harmonics” described by this word. For 10 points, the kinetic theory of gases assumes that all molecules are what idealized “hard” shape with a consistent radius?
spheres [or spherical; accept hard spheres; accept spherical harmonics; accept spherical model; accept mean spherical approximation or mean spherical model]
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 210 ], [ 211, 307 ], [ 308, 529 ], [ 530, 659 ], [ 660, 741 ], [ 742, 869 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 46, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-15-2_5
This is also the first word of a type of function that solves for the angular component of the wavefunction of the hydrogen atom.
[ "hard spheres", "spheres", "spherical", "spherical harmonics", "mean spherical model", "mean spherical approximation", "sphere", "spherical model" ]
acf-co24-15-2
5
Wertheim showed that systems named for this noun have an exact solution for the Percus–Yevick equation. A useful approximation model for ion energies in the primitive model is described by this word and “mean.” Berlin and Kac extended the Ising model to create a model of ferromagnetism named for this word. This is the second word of a model described by the Carnahan–Starling equation of state, which includes B-sub-2 equals “four times particle volume” among its analytical solutions for the first three virial coefficients. This is also the first word of a type of function that solves for the angular component of the wavefunction of the hydrogen atom. Those functions denoted “Y-sub-l-super-m” are “harmonics” described by this word. For 10 points, the kinetic theory of gases assumes that all molecules are what idealized “hard” shape with a consistent radius?
spheres [or spherical; accept hard spheres; accept spherical harmonics; accept spherical model; accept mean spherical approximation or mean spherical model]
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 210 ], [ 211, 307 ], [ 308, 529 ], [ 530, 659 ], [ 660, 741 ], [ 742, 869 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 46, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-15-2_6
Those functions denoted “Y-sub-l-super-m” are “harmonics” described by this word.
[ "hard spheres", "spheres", "spherical", "spherical harmonics", "mean spherical model", "mean spherical approximation", "sphere", "spherical model" ]
acf-co24-15-2
6
Wertheim showed that systems named for this noun have an exact solution for the Percus–Yevick equation. A useful approximation model for ion energies in the primitive model is described by this word and “mean.” Berlin and Kac extended the Ising model to create a model of ferromagnetism named for this word. This is the second word of a model described by the Carnahan–Starling equation of state, which includes B-sub-2 equals “four times particle volume” among its analytical solutions for the first three virial coefficients. This is also the first word of a type of function that solves for the angular component of the wavefunction of the hydrogen atom. Those functions denoted “Y-sub-l-super-m” are “harmonics” described by this word. For 10 points, the kinetic theory of gases assumes that all molecules are what idealized “hard” shape with a consistent radius?
spheres [or spherical; accept hard spheres; accept spherical harmonics; accept spherical model; accept mean spherical approximation or mean spherical model]
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 210 ], [ 211, 307 ], [ 308, 529 ], [ 530, 659 ], [ 660, 741 ], [ 742, 869 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 46, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-15-2_7
For 10 points, the kinetic theory of gases assumes that all molecules are what idealized “hard” shape with a consistent radius?
[ "hard spheres", "spheres", "spherical", "spherical harmonics", "mean spherical model", "mean spherical approximation", "sphere", "spherical model" ]
acf-co24-15-2
7
Wertheim showed that systems named for this noun have an exact solution for the Percus–Yevick equation. A useful approximation model for ion energies in the primitive model is described by this word and “mean.” Berlin and Kac extended the Ising model to create a model of ferromagnetism named for this word. This is the second word of a model described by the Carnahan–Starling equation of state, which includes B-sub-2 equals “four times particle volume” among its analytical solutions for the first three virial coefficients. This is also the first word of a type of function that solves for the angular component of the wavefunction of the hydrogen atom. Those functions denoted “Y-sub-l-super-m” are “harmonics” described by this word. For 10 points, the kinetic theory of gases assumes that all molecules are what idealized “hard” shape with a consistent radius?
spheres [or spherical; accept hard spheres; accept spherical harmonics; accept spherical model; accept mean spherical approximation or mean spherical model]
[ [ 0, 103 ], [ 104, 210 ], [ 211, 307 ], [ 308, 529 ], [ 530, 659 ], [ 660, 741 ], [ 742, 869 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Chemistry", "category_main": "science-chemistry", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 46, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "chemistry" ] }
acf-co24-15-3_1
Valerie Hansen credits a wave of refugees from this region with bringing the practice of writing their language on “wedge-shaped” and “double rectangular” wood slips to cities like Niya.
[ "Parupraesanna", "Gāndhārī language", "Paropamisadae", "Gāndhārī", "Gandhāra" ]
acf-co24-15-3
1
Valerie Hansen credits a wave of refugees from this region with bringing the practice of writing their language on “wedge-shaped” and “double rectangular” wood slips to cities like Niya. The language named for this region provides the local name Kroraïna for the Tarim Basin kingdom of Loulan, whose inhabitants used this region’s Kharoṣṭhī script. This historic region produced ornate stone “toilet trays,” as well the Shinkot and Bimaran casket reliquaries. This satrapy northwest of Arachosia lay just southeast of the Khyber Pass. This region’s loose topknots stood for the ushnisha cranial knob in works that replaced aniconic images of footprints in the 1st century CE. The Kushan Empire patronized artists from this region who used densely folded robes and haloes in their images of the Buddha. For 10 points, what ancient region names a Greco-Buddhist art style?
Gandhāra [accept Gāndhārī language; accept Paropamisadae or Parupraesanna; prompt on Peshawar Valley, Indo-Bactria, or Afghanistan]
[ [ 0, 186 ], [ 187, 348 ], [ 349, 459 ], [ 460, 535 ], [ 536, 676 ], [ 677, 802 ], [ 803, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-3_2
The language named for this region provides the local name Kroraïna for the Tarim Basin kingdom of Loulan, whose inhabitants used this region’s Kharoṣṭhī script.
[ "Parupraesanna", "Gāndhārī language", "Paropamisadae", "Gāndhārī", "Gandhāra" ]
acf-co24-15-3
2
Valerie Hansen credits a wave of refugees from this region with bringing the practice of writing their language on “wedge-shaped” and “double rectangular” wood slips to cities like Niya. The language named for this region provides the local name Kroraïna for the Tarim Basin kingdom of Loulan, whose inhabitants used this region’s Kharoṣṭhī script. This historic region produced ornate stone “toilet trays,” as well the Shinkot and Bimaran casket reliquaries. This satrapy northwest of Arachosia lay just southeast of the Khyber Pass. This region’s loose topknots stood for the ushnisha cranial knob in works that replaced aniconic images of footprints in the 1st century CE. The Kushan Empire patronized artists from this region who used densely folded robes and haloes in their images of the Buddha. For 10 points, what ancient region names a Greco-Buddhist art style?
Gandhāra [accept Gāndhārī language; accept Paropamisadae or Parupraesanna; prompt on Peshawar Valley, Indo-Bactria, or Afghanistan]
[ [ 0, 186 ], [ 187, 348 ], [ 349, 459 ], [ 460, 535 ], [ 536, 676 ], [ 677, 802 ], [ 803, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-3_3
This historic region produced ornate stone “toilet trays,” as well the Shinkot and Bimaran casket reliquaries.
[ "Parupraesanna", "Gāndhārī language", "Paropamisadae", "Gāndhārī", "Gandhāra" ]
acf-co24-15-3
3
Valerie Hansen credits a wave of refugees from this region with bringing the practice of writing their language on “wedge-shaped” and “double rectangular” wood slips to cities like Niya. The language named for this region provides the local name Kroraïna for the Tarim Basin kingdom of Loulan, whose inhabitants used this region’s Kharoṣṭhī script. This historic region produced ornate stone “toilet trays,” as well the Shinkot and Bimaran casket reliquaries. This satrapy northwest of Arachosia lay just southeast of the Khyber Pass. This region’s loose topknots stood for the ushnisha cranial knob in works that replaced aniconic images of footprints in the 1st century CE. The Kushan Empire patronized artists from this region who used densely folded robes and haloes in their images of the Buddha. For 10 points, what ancient region names a Greco-Buddhist art style?
Gandhāra [accept Gāndhārī language; accept Paropamisadae or Parupraesanna; prompt on Peshawar Valley, Indo-Bactria, or Afghanistan]
[ [ 0, 186 ], [ 187, 348 ], [ 349, 459 ], [ 460, 535 ], [ 536, 676 ], [ 677, 802 ], [ 803, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-3_4
This satrapy northwest of Arachosia lay just southeast of the Khyber Pass.
[ "Parupraesanna", "Gāndhārī language", "Paropamisadae", "Gāndhārī", "Gandhāra" ]
acf-co24-15-3
4
Valerie Hansen credits a wave of refugees from this region with bringing the practice of writing their language on “wedge-shaped” and “double rectangular” wood slips to cities like Niya. The language named for this region provides the local name Kroraïna for the Tarim Basin kingdom of Loulan, whose inhabitants used this region’s Kharoṣṭhī script. This historic region produced ornate stone “toilet trays,” as well the Shinkot and Bimaran casket reliquaries. This satrapy northwest of Arachosia lay just southeast of the Khyber Pass. This region’s loose topknots stood for the ushnisha cranial knob in works that replaced aniconic images of footprints in the 1st century CE. The Kushan Empire patronized artists from this region who used densely folded robes and haloes in their images of the Buddha. For 10 points, what ancient region names a Greco-Buddhist art style?
Gandhāra [accept Gāndhārī language; accept Paropamisadae or Parupraesanna; prompt on Peshawar Valley, Indo-Bactria, or Afghanistan]
[ [ 0, 186 ], [ 187, 348 ], [ 349, 459 ], [ 460, 535 ], [ 536, 676 ], [ 677, 802 ], [ 803, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-3_5
This region’s loose topknots stood for the ushnisha cranial knob in works that replaced aniconic images of footprints in the 1st century CE.
[ "Parupraesanna", "Gāndhārī language", "Paropamisadae", "Gāndhārī", "Gandhāra" ]
acf-co24-15-3
5
Valerie Hansen credits a wave of refugees from this region with bringing the practice of writing their language on “wedge-shaped” and “double rectangular” wood slips to cities like Niya. The language named for this region provides the local name Kroraïna for the Tarim Basin kingdom of Loulan, whose inhabitants used this region’s Kharoṣṭhī script. This historic region produced ornate stone “toilet trays,” as well the Shinkot and Bimaran casket reliquaries. This satrapy northwest of Arachosia lay just southeast of the Khyber Pass. This region’s loose topknots stood for the ushnisha cranial knob in works that replaced aniconic images of footprints in the 1st century CE. The Kushan Empire patronized artists from this region who used densely folded robes and haloes in their images of the Buddha. For 10 points, what ancient region names a Greco-Buddhist art style?
Gandhāra [accept Gāndhārī language; accept Paropamisadae or Parupraesanna; prompt on Peshawar Valley, Indo-Bactria, or Afghanistan]
[ [ 0, 186 ], [ 187, 348 ], [ 349, 459 ], [ 460, 535 ], [ 536, 676 ], [ 677, 802 ], [ 803, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-3_6
The Kushan Empire patronized artists from this region who used densely folded robes and haloes in their images of the Buddha.
[ "Parupraesanna", "Gāndhārī language", "Paropamisadae", "Gāndhārī", "Gandhāra" ]
acf-co24-15-3
6
Valerie Hansen credits a wave of refugees from this region with bringing the practice of writing their language on “wedge-shaped” and “double rectangular” wood slips to cities like Niya. The language named for this region provides the local name Kroraïna for the Tarim Basin kingdom of Loulan, whose inhabitants used this region’s Kharoṣṭhī script. This historic region produced ornate stone “toilet trays,” as well the Shinkot and Bimaran casket reliquaries. This satrapy northwest of Arachosia lay just southeast of the Khyber Pass. This region’s loose topknots stood for the ushnisha cranial knob in works that replaced aniconic images of footprints in the 1st century CE. The Kushan Empire patronized artists from this region who used densely folded robes and haloes in their images of the Buddha. For 10 points, what ancient region names a Greco-Buddhist art style?
Gandhāra [accept Gāndhārī language; accept Paropamisadae or Parupraesanna; prompt on Peshawar Valley, Indo-Bactria, or Afghanistan]
[ [ 0, 186 ], [ 187, 348 ], [ 349, 459 ], [ 460, 535 ], [ 536, 676 ], [ 677, 802 ], [ 803, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-3_7
For 10 points, what ancient region names a Greco-Buddhist art style?
[ "Parupraesanna", "Gāndhārī language", "Paropamisadae", "Gāndhārī", "Gandhāra" ]
acf-co24-15-3
7
Valerie Hansen credits a wave of refugees from this region with bringing the practice of writing their language on “wedge-shaped” and “double rectangular” wood slips to cities like Niya. The language named for this region provides the local name Kroraïna for the Tarim Basin kingdom of Loulan, whose inhabitants used this region’s Kharoṣṭhī script. This historic region produced ornate stone “toilet trays,” as well the Shinkot and Bimaran casket reliquaries. This satrapy northwest of Arachosia lay just southeast of the Khyber Pass. This region’s loose topknots stood for the ushnisha cranial knob in works that replaced aniconic images of footprints in the 1st century CE. The Kushan Empire patronized artists from this region who used densely folded robes and haloes in their images of the Buddha. For 10 points, what ancient region names a Greco-Buddhist art style?
Gandhāra [accept Gāndhārī language; accept Paropamisadae or Parupraesanna; prompt on Peshawar Valley, Indo-Bactria, or Afghanistan]
[ [ 0, 186 ], [ 187, 348 ], [ 349, 459 ], [ 460, 535 ], [ 536, 676 ], [ 677, 802 ], [ 803, 871 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - Other History", "category_main": "history-other-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 56, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-4_1
This ballet’s iconic pose features thumbs out, flat fingers angled down in profile, and bent knees and elbows.
[ "après-midi d’un faune", "Afternoon of a Faun", "The Afternoon of a Faun", "Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune" ]
acf-co24-15-4
1
This ballet’s iconic pose features thumbs out, flat fingers angled down in profile, and bent knees and elbows. This ballet’s single high jump inspired a posthumous cast by Rodin. 90 rehearsals were required for the statuesque 2D choreography of this ballet, which inspired a 1953 duet set in a studio by Jerome Robbins. This ballet’s muted backdrop, which is hung from the second wings, depicts a paradise in flat bas-relief designed by Léon Bakst. At the end of this ballet, a danseur in a cream bodysuit with dark patches mounts a rock and lies erotically on a veil. Though this scandalous one-act ballet premiered weeks earlier in 1912, Michel Fokine accused it of stealing from Daphnis et Chloé and left the Ballets Russes. This ballet adapts a tone poem that closes in a very tonal E major after reprising a low chromatic flute solo. For 10 points, Vaslav Nijinsky chased nymphs in what ballet inspired by Debussy’s “Prelude to” a Mallarmé poem?
The Afternoon of a Faun [or L’après-midi d’un faune; reject “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun” or “Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune”]
[ [ 0, 110 ], [ 111, 319 ], [ 320, 448 ], [ 449, 569 ], [ 570, 728 ], [ 729, 839 ], [ 840, 951 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 97, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-15-4_2
This ballet’s single high jump inspired a posthumous cast by Rodin. 90 rehearsals were required for the statuesque 2D choreography of this ballet, which inspired a 1953 duet set in a studio by Jerome Robbins.
[ "après-midi d’un faune", "Afternoon of a Faun", "The Afternoon of a Faun", "Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune" ]
acf-co24-15-4
2
This ballet’s iconic pose features thumbs out, flat fingers angled down in profile, and bent knees and elbows. This ballet’s single high jump inspired a posthumous cast by Rodin. 90 rehearsals were required for the statuesque 2D choreography of this ballet, which inspired a 1953 duet set in a studio by Jerome Robbins. This ballet’s muted backdrop, which is hung from the second wings, depicts a paradise in flat bas-relief designed by Léon Bakst. At the end of this ballet, a danseur in a cream bodysuit with dark patches mounts a rock and lies erotically on a veil. Though this scandalous one-act ballet premiered weeks earlier in 1912, Michel Fokine accused it of stealing from Daphnis et Chloé and left the Ballets Russes. This ballet adapts a tone poem that closes in a very tonal E major after reprising a low chromatic flute solo. For 10 points, Vaslav Nijinsky chased nymphs in what ballet inspired by Debussy’s “Prelude to” a Mallarmé poem?
The Afternoon of a Faun [or L’après-midi d’un faune; reject “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun” or “Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune”]
[ [ 0, 110 ], [ 111, 319 ], [ 320, 448 ], [ 449, 569 ], [ 570, 728 ], [ 729, 839 ], [ 840, 951 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 97, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-15-4_3
This ballet’s muted backdrop, which is hung from the second wings, depicts a paradise in flat bas-relief designed by Léon Bakst.
[ "après-midi d’un faune", "Afternoon of a Faun", "The Afternoon of a Faun", "Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune" ]
acf-co24-15-4
3
This ballet’s iconic pose features thumbs out, flat fingers angled down in profile, and bent knees and elbows. This ballet’s single high jump inspired a posthumous cast by Rodin. 90 rehearsals were required for the statuesque 2D choreography of this ballet, which inspired a 1953 duet set in a studio by Jerome Robbins. This ballet’s muted backdrop, which is hung from the second wings, depicts a paradise in flat bas-relief designed by Léon Bakst. At the end of this ballet, a danseur in a cream bodysuit with dark patches mounts a rock and lies erotically on a veil. Though this scandalous one-act ballet premiered weeks earlier in 1912, Michel Fokine accused it of stealing from Daphnis et Chloé and left the Ballets Russes. This ballet adapts a tone poem that closes in a very tonal E major after reprising a low chromatic flute solo. For 10 points, Vaslav Nijinsky chased nymphs in what ballet inspired by Debussy’s “Prelude to” a Mallarmé poem?
The Afternoon of a Faun [or L’après-midi d’un faune; reject “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun” or “Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune”]
[ [ 0, 110 ], [ 111, 319 ], [ 320, 448 ], [ 449, 569 ], [ 570, 728 ], [ 729, 839 ], [ 840, 951 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 97, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-15-4_4
At the end of this ballet, a danseur in a cream bodysuit with dark patches mounts a rock and lies erotically on a veil.
[ "après-midi d’un faune", "Afternoon of a Faun", "The Afternoon of a Faun", "Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune" ]
acf-co24-15-4
4
This ballet’s iconic pose features thumbs out, flat fingers angled down in profile, and bent knees and elbows. This ballet’s single high jump inspired a posthumous cast by Rodin. 90 rehearsals were required for the statuesque 2D choreography of this ballet, which inspired a 1953 duet set in a studio by Jerome Robbins. This ballet’s muted backdrop, which is hung from the second wings, depicts a paradise in flat bas-relief designed by Léon Bakst. At the end of this ballet, a danseur in a cream bodysuit with dark patches mounts a rock and lies erotically on a veil. Though this scandalous one-act ballet premiered weeks earlier in 1912, Michel Fokine accused it of stealing from Daphnis et Chloé and left the Ballets Russes. This ballet adapts a tone poem that closes in a very tonal E major after reprising a low chromatic flute solo. For 10 points, Vaslav Nijinsky chased nymphs in what ballet inspired by Debussy’s “Prelude to” a Mallarmé poem?
The Afternoon of a Faun [or L’après-midi d’un faune; reject “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun” or “Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune”]
[ [ 0, 110 ], [ 111, 319 ], [ 320, 448 ], [ 449, 569 ], [ 570, 728 ], [ 729, 839 ], [ 840, 951 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 97, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-15-4_5
Though this scandalous one-act ballet premiered weeks earlier in 1912, Michel Fokine accused it of stealing from Daphnis et Chloé and left the Ballets Russes.
[ "après-midi d’un faune", "Afternoon of a Faun", "The Afternoon of a Faun", "Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune" ]
acf-co24-15-4
5
This ballet’s iconic pose features thumbs out, flat fingers angled down in profile, and bent knees and elbows. This ballet’s single high jump inspired a posthumous cast by Rodin. 90 rehearsals were required for the statuesque 2D choreography of this ballet, which inspired a 1953 duet set in a studio by Jerome Robbins. This ballet’s muted backdrop, which is hung from the second wings, depicts a paradise in flat bas-relief designed by Léon Bakst. At the end of this ballet, a danseur in a cream bodysuit with dark patches mounts a rock and lies erotically on a veil. Though this scandalous one-act ballet premiered weeks earlier in 1912, Michel Fokine accused it of stealing from Daphnis et Chloé and left the Ballets Russes. This ballet adapts a tone poem that closes in a very tonal E major after reprising a low chromatic flute solo. For 10 points, Vaslav Nijinsky chased nymphs in what ballet inspired by Debussy’s “Prelude to” a Mallarmé poem?
The Afternoon of a Faun [or L’après-midi d’un faune; reject “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun” or “Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune”]
[ [ 0, 110 ], [ 111, 319 ], [ 320, 448 ], [ 449, 569 ], [ 570, 728 ], [ 729, 839 ], [ 840, 951 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 97, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-15-4_6
This ballet adapts a tone poem that closes in a very tonal E major after reprising a low chromatic flute solo.
[ "après-midi d’un faune", "Afternoon of a Faun", "The Afternoon of a Faun", "Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune" ]
acf-co24-15-4
6
This ballet’s iconic pose features thumbs out, flat fingers angled down in profile, and bent knees and elbows. This ballet’s single high jump inspired a posthumous cast by Rodin. 90 rehearsals were required for the statuesque 2D choreography of this ballet, which inspired a 1953 duet set in a studio by Jerome Robbins. This ballet’s muted backdrop, which is hung from the second wings, depicts a paradise in flat bas-relief designed by Léon Bakst. At the end of this ballet, a danseur in a cream bodysuit with dark patches mounts a rock and lies erotically on a veil. Though this scandalous one-act ballet premiered weeks earlier in 1912, Michel Fokine accused it of stealing from Daphnis et Chloé and left the Ballets Russes. This ballet adapts a tone poem that closes in a very tonal E major after reprising a low chromatic flute solo. For 10 points, Vaslav Nijinsky chased nymphs in what ballet inspired by Debussy’s “Prelude to” a Mallarmé poem?
The Afternoon of a Faun [or L’après-midi d’un faune; reject “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun” or “Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune”]
[ [ 0, 110 ], [ 111, 319 ], [ 320, 448 ], [ 449, 569 ], [ 570, 728 ], [ 729, 839 ], [ 840, 951 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 97, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-15-4_7
For 10 points, Vaslav Nijinsky chased nymphs in what ballet inspired by Debussy’s “Prelude to” a Mallarmé poem?
[ "après-midi d’un faune", "Afternoon of a Faun", "The Afternoon of a Faun", "Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune" ]
acf-co24-15-4
7
This ballet’s iconic pose features thumbs out, flat fingers angled down in profile, and bent knees and elbows. This ballet’s single high jump inspired a posthumous cast by Rodin. 90 rehearsals were required for the statuesque 2D choreography of this ballet, which inspired a 1953 duet set in a studio by Jerome Robbins. This ballet’s muted backdrop, which is hung from the second wings, depicts a paradise in flat bas-relief designed by Léon Bakst. At the end of this ballet, a danseur in a cream bodysuit with dark patches mounts a rock and lies erotically on a veil. Though this scandalous one-act ballet premiered weeks earlier in 1912, Michel Fokine accused it of stealing from Daphnis et Chloé and left the Ballets Russes. This ballet adapts a tone poem that closes in a very tonal E major after reprising a low chromatic flute solo. For 10 points, Vaslav Nijinsky chased nymphs in what ballet inspired by Debussy’s “Prelude to” a Mallarmé poem?
The Afternoon of a Faun [or L’après-midi d’un faune; reject “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun” or “Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune”]
[ [ 0, 110 ], [ 111, 319 ], [ 320, 448 ], [ 449, 569 ], [ 570, 728 ], [ 729, 839 ], [ 840, 951 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Other Arts", "category_main": "fine-arts-other-arts", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 97, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "other-arts" ] }
acf-co24-15-5_1
A book that divides a form of this phenomenon into “liberal” and “illiberal” types according to whether it emphasizes “ethnos” or “humanity” examines how Raphael Lemkin made use of the “language of transgression.”
[ "security dilemma", "Security", "United Nations Security Council", "security" ]
acf-co24-15-5
1
A book that divides a form of this phenomenon into “liberal” and “illiberal” types according to whether it emphasizes “ethnos” or “humanity” examines how Raphael Lemkin made use of the “language of transgression.” The “critical study” of this phenomenon is expounded by the Aberystwyth School, whose key figure, Ken Booth, describes this phenomenon in terms of “emancipatory realism.” In The Problems of Genocide, Dirk Moses posited a “permanent” form of this phenomenon pursued by paranoid states. The spiral model is alternately named for this phenomenon, since it involves states pursuing it and thereby influencing other states to do the same. A Stephen Walt paper on “The Renaissance” of the study of this phenomenon defines the field as “the study of the threat, use, and control of military force.” For 10 points, give this concept that names a UN body with five permanent members.
security [accept The Problems of Genocide: Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression or United Nations Security Council or security dilemma]
[ [ 0, 213 ], [ 214, 384 ], [ 385, 499 ], [ 500, 648 ], [ 649, 806 ], [ 807, 889 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, -5 ], [ 143, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-15-5_2
The “critical study” of this phenomenon is expounded by the Aberystwyth School, whose key figure, Ken Booth, describes this phenomenon in terms of “emancipatory realism.”
[ "security dilemma", "Security", "United Nations Security Council", "security" ]
acf-co24-15-5
2
A book that divides a form of this phenomenon into “liberal” and “illiberal” types according to whether it emphasizes “ethnos” or “humanity” examines how Raphael Lemkin made use of the “language of transgression.” The “critical study” of this phenomenon is expounded by the Aberystwyth School, whose key figure, Ken Booth, describes this phenomenon in terms of “emancipatory realism.” In The Problems of Genocide, Dirk Moses posited a “permanent” form of this phenomenon pursued by paranoid states. The spiral model is alternately named for this phenomenon, since it involves states pursuing it and thereby influencing other states to do the same. A Stephen Walt paper on “The Renaissance” of the study of this phenomenon defines the field as “the study of the threat, use, and control of military force.” For 10 points, give this concept that names a UN body with five permanent members.
security [accept The Problems of Genocide: Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression or United Nations Security Council or security dilemma]
[ [ 0, 213 ], [ 214, 384 ], [ 385, 499 ], [ 500, 648 ], [ 649, 806 ], [ 807, 889 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, -5 ], [ 143, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-15-5_3
In The Problems of Genocide, Dirk Moses posited a “permanent” form of this phenomenon pursued by paranoid states.
[ "security dilemma", "Security", "United Nations Security Council", "security" ]
acf-co24-15-5
3
A book that divides a form of this phenomenon into “liberal” and “illiberal” types according to whether it emphasizes “ethnos” or “humanity” examines how Raphael Lemkin made use of the “language of transgression.” The “critical study” of this phenomenon is expounded by the Aberystwyth School, whose key figure, Ken Booth, describes this phenomenon in terms of “emancipatory realism.” In The Problems of Genocide, Dirk Moses posited a “permanent” form of this phenomenon pursued by paranoid states. The spiral model is alternately named for this phenomenon, since it involves states pursuing it and thereby influencing other states to do the same. A Stephen Walt paper on “The Renaissance” of the study of this phenomenon defines the field as “the study of the threat, use, and control of military force.” For 10 points, give this concept that names a UN body with five permanent members.
security [accept The Problems of Genocide: Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression or United Nations Security Council or security dilemma]
[ [ 0, 213 ], [ 214, 384 ], [ 385, 499 ], [ 500, 648 ], [ 649, 806 ], [ 807, 889 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, -5 ], [ 143, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-15-5_4
The spiral model is alternately named for this phenomenon, since it involves states pursuing it and thereby influencing other states to do the same.
[ "security dilemma", "Security", "United Nations Security Council", "security" ]
acf-co24-15-5
4
A book that divides a form of this phenomenon into “liberal” and “illiberal” types according to whether it emphasizes “ethnos” or “humanity” examines how Raphael Lemkin made use of the “language of transgression.” The “critical study” of this phenomenon is expounded by the Aberystwyth School, whose key figure, Ken Booth, describes this phenomenon in terms of “emancipatory realism.” In The Problems of Genocide, Dirk Moses posited a “permanent” form of this phenomenon pursued by paranoid states. The spiral model is alternately named for this phenomenon, since it involves states pursuing it and thereby influencing other states to do the same. A Stephen Walt paper on “The Renaissance” of the study of this phenomenon defines the field as “the study of the threat, use, and control of military force.” For 10 points, give this concept that names a UN body with five permanent members.
security [accept The Problems of Genocide: Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression or United Nations Security Council or security dilemma]
[ [ 0, 213 ], [ 214, 384 ], [ 385, 499 ], [ 500, 648 ], [ 649, 806 ], [ 807, 889 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, -5 ], [ 143, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-15-5_5
A Stephen Walt paper on “The Renaissance” of the study of this phenomenon defines the field as “the study of the threat, use, and control of military force.”
[ "security dilemma", "Security", "United Nations Security Council", "security" ]
acf-co24-15-5
5
A book that divides a form of this phenomenon into “liberal” and “illiberal” types according to whether it emphasizes “ethnos” or “humanity” examines how Raphael Lemkin made use of the “language of transgression.” The “critical study” of this phenomenon is expounded by the Aberystwyth School, whose key figure, Ken Booth, describes this phenomenon in terms of “emancipatory realism.” In The Problems of Genocide, Dirk Moses posited a “permanent” form of this phenomenon pursued by paranoid states. The spiral model is alternately named for this phenomenon, since it involves states pursuing it and thereby influencing other states to do the same. A Stephen Walt paper on “The Renaissance” of the study of this phenomenon defines the field as “the study of the threat, use, and control of military force.” For 10 points, give this concept that names a UN body with five permanent members.
security [accept The Problems of Genocide: Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression or United Nations Security Council or security dilemma]
[ [ 0, 213 ], [ 214, 384 ], [ 385, 499 ], [ 500, 648 ], [ 649, 806 ], [ 807, 889 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, -5 ], [ 143, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-15-5_6
For 10 points, give this concept that names a UN body with five permanent members.
[ "security dilemma", "Security", "United Nations Security Council", "security" ]
acf-co24-15-5
6
A book that divides a form of this phenomenon into “liberal” and “illiberal” types according to whether it emphasizes “ethnos” or “humanity” examines how Raphael Lemkin made use of the “language of transgression.” The “critical study” of this phenomenon is expounded by the Aberystwyth School, whose key figure, Ken Booth, describes this phenomenon in terms of “emancipatory realism.” In The Problems of Genocide, Dirk Moses posited a “permanent” form of this phenomenon pursued by paranoid states. The spiral model is alternately named for this phenomenon, since it involves states pursuing it and thereby influencing other states to do the same. A Stephen Walt paper on “The Renaissance” of the study of this phenomenon defines the field as “the study of the threat, use, and control of military force.” For 10 points, give this concept that names a UN body with five permanent members.
security [accept The Problems of Genocide: Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression or United Nations Security Council or security dilemma]
[ [ 0, 213 ], [ 214, 384 ], [ 385, 499 ], [ 500, 648 ], [ 649, 806 ], [ 807, 889 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 80, -5 ], [ 143, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-co24-15-6_1
A cache of objects almost certainly from this modern-day country, as well as 2,000 brass rods, were found in Mauritania by Théodore Monod at the “wreck” site of Ma’adin Ijafen.
[ "Republic of Maldives", "Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until Dhivehi is read", "Maldives", "Dhivehi" ]
acf-co24-15-6
1
A cache of objects almost certainly from this modern-day country, as well as 2,000 brass rods, were found in Mauritania by Théodore Monod at the “wreck” site of Ma’adin Ijafen. A 14th-century account claims that this country is annually menaced by a lamp-filled ship that will land if its inhabitants abandon Islam. This country’s hawitta mounds date from before its conversion by a merchant possibly identical to the Somali saint Aw Barkhadle. While serving under Queen Khadijah in this country, Ibn Battuta was exasperated by its women’s custom of only wearing skirts. This country was the main source of objects used with horseshoe-shaped manilla bands as money in West Africa, cowrie shells. This country’s sultan Thakurufaanu patronized the Thaana script now used for its Dhivehi language. For 10 points, fishermen used dhoni boats to sail between the many atolls of what Indian Ocean country?
Maldives [or Republic of Maldives; accept Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until “Dhivehi” is read]
[ [ 0, 176 ], [ 177, 315 ], [ 316, 444 ], [ 445, 571 ], [ 572, 696 ], [ 697, 795 ], [ 796, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - World History", "category_main": "history-world-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-6_2
A 14th-century account claims that this country is annually menaced by a lamp-filled ship that will land if its inhabitants abandon Islam.
[ "Republic of Maldives", "Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until Dhivehi is read", "Maldives", "Dhivehi" ]
acf-co24-15-6
2
A cache of objects almost certainly from this modern-day country, as well as 2,000 brass rods, were found in Mauritania by Théodore Monod at the “wreck” site of Ma’adin Ijafen. A 14th-century account claims that this country is annually menaced by a lamp-filled ship that will land if its inhabitants abandon Islam. This country’s hawitta mounds date from before its conversion by a merchant possibly identical to the Somali saint Aw Barkhadle. While serving under Queen Khadijah in this country, Ibn Battuta was exasperated by its women’s custom of only wearing skirts. This country was the main source of objects used with horseshoe-shaped manilla bands as money in West Africa, cowrie shells. This country’s sultan Thakurufaanu patronized the Thaana script now used for its Dhivehi language. For 10 points, fishermen used dhoni boats to sail between the many atolls of what Indian Ocean country?
Maldives [or Republic of Maldives; accept Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until “Dhivehi” is read]
[ [ 0, 176 ], [ 177, 315 ], [ 316, 444 ], [ 445, 571 ], [ 572, 696 ], [ 697, 795 ], [ 796, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - World History", "category_main": "history-world-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-6_3
This country’s hawitta mounds date from before its conversion by a merchant possibly identical to the Somali saint Aw Barkhadle.
[ "Republic of Maldives", "Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until Dhivehi is read", "Maldives", "Dhivehi" ]
acf-co24-15-6
3
A cache of objects almost certainly from this modern-day country, as well as 2,000 brass rods, were found in Mauritania by Théodore Monod at the “wreck” site of Ma’adin Ijafen. A 14th-century account claims that this country is annually menaced by a lamp-filled ship that will land if its inhabitants abandon Islam. This country’s hawitta mounds date from before its conversion by a merchant possibly identical to the Somali saint Aw Barkhadle. While serving under Queen Khadijah in this country, Ibn Battuta was exasperated by its women’s custom of only wearing skirts. This country was the main source of objects used with horseshoe-shaped manilla bands as money in West Africa, cowrie shells. This country’s sultan Thakurufaanu patronized the Thaana script now used for its Dhivehi language. For 10 points, fishermen used dhoni boats to sail between the many atolls of what Indian Ocean country?
Maldives [or Republic of Maldives; accept Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until “Dhivehi” is read]
[ [ 0, 176 ], [ 177, 315 ], [ 316, 444 ], [ 445, 571 ], [ 572, 696 ], [ 697, 795 ], [ 796, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - World History", "category_main": "history-world-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-6_4
While serving under Queen Khadijah in this country, Ibn Battuta was exasperated by its women’s custom of only wearing skirts.
[ "Republic of Maldives", "Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until Dhivehi is read", "Maldives", "Dhivehi" ]
acf-co24-15-6
4
A cache of objects almost certainly from this modern-day country, as well as 2,000 brass rods, were found in Mauritania by Théodore Monod at the “wreck” site of Ma’adin Ijafen. A 14th-century account claims that this country is annually menaced by a lamp-filled ship that will land if its inhabitants abandon Islam. This country’s hawitta mounds date from before its conversion by a merchant possibly identical to the Somali saint Aw Barkhadle. While serving under Queen Khadijah in this country, Ibn Battuta was exasperated by its women’s custom of only wearing skirts. This country was the main source of objects used with horseshoe-shaped manilla bands as money in West Africa, cowrie shells. This country’s sultan Thakurufaanu patronized the Thaana script now used for its Dhivehi language. For 10 points, fishermen used dhoni boats to sail between the many atolls of what Indian Ocean country?
Maldives [or Republic of Maldives; accept Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until “Dhivehi” is read]
[ [ 0, 176 ], [ 177, 315 ], [ 316, 444 ], [ 445, 571 ], [ 572, 696 ], [ 697, 795 ], [ 796, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - World History", "category_main": "history-world-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-6_5
This country was the main source of objects used with horseshoe-shaped manilla bands as money in West Africa, cowrie shells.
[ "Republic of Maldives", "Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until Dhivehi is read", "Maldives", "Dhivehi" ]
acf-co24-15-6
5
A cache of objects almost certainly from this modern-day country, as well as 2,000 brass rods, were found in Mauritania by Théodore Monod at the “wreck” site of Ma’adin Ijafen. A 14th-century account claims that this country is annually menaced by a lamp-filled ship that will land if its inhabitants abandon Islam. This country’s hawitta mounds date from before its conversion by a merchant possibly identical to the Somali saint Aw Barkhadle. While serving under Queen Khadijah in this country, Ibn Battuta was exasperated by its women’s custom of only wearing skirts. This country was the main source of objects used with horseshoe-shaped manilla bands as money in West Africa, cowrie shells. This country’s sultan Thakurufaanu patronized the Thaana script now used for its Dhivehi language. For 10 points, fishermen used dhoni boats to sail between the many atolls of what Indian Ocean country?
Maldives [or Republic of Maldives; accept Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until “Dhivehi” is read]
[ [ 0, 176 ], [ 177, 315 ], [ 316, 444 ], [ 445, 571 ], [ 572, 696 ], [ 697, 795 ], [ 796, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - World History", "category_main": "history-world-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-6_6
This country’s sultan Thakurufaanu patronized the Thaana script now used for its Dhivehi language.
[ "Republic of Maldives", "Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until Dhivehi is read", "Maldives", "Dhivehi" ]
acf-co24-15-6
6
A cache of objects almost certainly from this modern-day country, as well as 2,000 brass rods, were found in Mauritania by Théodore Monod at the “wreck” site of Ma’adin Ijafen. A 14th-century account claims that this country is annually menaced by a lamp-filled ship that will land if its inhabitants abandon Islam. This country’s hawitta mounds date from before its conversion by a merchant possibly identical to the Somali saint Aw Barkhadle. While serving under Queen Khadijah in this country, Ibn Battuta was exasperated by its women’s custom of only wearing skirts. This country was the main source of objects used with horseshoe-shaped manilla bands as money in West Africa, cowrie shells. This country’s sultan Thakurufaanu patronized the Thaana script now used for its Dhivehi language. For 10 points, fishermen used dhoni boats to sail between the many atolls of what Indian Ocean country?
Maldives [or Republic of Maldives; accept Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until “Dhivehi” is read]
[ [ 0, 176 ], [ 177, 315 ], [ 316, 444 ], [ 445, 571 ], [ 572, 696 ], [ 697, 795 ], [ 796, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - World History", "category_main": "history-world-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-6_7
For 10 points, fishermen used dhoni boats to sail between the many atolls of what Indian Ocean country?
[ "Republic of Maldives", "Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until Dhivehi is read", "Maldives", "Dhivehi" ]
acf-co24-15-6
7
A cache of objects almost certainly from this modern-day country, as well as 2,000 brass rods, were found in Mauritania by Théodore Monod at the “wreck” site of Ma’adin Ijafen. A 14th-century account claims that this country is annually menaced by a lamp-filled ship that will land if its inhabitants abandon Islam. This country’s hawitta mounds date from before its conversion by a merchant possibly identical to the Somali saint Aw Barkhadle. While serving under Queen Khadijah in this country, Ibn Battuta was exasperated by its women’s custom of only wearing skirts. This country was the main source of objects used with horseshoe-shaped manilla bands as money in West Africa, cowrie shells. This country’s sultan Thakurufaanu patronized the Thaana script now used for its Dhivehi language. For 10 points, fishermen used dhoni boats to sail between the many atolls of what Indian Ocean country?
Maldives [or Republic of Maldives; accept Dhivehi Raajjeyge Jumhooriyyaa until “Dhivehi” is read]
[ [ 0, 176 ], [ 177, 315 ], [ 316, 444 ], [ 445, 571 ], [ 572, 696 ], [ 697, 795 ], [ 796, 899 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - World History", "category_main": "history-world-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 69, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-7_1
Animals that engage in this behavior exclusively host the parasitic ant species A. punctaticeps.
[ "hole-digging", "fossorial", "digging", "tunneling", "mound-building", "fossorial behavior until read", "burrowing" ]
acf-co24-15-7
1
Animals that engage in this behavior exclusively host the parasitic ant species A. punctaticeps. The heavy zygomatic arch and small infraorbital foramen of bathyergids are adaptations that promote this behavior. Well-developed shoulder retractors and elbow flexors characterize animals that perform this behavior by using a “hook-and-pull” strategy. A rapid diversification of this behavior evident in the fossil record is linked to the Cambrian substrate revolution. The owl species A. cunicularia relies on animals that exhibit this behavior for its nests but, despite its common name, can’t perform it itself. Animals that engage in this behavior are distinguished by the elongation of the ulnar olecranon process and the distal phalanges, giving them robust forelimbs. For 10 points, name this characteristic behavior of fossorial mammals like naked mole rats and prairie dogs.
burrowing [or digging or hole-digging; or tunneling; accept mound-building; accept fossorial behavior until read; prompt on environmental engineering or ecosystem engineering]
[ [ 0, 96 ], [ 97, 211 ], [ 212, 349 ], [ 350, 468 ], [ 469, 613 ], [ 614, 773 ], [ 774, 882 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 64, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-15-7_2
The heavy zygomatic arch and small infraorbital foramen of bathyergids are adaptations that promote this behavior.
[ "hole-digging", "fossorial", "digging", "tunneling", "mound-building", "fossorial behavior until read", "burrowing" ]
acf-co24-15-7
2
Animals that engage in this behavior exclusively host the parasitic ant species A. punctaticeps. The heavy zygomatic arch and small infraorbital foramen of bathyergids are adaptations that promote this behavior. Well-developed shoulder retractors and elbow flexors characterize animals that perform this behavior by using a “hook-and-pull” strategy. A rapid diversification of this behavior evident in the fossil record is linked to the Cambrian substrate revolution. The owl species A. cunicularia relies on animals that exhibit this behavior for its nests but, despite its common name, can’t perform it itself. Animals that engage in this behavior are distinguished by the elongation of the ulnar olecranon process and the distal phalanges, giving them robust forelimbs. For 10 points, name this characteristic behavior of fossorial mammals like naked mole rats and prairie dogs.
burrowing [or digging or hole-digging; or tunneling; accept mound-building; accept fossorial behavior until read; prompt on environmental engineering or ecosystem engineering]
[ [ 0, 96 ], [ 97, 211 ], [ 212, 349 ], [ 350, 468 ], [ 469, 613 ], [ 614, 773 ], [ 774, 882 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 64, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-15-7_3
Well-developed shoulder retractors and elbow flexors characterize animals that perform this behavior by using a “hook-and-pull” strategy.
[ "hole-digging", "fossorial", "digging", "tunneling", "mound-building", "fossorial behavior until read", "burrowing" ]
acf-co24-15-7
3
Animals that engage in this behavior exclusively host the parasitic ant species A. punctaticeps. The heavy zygomatic arch and small infraorbital foramen of bathyergids are adaptations that promote this behavior. Well-developed shoulder retractors and elbow flexors characterize animals that perform this behavior by using a “hook-and-pull” strategy. A rapid diversification of this behavior evident in the fossil record is linked to the Cambrian substrate revolution. The owl species A. cunicularia relies on animals that exhibit this behavior for its nests but, despite its common name, can’t perform it itself. Animals that engage in this behavior are distinguished by the elongation of the ulnar olecranon process and the distal phalanges, giving them robust forelimbs. For 10 points, name this characteristic behavior of fossorial mammals like naked mole rats and prairie dogs.
burrowing [or digging or hole-digging; or tunneling; accept mound-building; accept fossorial behavior until read; prompt on environmental engineering or ecosystem engineering]
[ [ 0, 96 ], [ 97, 211 ], [ 212, 349 ], [ 350, 468 ], [ 469, 613 ], [ 614, 773 ], [ 774, 882 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 64, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-15-7_4
A rapid diversification of this behavior evident in the fossil record is linked to the Cambrian substrate revolution.
[ "hole-digging", "fossorial", "digging", "tunneling", "mound-building", "fossorial behavior until read", "burrowing" ]
acf-co24-15-7
4
Animals that engage in this behavior exclusively host the parasitic ant species A. punctaticeps. The heavy zygomatic arch and small infraorbital foramen of bathyergids are adaptations that promote this behavior. Well-developed shoulder retractors and elbow flexors characterize animals that perform this behavior by using a “hook-and-pull” strategy. A rapid diversification of this behavior evident in the fossil record is linked to the Cambrian substrate revolution. The owl species A. cunicularia relies on animals that exhibit this behavior for its nests but, despite its common name, can’t perform it itself. Animals that engage in this behavior are distinguished by the elongation of the ulnar olecranon process and the distal phalanges, giving them robust forelimbs. For 10 points, name this characteristic behavior of fossorial mammals like naked mole rats and prairie dogs.
burrowing [or digging or hole-digging; or tunneling; accept mound-building; accept fossorial behavior until read; prompt on environmental engineering or ecosystem engineering]
[ [ 0, 96 ], [ 97, 211 ], [ 212, 349 ], [ 350, 468 ], [ 469, 613 ], [ 614, 773 ], [ 774, 882 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 64, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-15-7_5
The owl species A. cunicularia relies on animals that exhibit this behavior for its nests but, despite its common name, can’t perform it itself.
[ "hole-digging", "fossorial", "digging", "tunneling", "mound-building", "fossorial behavior until read", "burrowing" ]
acf-co24-15-7
5
Animals that engage in this behavior exclusively host the parasitic ant species A. punctaticeps. The heavy zygomatic arch and small infraorbital foramen of bathyergids are adaptations that promote this behavior. Well-developed shoulder retractors and elbow flexors characterize animals that perform this behavior by using a “hook-and-pull” strategy. A rapid diversification of this behavior evident in the fossil record is linked to the Cambrian substrate revolution. The owl species A. cunicularia relies on animals that exhibit this behavior for its nests but, despite its common name, can’t perform it itself. Animals that engage in this behavior are distinguished by the elongation of the ulnar olecranon process and the distal phalanges, giving them robust forelimbs. For 10 points, name this characteristic behavior of fossorial mammals like naked mole rats and prairie dogs.
burrowing [or digging or hole-digging; or tunneling; accept mound-building; accept fossorial behavior until read; prompt on environmental engineering or ecosystem engineering]
[ [ 0, 96 ], [ 97, 211 ], [ 212, 349 ], [ 350, 468 ], [ 469, 613 ], [ 614, 773 ], [ 774, 882 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 64, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-15-7_6
Animals that engage in this behavior are distinguished by the elongation of the ulnar olecranon process and the distal phalanges, giving them robust forelimbs.
[ "hole-digging", "fossorial", "digging", "tunneling", "mound-building", "fossorial behavior until read", "burrowing" ]
acf-co24-15-7
6
Animals that engage in this behavior exclusively host the parasitic ant species A. punctaticeps. The heavy zygomatic arch and small infraorbital foramen of bathyergids are adaptations that promote this behavior. Well-developed shoulder retractors and elbow flexors characterize animals that perform this behavior by using a “hook-and-pull” strategy. A rapid diversification of this behavior evident in the fossil record is linked to the Cambrian substrate revolution. The owl species A. cunicularia relies on animals that exhibit this behavior for its nests but, despite its common name, can’t perform it itself. Animals that engage in this behavior are distinguished by the elongation of the ulnar olecranon process and the distal phalanges, giving them robust forelimbs. For 10 points, name this characteristic behavior of fossorial mammals like naked mole rats and prairie dogs.
burrowing [or digging or hole-digging; or tunneling; accept mound-building; accept fossorial behavior until read; prompt on environmental engineering or ecosystem engineering]
[ [ 0, 96 ], [ 97, 211 ], [ 212, 349 ], [ 350, 468 ], [ 469, 613 ], [ 614, 773 ], [ 774, 882 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 64, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-15-7_7
For 10 points, name this characteristic behavior of fossorial mammals like naked mole rats and prairie dogs.
[ "hole-digging", "fossorial", "digging", "tunneling", "mound-building", "fossorial behavior until read", "burrowing" ]
acf-co24-15-7
7
Animals that engage in this behavior exclusively host the parasitic ant species A. punctaticeps. The heavy zygomatic arch and small infraorbital foramen of bathyergids are adaptations that promote this behavior. Well-developed shoulder retractors and elbow flexors characterize animals that perform this behavior by using a “hook-and-pull” strategy. A rapid diversification of this behavior evident in the fossil record is linked to the Cambrian substrate revolution. The owl species A. cunicularia relies on animals that exhibit this behavior for its nests but, despite its common name, can’t perform it itself. Animals that engage in this behavior are distinguished by the elongation of the ulnar olecranon process and the distal phalanges, giving them robust forelimbs. For 10 points, name this characteristic behavior of fossorial mammals like naked mole rats and prairie dogs.
burrowing [or digging or hole-digging; or tunneling; accept mound-building; accept fossorial behavior until read; prompt on environmental engineering or ecosystem engineering]
[ [ 0, 96 ], [ 97, 211 ], [ 212, 349 ], [ 350, 468 ], [ 469, 613 ], [ 614, 773 ], [ 774, 882 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Biology", "category_main": "science-biology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 64, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "biology" ] }
acf-co24-15-8_1
A folktale character with this name hides her wedding dress under a rock in the ocean, only for it to be fetched by an army of crabs at the behest of an archer’s talking stallion.
[ "Vasilisa Vasilisa Vasilisa", "Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya,", "Vasilisa", "Vasilisa Premudraya", "Vasalisa" ]
acf-co24-15-8
1
A folktale character with this name hides her wedding dress under a rock in the ocean, only for it to be fetched by an army of crabs at the behest of an archer’s talking stallion. A girl with this name is the subject of Chapter 3 in Clarissa Estés’s Women Who Run with the Wolves, which offers a Jungian analysis of her refusal to “know too much” by asking about three pairs of disembodied hands that materialize to press some poppy seeds. A king’s arrow leads his youngest son to a “frog princess” with this name. A girl with this name experiences day, sunrise, and night as men on white, red, and black horses ride past her in the forest. Ivan Bilibin’s illustrations depict a girl with this name walking by light of a flaming skull after her magic doll helps her sort corn for Baba Yaga. For 10 points, give this ubiquitous name for Russian fairy tale heroines, like ones nicknamed “the wise” and “the beautiful.”
Vasilisa [or Vasalisa; accept Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya, or Vasilisa Premudraya]
[ [ 0, 179 ], [ 180, 439 ], [ 440, 514 ], [ 515, 641 ], [ 642, 791 ], [ 792, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 92, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-15-8_2
A girl with this name is the subject of Chapter 3 in Clarissa Estés’s Women Who Run with the Wolves, which offers a Jungian analysis of her refusal to “know too much” by asking about three pairs of disembodied hands that materialize to press some poppy seeds.
[ "Vasilisa Vasilisa Vasilisa", "Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya,", "Vasilisa", "Vasilisa Premudraya", "Vasalisa" ]
acf-co24-15-8
2
A folktale character with this name hides her wedding dress under a rock in the ocean, only for it to be fetched by an army of crabs at the behest of an archer’s talking stallion. A girl with this name is the subject of Chapter 3 in Clarissa Estés’s Women Who Run with the Wolves, which offers a Jungian analysis of her refusal to “know too much” by asking about three pairs of disembodied hands that materialize to press some poppy seeds. A king’s arrow leads his youngest son to a “frog princess” with this name. A girl with this name experiences day, sunrise, and night as men on white, red, and black horses ride past her in the forest. Ivan Bilibin’s illustrations depict a girl with this name walking by light of a flaming skull after her magic doll helps her sort corn for Baba Yaga. For 10 points, give this ubiquitous name for Russian fairy tale heroines, like ones nicknamed “the wise” and “the beautiful.”
Vasilisa [or Vasalisa; accept Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya, or Vasilisa Premudraya]
[ [ 0, 179 ], [ 180, 439 ], [ 440, 514 ], [ 515, 641 ], [ 642, 791 ], [ 792, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 92, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-15-8_3
A king’s arrow leads his youngest son to a “frog princess” with this name.
[ "Vasilisa Vasilisa Vasilisa", "Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya,", "Vasilisa", "Vasilisa Premudraya", "Vasalisa" ]
acf-co24-15-8
3
A folktale character with this name hides her wedding dress under a rock in the ocean, only for it to be fetched by an army of crabs at the behest of an archer’s talking stallion. A girl with this name is the subject of Chapter 3 in Clarissa Estés’s Women Who Run with the Wolves, which offers a Jungian analysis of her refusal to “know too much” by asking about three pairs of disembodied hands that materialize to press some poppy seeds. A king’s arrow leads his youngest son to a “frog princess” with this name. A girl with this name experiences day, sunrise, and night as men on white, red, and black horses ride past her in the forest. Ivan Bilibin’s illustrations depict a girl with this name walking by light of a flaming skull after her magic doll helps her sort corn for Baba Yaga. For 10 points, give this ubiquitous name for Russian fairy tale heroines, like ones nicknamed “the wise” and “the beautiful.”
Vasilisa [or Vasalisa; accept Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya, or Vasilisa Premudraya]
[ [ 0, 179 ], [ 180, 439 ], [ 440, 514 ], [ 515, 641 ], [ 642, 791 ], [ 792, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 92, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-15-8_4
A girl with this name experiences day, sunrise, and night as men on white, red, and black horses ride past her in the forest.
[ "Vasilisa Vasilisa Vasilisa", "Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya,", "Vasilisa", "Vasilisa Premudraya", "Vasalisa" ]
acf-co24-15-8
4
A folktale character with this name hides her wedding dress under a rock in the ocean, only for it to be fetched by an army of crabs at the behest of an archer’s talking stallion. A girl with this name is the subject of Chapter 3 in Clarissa Estés’s Women Who Run with the Wolves, which offers a Jungian analysis of her refusal to “know too much” by asking about three pairs of disembodied hands that materialize to press some poppy seeds. A king’s arrow leads his youngest son to a “frog princess” with this name. A girl with this name experiences day, sunrise, and night as men on white, red, and black horses ride past her in the forest. Ivan Bilibin’s illustrations depict a girl with this name walking by light of a flaming skull after her magic doll helps her sort corn for Baba Yaga. For 10 points, give this ubiquitous name for Russian fairy tale heroines, like ones nicknamed “the wise” and “the beautiful.”
Vasilisa [or Vasalisa; accept Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya, or Vasilisa Premudraya]
[ [ 0, 179 ], [ 180, 439 ], [ 440, 514 ], [ 515, 641 ], [ 642, 791 ], [ 792, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 92, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-15-8_5
Ivan Bilibin’s illustrations depict a girl with this name walking by light of a flaming skull after her magic doll helps her sort corn for Baba Yaga.
[ "Vasilisa Vasilisa Vasilisa", "Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya,", "Vasilisa", "Vasilisa Premudraya", "Vasalisa" ]
acf-co24-15-8
5
A folktale character with this name hides her wedding dress under a rock in the ocean, only for it to be fetched by an army of crabs at the behest of an archer’s talking stallion. A girl with this name is the subject of Chapter 3 in Clarissa Estés’s Women Who Run with the Wolves, which offers a Jungian analysis of her refusal to “know too much” by asking about three pairs of disembodied hands that materialize to press some poppy seeds. A king’s arrow leads his youngest son to a “frog princess” with this name. A girl with this name experiences day, sunrise, and night as men on white, red, and black horses ride past her in the forest. Ivan Bilibin’s illustrations depict a girl with this name walking by light of a flaming skull after her magic doll helps her sort corn for Baba Yaga. For 10 points, give this ubiquitous name for Russian fairy tale heroines, like ones nicknamed “the wise” and “the beautiful.”
Vasilisa [or Vasalisa; accept Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya, or Vasilisa Premudraya]
[ [ 0, 179 ], [ 180, 439 ], [ 440, 514 ], [ 515, 641 ], [ 642, 791 ], [ 792, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 92, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-15-8_6
For 10 points, give this ubiquitous name for Russian fairy tale heroines, like ones nicknamed “the wise” and “the beautiful.”
[ "Vasilisa Vasilisa Vasilisa", "Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya,", "Vasilisa", "Vasilisa Premudraya", "Vasalisa" ]
acf-co24-15-8
6
A folktale character with this name hides her wedding dress under a rock in the ocean, only for it to be fetched by an army of crabs at the behest of an archer’s talking stallion. A girl with this name is the subject of Chapter 3 in Clarissa Estés’s Women Who Run with the Wolves, which offers a Jungian analysis of her refusal to “know too much” by asking about three pairs of disembodied hands that materialize to press some poppy seeds. A king’s arrow leads his youngest son to a “frog princess” with this name. A girl with this name experiences day, sunrise, and night as men on white, red, and black horses ride past her in the forest. Ivan Bilibin’s illustrations depict a girl with this name walking by light of a flaming skull after her magic doll helps her sort corn for Baba Yaga. For 10 points, give this ubiquitous name for Russian fairy tale heroines, like ones nicknamed “the wise” and “the beautiful.”
Vasilisa [or Vasalisa; accept Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vasilisa the Wise, Vasilisa Prekrasnaya, or Vasilisa Premudraya]
[ [ 0, 179 ], [ 180, 439 ], [ 440, 514 ], [ 515, 641 ], [ 642, 791 ], [ 792, 917 ] ]
{ "category": "mythology", "category_full": "Mythology - Mythology", "category_main": "mythology", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 92, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "mythology" ] }
acf-co24-15-9_1
This is the first concept in the title of a book that opens with an analysis of Aeschylus’s Eumenides and how the family became “a place of philia.”
[ "Anger and Forgiveness", "De Ira", "anger", "On Anger", "Anger" ]
acf-co24-15-9
1
This is the first concept in the title of a book that opens with an analysis of Aeschylus’s Eumenides and how the family became “a place of philia.” That book posits a “Transition-” type of this concept that avoids two flawed “roads” in response to it. A work about this concept lists three “movements” that may distinguish between impulse and assent and a transition to “feritas.” This is the first title concept of a book that revises views about its “justified and right” forms expressed in Upheavals of Thought. The title of a book by Martha Nussbaum pairs this concept with forgiveness, echoing a Roman philosopher who followed up his treatise on this concept with one “On Clemency.” Roman Stoics argued against the Peripatetic claim that this emotion provides motivation for courage. For 10 points, name this destructive emotion that titles a work by Seneca.
anger [accept On Anger or De Ira; accept Anger and Forgiveness; prompt on emotions or passions; prompt on synonyms like rage; prompt on revenge or vengeance]
[ [ 0, 148 ], [ 149, 252 ], [ 253, 381 ], [ 382, 516 ], [ 517, 689 ], [ 690, 790 ], [ 791, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 41, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-15-9_2
That book posits a “Transition-” type of this concept that avoids two flawed “roads” in response to it.
[ "Anger and Forgiveness", "De Ira", "anger", "On Anger", "Anger" ]
acf-co24-15-9
2
This is the first concept in the title of a book that opens with an analysis of Aeschylus’s Eumenides and how the family became “a place of philia.” That book posits a “Transition-” type of this concept that avoids two flawed “roads” in response to it. A work about this concept lists three “movements” that may distinguish between impulse and assent and a transition to “feritas.” This is the first title concept of a book that revises views about its “justified and right” forms expressed in Upheavals of Thought. The title of a book by Martha Nussbaum pairs this concept with forgiveness, echoing a Roman philosopher who followed up his treatise on this concept with one “On Clemency.” Roman Stoics argued against the Peripatetic claim that this emotion provides motivation for courage. For 10 points, name this destructive emotion that titles a work by Seneca.
anger [accept On Anger or De Ira; accept Anger and Forgiveness; prompt on emotions or passions; prompt on synonyms like rage; prompt on revenge or vengeance]
[ [ 0, 148 ], [ 149, 252 ], [ 253, 381 ], [ 382, 516 ], [ 517, 689 ], [ 690, 790 ], [ 791, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 41, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-15-9_3
A work about this concept lists three “movements” that may distinguish between impulse and assent and a transition to “feritas.”
[ "Anger and Forgiveness", "De Ira", "anger", "On Anger", "Anger" ]
acf-co24-15-9
3
This is the first concept in the title of a book that opens with an analysis of Aeschylus’s Eumenides and how the family became “a place of philia.” That book posits a “Transition-” type of this concept that avoids two flawed “roads” in response to it. A work about this concept lists three “movements” that may distinguish between impulse and assent and a transition to “feritas.” This is the first title concept of a book that revises views about its “justified and right” forms expressed in Upheavals of Thought. The title of a book by Martha Nussbaum pairs this concept with forgiveness, echoing a Roman philosopher who followed up his treatise on this concept with one “On Clemency.” Roman Stoics argued against the Peripatetic claim that this emotion provides motivation for courage. For 10 points, name this destructive emotion that titles a work by Seneca.
anger [accept On Anger or De Ira; accept Anger and Forgiveness; prompt on emotions or passions; prompt on synonyms like rage; prompt on revenge or vengeance]
[ [ 0, 148 ], [ 149, 252 ], [ 253, 381 ], [ 382, 516 ], [ 517, 689 ], [ 690, 790 ], [ 791, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 41, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-15-9_4
This is the first title concept of a book that revises views about its “justified and right” forms expressed in Upheavals of Thought.
[ "Anger and Forgiveness", "De Ira", "anger", "On Anger", "Anger" ]
acf-co24-15-9
4
This is the first concept in the title of a book that opens with an analysis of Aeschylus’s Eumenides and how the family became “a place of philia.” That book posits a “Transition-” type of this concept that avoids two flawed “roads” in response to it. A work about this concept lists three “movements” that may distinguish between impulse and assent and a transition to “feritas.” This is the first title concept of a book that revises views about its “justified and right” forms expressed in Upheavals of Thought. The title of a book by Martha Nussbaum pairs this concept with forgiveness, echoing a Roman philosopher who followed up his treatise on this concept with one “On Clemency.” Roman Stoics argued against the Peripatetic claim that this emotion provides motivation for courage. For 10 points, name this destructive emotion that titles a work by Seneca.
anger [accept On Anger or De Ira; accept Anger and Forgiveness; prompt on emotions or passions; prompt on synonyms like rage; prompt on revenge or vengeance]
[ [ 0, 148 ], [ 149, 252 ], [ 253, 381 ], [ 382, 516 ], [ 517, 689 ], [ 690, 790 ], [ 791, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 41, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-15-9_5
The title of a book by Martha Nussbaum pairs this concept with forgiveness, echoing a Roman philosopher who followed up his treatise on this concept with one “On Clemency.”
[ "Anger and Forgiveness", "De Ira", "anger", "On Anger", "Anger" ]
acf-co24-15-9
5
This is the first concept in the title of a book that opens with an analysis of Aeschylus’s Eumenides and how the family became “a place of philia.” That book posits a “Transition-” type of this concept that avoids two flawed “roads” in response to it. A work about this concept lists three “movements” that may distinguish between impulse and assent and a transition to “feritas.” This is the first title concept of a book that revises views about its “justified and right” forms expressed in Upheavals of Thought. The title of a book by Martha Nussbaum pairs this concept with forgiveness, echoing a Roman philosopher who followed up his treatise on this concept with one “On Clemency.” Roman Stoics argued against the Peripatetic claim that this emotion provides motivation for courage. For 10 points, name this destructive emotion that titles a work by Seneca.
anger [accept On Anger or De Ira; accept Anger and Forgiveness; prompt on emotions or passions; prompt on synonyms like rage; prompt on revenge or vengeance]
[ [ 0, 148 ], [ 149, 252 ], [ 253, 381 ], [ 382, 516 ], [ 517, 689 ], [ 690, 790 ], [ 791, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 41, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-15-9_6
Roman Stoics argued against the Peripatetic claim that this emotion provides motivation for courage.
[ "Anger and Forgiveness", "De Ira", "anger", "On Anger", "Anger" ]
acf-co24-15-9
6
This is the first concept in the title of a book that opens with an analysis of Aeschylus’s Eumenides and how the family became “a place of philia.” That book posits a “Transition-” type of this concept that avoids two flawed “roads” in response to it. A work about this concept lists three “movements” that may distinguish between impulse and assent and a transition to “feritas.” This is the first title concept of a book that revises views about its “justified and right” forms expressed in Upheavals of Thought. The title of a book by Martha Nussbaum pairs this concept with forgiveness, echoing a Roman philosopher who followed up his treatise on this concept with one “On Clemency.” Roman Stoics argued against the Peripatetic claim that this emotion provides motivation for courage. For 10 points, name this destructive emotion that titles a work by Seneca.
anger [accept On Anger or De Ira; accept Anger and Forgiveness; prompt on emotions or passions; prompt on synonyms like rage; prompt on revenge or vengeance]
[ [ 0, 148 ], [ 149, 252 ], [ 253, 381 ], [ 382, 516 ], [ 517, 689 ], [ 690, 790 ], [ 791, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 41, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-15-9_7
For 10 points, name this destructive emotion that titles a work by Seneca.
[ "Anger and Forgiveness", "De Ira", "anger", "On Anger", "Anger" ]
acf-co24-15-9
7
This is the first concept in the title of a book that opens with an analysis of Aeschylus’s Eumenides and how the family became “a place of philia.” That book posits a “Transition-” type of this concept that avoids two flawed “roads” in response to it. A work about this concept lists three “movements” that may distinguish between impulse and assent and a transition to “feritas.” This is the first title concept of a book that revises views about its “justified and right” forms expressed in Upheavals of Thought. The title of a book by Martha Nussbaum pairs this concept with forgiveness, echoing a Roman philosopher who followed up his treatise on this concept with one “On Clemency.” Roman Stoics argued against the Peripatetic claim that this emotion provides motivation for courage. For 10 points, name this destructive emotion that titles a work by Seneca.
anger [accept On Anger or De Ira; accept Anger and Forgiveness; prompt on emotions or passions; prompt on synonyms like rage; prompt on revenge or vengeance]
[ [ 0, 148 ], [ 149, 252 ], [ 253, 381 ], [ 382, 516 ], [ 517, 689 ], [ 690, 790 ], [ 791, 865 ] ]
{ "category": "philosophy", "category_full": "Philosophy - Philosophy", "category_main": "philosophy", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 41, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "philosophy" ] }
acf-co24-15-10_1
A factory worker in this country becomes a scab to support his pregnant wife Maria in the play They Don’t Wear Black Tie.
[ "Brazil", "República Federativa do Brasil", "Brasil", "Federative Republic of Brazil" ]
acf-co24-15-10
1
A factory worker in this country becomes a scab to support his pregnant wife Maria in the play They Don’t Wear Black Tie. In a surrealist play from this country, Alaide obsesses over the mysterious Madame Clessi in fragmented memories while possibly undergoing surgery. A play from this country is titled for an action that Arandir does with a bus accident victim, which spawns a media frenzy. The plays The Wedding Dress and The Asphalt Kiss are from this country. A populist theater movement from this country highlighted the roles of the “Joker” and of audience participants, or “spect-actors.” A guitarist pines for his dead love in an all-black play from this country that adapts the Orpheus myth and was made into a 1959 musical film. For 10 points, name this home country of Nelson Rodrigues, where Augusto Boal led the Theatre of the Oppressed.
Brazil [or Federative Republic of Brazil or República Federativa do Brasil] (The play in the penultimate line is Orpheus of the Conception, which was adapted into the film Black Orpheus.)
[ [ 0, 121 ], [ 122, 269 ], [ 270, 393 ], [ 394, 465 ], [ 466, 598 ], [ 599, 741 ], [ 742, 853 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 96, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-10_2
In a surrealist play from this country, Alaide obsesses over the mysterious Madame Clessi in fragmented memories while possibly undergoing surgery.
[ "Brazil", "República Federativa do Brasil", "Brasil", "Federative Republic of Brazil" ]
acf-co24-15-10
2
A factory worker in this country becomes a scab to support his pregnant wife Maria in the play They Don’t Wear Black Tie. In a surrealist play from this country, Alaide obsesses over the mysterious Madame Clessi in fragmented memories while possibly undergoing surgery. A play from this country is titled for an action that Arandir does with a bus accident victim, which spawns a media frenzy. The plays The Wedding Dress and The Asphalt Kiss are from this country. A populist theater movement from this country highlighted the roles of the “Joker” and of audience participants, or “spect-actors.” A guitarist pines for his dead love in an all-black play from this country that adapts the Orpheus myth and was made into a 1959 musical film. For 10 points, name this home country of Nelson Rodrigues, where Augusto Boal led the Theatre of the Oppressed.
Brazil [or Federative Republic of Brazil or República Federativa do Brasil] (The play in the penultimate line is Orpheus of the Conception, which was adapted into the film Black Orpheus.)
[ [ 0, 121 ], [ 122, 269 ], [ 270, 393 ], [ 394, 465 ], [ 466, 598 ], [ 599, 741 ], [ 742, 853 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 96, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-10_3
A play from this country is titled for an action that Arandir does with a bus accident victim, which spawns a media frenzy.
[ "Brazil", "República Federativa do Brasil", "Brasil", "Federative Republic of Brazil" ]
acf-co24-15-10
3
A factory worker in this country becomes a scab to support his pregnant wife Maria in the play They Don’t Wear Black Tie. In a surrealist play from this country, Alaide obsesses over the mysterious Madame Clessi in fragmented memories while possibly undergoing surgery. A play from this country is titled for an action that Arandir does with a bus accident victim, which spawns a media frenzy. The plays The Wedding Dress and The Asphalt Kiss are from this country. A populist theater movement from this country highlighted the roles of the “Joker” and of audience participants, or “spect-actors.” A guitarist pines for his dead love in an all-black play from this country that adapts the Orpheus myth and was made into a 1959 musical film. For 10 points, name this home country of Nelson Rodrigues, where Augusto Boal led the Theatre of the Oppressed.
Brazil [or Federative Republic of Brazil or República Federativa do Brasil] (The play in the penultimate line is Orpheus of the Conception, which was adapted into the film Black Orpheus.)
[ [ 0, 121 ], [ 122, 269 ], [ 270, 393 ], [ 394, 465 ], [ 466, 598 ], [ 599, 741 ], [ 742, 853 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 96, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-10_4
The plays The Wedding Dress and The Asphalt Kiss are from this country.
[ "Brazil", "República Federativa do Brasil", "Brasil", "Federative Republic of Brazil" ]
acf-co24-15-10
4
A factory worker in this country becomes a scab to support his pregnant wife Maria in the play They Don’t Wear Black Tie. In a surrealist play from this country, Alaide obsesses over the mysterious Madame Clessi in fragmented memories while possibly undergoing surgery. A play from this country is titled for an action that Arandir does with a bus accident victim, which spawns a media frenzy. The plays The Wedding Dress and The Asphalt Kiss are from this country. A populist theater movement from this country highlighted the roles of the “Joker” and of audience participants, or “spect-actors.” A guitarist pines for his dead love in an all-black play from this country that adapts the Orpheus myth and was made into a 1959 musical film. For 10 points, name this home country of Nelson Rodrigues, where Augusto Boal led the Theatre of the Oppressed.
Brazil [or Federative Republic of Brazil or República Federativa do Brasil] (The play in the penultimate line is Orpheus of the Conception, which was adapted into the film Black Orpheus.)
[ [ 0, 121 ], [ 122, 269 ], [ 270, 393 ], [ 394, 465 ], [ 466, 598 ], [ 599, 741 ], [ 742, 853 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 96, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-10_5
A populist theater movement from this country highlighted the roles of the “Joker” and of audience participants, or “spect-actors.”
[ "Brazil", "República Federativa do Brasil", "Brasil", "Federative Republic of Brazil" ]
acf-co24-15-10
5
A factory worker in this country becomes a scab to support his pregnant wife Maria in the play They Don’t Wear Black Tie. In a surrealist play from this country, Alaide obsesses over the mysterious Madame Clessi in fragmented memories while possibly undergoing surgery. A play from this country is titled for an action that Arandir does with a bus accident victim, which spawns a media frenzy. The plays The Wedding Dress and The Asphalt Kiss are from this country. A populist theater movement from this country highlighted the roles of the “Joker” and of audience participants, or “spect-actors.” A guitarist pines for his dead love in an all-black play from this country that adapts the Orpheus myth and was made into a 1959 musical film. For 10 points, name this home country of Nelson Rodrigues, where Augusto Boal led the Theatre of the Oppressed.
Brazil [or Federative Republic of Brazil or República Federativa do Brasil] (The play in the penultimate line is Orpheus of the Conception, which was adapted into the film Black Orpheus.)
[ [ 0, 121 ], [ 122, 269 ], [ 270, 393 ], [ 394, 465 ], [ 466, 598 ], [ 599, 741 ], [ 742, 853 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 96, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-10_6
A guitarist pines for his dead love in an all-black play from this country that adapts the Orpheus myth and was made into a 1959 musical film.
[ "Brazil", "República Federativa do Brasil", "Brasil", "Federative Republic of Brazil" ]
acf-co24-15-10
6
A factory worker in this country becomes a scab to support his pregnant wife Maria in the play They Don’t Wear Black Tie. In a surrealist play from this country, Alaide obsesses over the mysterious Madame Clessi in fragmented memories while possibly undergoing surgery. A play from this country is titled for an action that Arandir does with a bus accident victim, which spawns a media frenzy. The plays The Wedding Dress and The Asphalt Kiss are from this country. A populist theater movement from this country highlighted the roles of the “Joker” and of audience participants, or “spect-actors.” A guitarist pines for his dead love in an all-black play from this country that adapts the Orpheus myth and was made into a 1959 musical film. For 10 points, name this home country of Nelson Rodrigues, where Augusto Boal led the Theatre of the Oppressed.
Brazil [or Federative Republic of Brazil or República Federativa do Brasil] (The play in the penultimate line is Orpheus of the Conception, which was adapted into the film Black Orpheus.)
[ [ 0, 121 ], [ 122, 269 ], [ 270, 393 ], [ 394, 465 ], [ 466, 598 ], [ 599, 741 ], [ 742, 853 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 96, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-10_7
For 10 points, name this home country of Nelson Rodrigues, where Augusto Boal led the Theatre of the Oppressed.
[ "Brazil", "República Federativa do Brasil", "Brasil", "Federative Republic of Brazil" ]
acf-co24-15-10
7
A factory worker in this country becomes a scab to support his pregnant wife Maria in the play They Don’t Wear Black Tie. In a surrealist play from this country, Alaide obsesses over the mysterious Madame Clessi in fragmented memories while possibly undergoing surgery. A play from this country is titled for an action that Arandir does with a bus accident victim, which spawns a media frenzy. The plays The Wedding Dress and The Asphalt Kiss are from this country. A populist theater movement from this country highlighted the roles of the “Joker” and of audience participants, or “spect-actors.” A guitarist pines for his dead love in an all-black play from this country that adapts the Orpheus myth and was made into a 1959 musical film. For 10 points, name this home country of Nelson Rodrigues, where Augusto Boal led the Theatre of the Oppressed.
Brazil [or Federative Republic of Brazil or República Federativa do Brasil] (The play in the penultimate line is Orpheus of the Conception, which was adapted into the film Black Orpheus.)
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{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 96, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-11_1
The B section of this theme repeats swung, brassy, planed second-inversion chords rooted on E, F-sharp, G, then F-sharp, followed by stabbing chords in a son rhythm.
[ "James Bond theme", "Bond", "the original James Bond theme from Dr. No" ]
acf-co24-15-11
1
The B section of this theme repeats swung, brassy, planed second-inversion chords rooted on E, F-sharp, G, then F-sharp, followed by stabbing chords in a son rhythm. This theme’s final chord is produced by the guitar tab “0 10 9 8 7 x” in standard tuning. This theme begins with a line cliché of four smooth E minor chords topped with degrees 5, flat-6, 6, and flat-6, its “suspense motif.” This theme’s syncopated motif E G, high E-flat D recurs in trumpets’ high register before Vic Flick reprises a syncopated riff on the low E string of a distorted electric guitar. That riff was drawn from a song about an “unlucky sneeze” that imitates Indian classical music. A dissonant E major-minor ninth chord ends this theme by Monty Norman that John Barry arranged for big band. This theme gives way to silhouettes dancing to calypso during the first gun barrel sequence. For 10 points, what theme was introduced to a spy series in Dr. No?
James Bond theme [or the original James Bond theme from Dr. No]
[ [ 0, 165 ], [ 166, 255 ], [ 256, 390 ], [ 391, 570 ], [ 571, 666 ], [ 667, 775 ], [ 776, 868 ], [ 869, 932 ], [ 933, 936 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 36, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-15-11_2
This theme’s final chord is produced by the guitar tab “0 10 9 8 7 x” in standard tuning.
[ "James Bond theme", "Bond", "the original James Bond theme from Dr. No" ]
acf-co24-15-11
2
The B section of this theme repeats swung, brassy, planed second-inversion chords rooted on E, F-sharp, G, then F-sharp, followed by stabbing chords in a son rhythm. This theme’s final chord is produced by the guitar tab “0 10 9 8 7 x” in standard tuning. This theme begins with a line cliché of four smooth E minor chords topped with degrees 5, flat-6, 6, and flat-6, its “suspense motif.” This theme’s syncopated motif E G, high E-flat D recurs in trumpets’ high register before Vic Flick reprises a syncopated riff on the low E string of a distorted electric guitar. That riff was drawn from a song about an “unlucky sneeze” that imitates Indian classical music. A dissonant E major-minor ninth chord ends this theme by Monty Norman that John Barry arranged for big band. This theme gives way to silhouettes dancing to calypso during the first gun barrel sequence. For 10 points, what theme was introduced to a spy series in Dr. No?
James Bond theme [or the original James Bond theme from Dr. No]
[ [ 0, 165 ], [ 166, 255 ], [ 256, 390 ], [ 391, 570 ], [ 571, 666 ], [ 667, 775 ], [ 776, 868 ], [ 869, 932 ], [ 933, 936 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 36, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-15-11_3
This theme begins with a line cliché of four smooth E minor chords topped with degrees 5, flat-6, 6, and flat-6, its “suspense motif.”
[ "James Bond theme", "Bond", "the original James Bond theme from Dr. No" ]
acf-co24-15-11
3
The B section of this theme repeats swung, brassy, planed second-inversion chords rooted on E, F-sharp, G, then F-sharp, followed by stabbing chords in a son rhythm. This theme’s final chord is produced by the guitar tab “0 10 9 8 7 x” in standard tuning. This theme begins with a line cliché of four smooth E minor chords topped with degrees 5, flat-6, 6, and flat-6, its “suspense motif.” This theme’s syncopated motif E G, high E-flat D recurs in trumpets’ high register before Vic Flick reprises a syncopated riff on the low E string of a distorted electric guitar. That riff was drawn from a song about an “unlucky sneeze” that imitates Indian classical music. A dissonant E major-minor ninth chord ends this theme by Monty Norman that John Barry arranged for big band. This theme gives way to silhouettes dancing to calypso during the first gun barrel sequence. For 10 points, what theme was introduced to a spy series in Dr. No?
James Bond theme [or the original James Bond theme from Dr. No]
[ [ 0, 165 ], [ 166, 255 ], [ 256, 390 ], [ 391, 570 ], [ 571, 666 ], [ 667, 775 ], [ 776, 868 ], [ 869, 932 ], [ 933, 936 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 36, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-15-11_4
This theme’s syncopated motif E G, high E-flat D recurs in trumpets’ high register before Vic Flick reprises a syncopated riff on the low E string of a distorted electric guitar.
[ "James Bond theme", "Bond", "the original James Bond theme from Dr. No" ]
acf-co24-15-11
4
The B section of this theme repeats swung, brassy, planed second-inversion chords rooted on E, F-sharp, G, then F-sharp, followed by stabbing chords in a son rhythm. This theme’s final chord is produced by the guitar tab “0 10 9 8 7 x” in standard tuning. This theme begins with a line cliché of four smooth E minor chords topped with degrees 5, flat-6, 6, and flat-6, its “suspense motif.” This theme’s syncopated motif E G, high E-flat D recurs in trumpets’ high register before Vic Flick reprises a syncopated riff on the low E string of a distorted electric guitar. That riff was drawn from a song about an “unlucky sneeze” that imitates Indian classical music. A dissonant E major-minor ninth chord ends this theme by Monty Norman that John Barry arranged for big band. This theme gives way to silhouettes dancing to calypso during the first gun barrel sequence. For 10 points, what theme was introduced to a spy series in Dr. No?
James Bond theme [or the original James Bond theme from Dr. No]
[ [ 0, 165 ], [ 166, 255 ], [ 256, 390 ], [ 391, 570 ], [ 571, 666 ], [ 667, 775 ], [ 776, 868 ], [ 869, 932 ], [ 933, 936 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 36, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-15-11_5
That riff was drawn from a song about an “unlucky sneeze” that imitates Indian classical music.
[ "James Bond theme", "Bond", "the original James Bond theme from Dr. No" ]
acf-co24-15-11
5
The B section of this theme repeats swung, brassy, planed second-inversion chords rooted on E, F-sharp, G, then F-sharp, followed by stabbing chords in a son rhythm. This theme’s final chord is produced by the guitar tab “0 10 9 8 7 x” in standard tuning. This theme begins with a line cliché of four smooth E minor chords topped with degrees 5, flat-6, 6, and flat-6, its “suspense motif.” This theme’s syncopated motif E G, high E-flat D recurs in trumpets’ high register before Vic Flick reprises a syncopated riff on the low E string of a distorted electric guitar. That riff was drawn from a song about an “unlucky sneeze” that imitates Indian classical music. A dissonant E major-minor ninth chord ends this theme by Monty Norman that John Barry arranged for big band. This theme gives way to silhouettes dancing to calypso during the first gun barrel sequence. For 10 points, what theme was introduced to a spy series in Dr. No?
James Bond theme [or the original James Bond theme from Dr. No]
[ [ 0, 165 ], [ 166, 255 ], [ 256, 390 ], [ 391, 570 ], [ 571, 666 ], [ 667, 775 ], [ 776, 868 ], [ 869, 932 ], [ 933, 936 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 36, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-15-11_6
A dissonant E major-minor ninth chord ends this theme by Monty Norman that John Barry arranged for big band.
[ "James Bond theme", "Bond", "the original James Bond theme from Dr. No" ]
acf-co24-15-11
6
The B section of this theme repeats swung, brassy, planed second-inversion chords rooted on E, F-sharp, G, then F-sharp, followed by stabbing chords in a son rhythm. This theme’s final chord is produced by the guitar tab “0 10 9 8 7 x” in standard tuning. This theme begins with a line cliché of four smooth E minor chords topped with degrees 5, flat-6, 6, and flat-6, its “suspense motif.” This theme’s syncopated motif E G, high E-flat D recurs in trumpets’ high register before Vic Flick reprises a syncopated riff on the low E string of a distorted electric guitar. That riff was drawn from a song about an “unlucky sneeze” that imitates Indian classical music. A dissonant E major-minor ninth chord ends this theme by Monty Norman that John Barry arranged for big band. This theme gives way to silhouettes dancing to calypso during the first gun barrel sequence. For 10 points, what theme was introduced to a spy series in Dr. No?
James Bond theme [or the original James Bond theme from Dr. No]
[ [ 0, 165 ], [ 166, 255 ], [ 256, 390 ], [ 391, 570 ], [ 571, 666 ], [ 667, 775 ], [ 776, 868 ], [ 869, 932 ], [ 933, 936 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 36, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-15-11_7
This theme gives way to silhouettes dancing to calypso during the first gun barrel sequence.
[ "James Bond theme", "Bond", "the original James Bond theme from Dr. No" ]
acf-co24-15-11
7
The B section of this theme repeats swung, brassy, planed second-inversion chords rooted on E, F-sharp, G, then F-sharp, followed by stabbing chords in a son rhythm. This theme’s final chord is produced by the guitar tab “0 10 9 8 7 x” in standard tuning. This theme begins with a line cliché of four smooth E minor chords topped with degrees 5, flat-6, 6, and flat-6, its “suspense motif.” This theme’s syncopated motif E G, high E-flat D recurs in trumpets’ high register before Vic Flick reprises a syncopated riff on the low E string of a distorted electric guitar. That riff was drawn from a song about an “unlucky sneeze” that imitates Indian classical music. A dissonant E major-minor ninth chord ends this theme by Monty Norman that John Barry arranged for big band. This theme gives way to silhouettes dancing to calypso during the first gun barrel sequence. For 10 points, what theme was introduced to a spy series in Dr. No?
James Bond theme [or the original James Bond theme from Dr. No]
[ [ 0, 165 ], [ 166, 255 ], [ 256, 390 ], [ 391, 570 ], [ 571, 666 ], [ 667, 775 ], [ 776, 868 ], [ 869, 932 ], [ 933, 936 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 36, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-15-11_8
For 10 points, what theme was introduced to a spy series in Dr.
[ "James Bond theme", "Bond", "the original James Bond theme from Dr. No" ]
acf-co24-15-11
8
The B section of this theme repeats swung, brassy, planed second-inversion chords rooted on E, F-sharp, G, then F-sharp, followed by stabbing chords in a son rhythm. This theme’s final chord is produced by the guitar tab “0 10 9 8 7 x” in standard tuning. This theme begins with a line cliché of four smooth E minor chords topped with degrees 5, flat-6, 6, and flat-6, its “suspense motif.” This theme’s syncopated motif E G, high E-flat D recurs in trumpets’ high register before Vic Flick reprises a syncopated riff on the low E string of a distorted electric guitar. That riff was drawn from a song about an “unlucky sneeze” that imitates Indian classical music. A dissonant E major-minor ninth chord ends this theme by Monty Norman that John Barry arranged for big band. This theme gives way to silhouettes dancing to calypso during the first gun barrel sequence. For 10 points, what theme was introduced to a spy series in Dr. No?
James Bond theme [or the original James Bond theme from Dr. No]
[ [ 0, 165 ], [ 166, 255 ], [ 256, 390 ], [ 391, 570 ], [ 571, 666 ], [ 667, 775 ], [ 776, 868 ], [ 869, 932 ], [ 933, 936 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 36, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-15-11_9
No?
[ "James Bond theme", "Bond", "the original James Bond theme from Dr. No" ]
acf-co24-15-11
9
The B section of this theme repeats swung, brassy, planed second-inversion chords rooted on E, F-sharp, G, then F-sharp, followed by stabbing chords in a son rhythm. This theme’s final chord is produced by the guitar tab “0 10 9 8 7 x” in standard tuning. This theme begins with a line cliché of four smooth E minor chords topped with degrees 5, flat-6, 6, and flat-6, its “suspense motif.” This theme’s syncopated motif E G, high E-flat D recurs in trumpets’ high register before Vic Flick reprises a syncopated riff on the low E string of a distorted electric guitar. That riff was drawn from a song about an “unlucky sneeze” that imitates Indian classical music. A dissonant E major-minor ninth chord ends this theme by Monty Norman that John Barry arranged for big band. This theme gives way to silhouettes dancing to calypso during the first gun barrel sequence. For 10 points, what theme was introduced to a spy series in Dr. No?
James Bond theme [or the original James Bond theme from Dr. No]
[ [ 0, 165 ], [ 166, 255 ], [ 256, 390 ], [ 391, 570 ], [ 571, 666 ], [ 667, 775 ], [ 776, 868 ], [ 869, 932 ], [ 933, 936 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music and Opera", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music-and-opera", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 36, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "classical-music-and-opera" ] }
acf-co24-15-12_1
During this conflict, the work of a kidnapped Radio Liberty journalist was called “more dangerous than firing a machine gun.”
[ "Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna", "Second Chechen War", "Chechenskiy chechenskaya", "First Chechen War", "Chechnya Conflict", "descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict", "Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna,", "Chechen Wars", "chechenskaya", "Chechen", "Chechnya", "Chechenskiy" ]
acf-co24-15-12
1
During this conflict, the work of a kidnapped Radio Liberty journalist was called “more dangerous than firing a machine gun.” A general in the first stage of this conflict boasted that one airborne division could win it in two hours before drunkenly launching a New Year’s Eve assault that lasted for two months. Journalists who covered this conflict included Ann Nivat and a woman who was shot in her apartment elevator after being detained during it. This conflict included the first use of “filtration point” camps, as well the first “mopping-up” operations called zachistka. During this conflict, one side deployed “black widow” suicide bombers. During the guerilla stage of this conflict, a school in Beslan was seized by forces of Shamil Basayev, an ally of Aslan Maskhadov. For 10 points, name this pair of wars in which Russian troops destroyed the capital of the breakaway state of Ichkeria, Grozny.
Chechen Wars [accept descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict or Chechnya Conflict; accept Second Chechen War or First Chechen War; accept Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna, or Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna] (The general is Pavel Grachev. The reporters are Andrei Babitsky and Anna Politkovskaya.)
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 312 ], [ 313, 452 ], [ 453, 579 ], [ 580, 650 ], [ 651, 781 ], [ 782, 909 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 102, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-12_2
A general in the first stage of this conflict boasted that one airborne division could win it in two hours before drunkenly launching a New Year’s Eve assault that lasted for two months.
[ "Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna", "Second Chechen War", "Chechenskiy chechenskaya", "First Chechen War", "Chechnya Conflict", "descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict", "Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna,", "Chechen Wars", "chechenskaya", "Chechen", "Chechnya", "Chechenskiy" ]
acf-co24-15-12
2
During this conflict, the work of a kidnapped Radio Liberty journalist was called “more dangerous than firing a machine gun.” A general in the first stage of this conflict boasted that one airborne division could win it in two hours before drunkenly launching a New Year’s Eve assault that lasted for two months. Journalists who covered this conflict included Ann Nivat and a woman who was shot in her apartment elevator after being detained during it. This conflict included the first use of “filtration point” camps, as well the first “mopping-up” operations called zachistka. During this conflict, one side deployed “black widow” suicide bombers. During the guerilla stage of this conflict, a school in Beslan was seized by forces of Shamil Basayev, an ally of Aslan Maskhadov. For 10 points, name this pair of wars in which Russian troops destroyed the capital of the breakaway state of Ichkeria, Grozny.
Chechen Wars [accept descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict or Chechnya Conflict; accept Second Chechen War or First Chechen War; accept Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna, or Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna] (The general is Pavel Grachev. The reporters are Andrei Babitsky and Anna Politkovskaya.)
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 312 ], [ 313, 452 ], [ 453, 579 ], [ 580, 650 ], [ 651, 781 ], [ 782, 909 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 102, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-12_3
Journalists who covered this conflict included Ann Nivat and a woman who was shot in her apartment elevator after being detained during it.
[ "Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna", "Second Chechen War", "Chechenskiy chechenskaya", "First Chechen War", "Chechnya Conflict", "descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict", "Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna,", "Chechen Wars", "chechenskaya", "Chechen", "Chechnya", "Chechenskiy" ]
acf-co24-15-12
3
During this conflict, the work of a kidnapped Radio Liberty journalist was called “more dangerous than firing a machine gun.” A general in the first stage of this conflict boasted that one airborne division could win it in two hours before drunkenly launching a New Year’s Eve assault that lasted for two months. Journalists who covered this conflict included Ann Nivat and a woman who was shot in her apartment elevator after being detained during it. This conflict included the first use of “filtration point” camps, as well the first “mopping-up” operations called zachistka. During this conflict, one side deployed “black widow” suicide bombers. During the guerilla stage of this conflict, a school in Beslan was seized by forces of Shamil Basayev, an ally of Aslan Maskhadov. For 10 points, name this pair of wars in which Russian troops destroyed the capital of the breakaway state of Ichkeria, Grozny.
Chechen Wars [accept descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict or Chechnya Conflict; accept Second Chechen War or First Chechen War; accept Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna, or Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna] (The general is Pavel Grachev. The reporters are Andrei Babitsky and Anna Politkovskaya.)
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 312 ], [ 313, 452 ], [ 453, 579 ], [ 580, 650 ], [ 651, 781 ], [ 782, 909 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 102, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-12_4
This conflict included the first use of “filtration point” camps, as well the first “mopping-up” operations called zachistka.
[ "Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna", "Second Chechen War", "Chechenskiy chechenskaya", "First Chechen War", "Chechnya Conflict", "descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict", "Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna,", "Chechen Wars", "chechenskaya", "Chechen", "Chechnya", "Chechenskiy" ]
acf-co24-15-12
4
During this conflict, the work of a kidnapped Radio Liberty journalist was called “more dangerous than firing a machine gun.” A general in the first stage of this conflict boasted that one airborne division could win it in two hours before drunkenly launching a New Year’s Eve assault that lasted for two months. Journalists who covered this conflict included Ann Nivat and a woman who was shot in her apartment elevator after being detained during it. This conflict included the first use of “filtration point” camps, as well the first “mopping-up” operations called zachistka. During this conflict, one side deployed “black widow” suicide bombers. During the guerilla stage of this conflict, a school in Beslan was seized by forces of Shamil Basayev, an ally of Aslan Maskhadov. For 10 points, name this pair of wars in which Russian troops destroyed the capital of the breakaway state of Ichkeria, Grozny.
Chechen Wars [accept descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict or Chechnya Conflict; accept Second Chechen War or First Chechen War; accept Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna, or Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna] (The general is Pavel Grachev. The reporters are Andrei Babitsky and Anna Politkovskaya.)
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 312 ], [ 313, 452 ], [ 453, 579 ], [ 580, 650 ], [ 651, 781 ], [ 782, 909 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 102, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-12_5
During this conflict, one side deployed “black widow” suicide bombers.
[ "Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna", "Second Chechen War", "Chechenskiy chechenskaya", "First Chechen War", "Chechnya Conflict", "descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict", "Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna,", "Chechen Wars", "chechenskaya", "Chechen", "Chechnya", "Chechenskiy" ]
acf-co24-15-12
5
During this conflict, the work of a kidnapped Radio Liberty journalist was called “more dangerous than firing a machine gun.” A general in the first stage of this conflict boasted that one airborne division could win it in two hours before drunkenly launching a New Year’s Eve assault that lasted for two months. Journalists who covered this conflict included Ann Nivat and a woman who was shot in her apartment elevator after being detained during it. This conflict included the first use of “filtration point” camps, as well the first “mopping-up” operations called zachistka. During this conflict, one side deployed “black widow” suicide bombers. During the guerilla stage of this conflict, a school in Beslan was seized by forces of Shamil Basayev, an ally of Aslan Maskhadov. For 10 points, name this pair of wars in which Russian troops destroyed the capital of the breakaway state of Ichkeria, Grozny.
Chechen Wars [accept descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict or Chechnya Conflict; accept Second Chechen War or First Chechen War; accept Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna, or Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna] (The general is Pavel Grachev. The reporters are Andrei Babitsky and Anna Politkovskaya.)
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 312 ], [ 313, 452 ], [ 453, 579 ], [ 580, 650 ], [ 651, 781 ], [ 782, 909 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 102, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-12_6
During the guerilla stage of this conflict, a school in Beslan was seized by forces of Shamil Basayev, an ally of Aslan Maskhadov.
[ "Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna", "Second Chechen War", "Chechenskiy chechenskaya", "First Chechen War", "Chechnya Conflict", "descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict", "Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna,", "Chechen Wars", "chechenskaya", "Chechen", "Chechnya", "Chechenskiy" ]
acf-co24-15-12
6
During this conflict, the work of a kidnapped Radio Liberty journalist was called “more dangerous than firing a machine gun.” A general in the first stage of this conflict boasted that one airborne division could win it in two hours before drunkenly launching a New Year’s Eve assault that lasted for two months. Journalists who covered this conflict included Ann Nivat and a woman who was shot in her apartment elevator after being detained during it. This conflict included the first use of “filtration point” camps, as well the first “mopping-up” operations called zachistka. During this conflict, one side deployed “black widow” suicide bombers. During the guerilla stage of this conflict, a school in Beslan was seized by forces of Shamil Basayev, an ally of Aslan Maskhadov. For 10 points, name this pair of wars in which Russian troops destroyed the capital of the breakaway state of Ichkeria, Grozny.
Chechen Wars [accept descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict or Chechnya Conflict; accept Second Chechen War or First Chechen War; accept Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna, or Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna] (The general is Pavel Grachev. The reporters are Andrei Babitsky and Anna Politkovskaya.)
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 312 ], [ 313, 452 ], [ 453, 579 ], [ 580, 650 ], [ 651, 781 ], [ 782, 909 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 102, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-12_7
For 10 points, name this pair of wars in which Russian troops destroyed the capital of the breakaway state of Ichkeria, Grozny.
[ "Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna", "Second Chechen War", "Chechenskiy chechenskaya", "First Chechen War", "Chechnya Conflict", "descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict", "Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna,", "Chechen Wars", "chechenskaya", "Chechen", "Chechnya", "Chechenskiy" ]
acf-co24-15-12
7
During this conflict, the work of a kidnapped Radio Liberty journalist was called “more dangerous than firing a machine gun.” A general in the first stage of this conflict boasted that one airborne division could win it in two hours before drunkenly launching a New Year’s Eve assault that lasted for two months. Journalists who covered this conflict included Ann Nivat and a woman who was shot in her apartment elevator after being detained during it. This conflict included the first use of “filtration point” camps, as well the first “mopping-up” operations called zachistka. During this conflict, one side deployed “black widow” suicide bombers. During the guerilla stage of this conflict, a school in Beslan was seized by forces of Shamil Basayev, an ally of Aslan Maskhadov. For 10 points, name this pair of wars in which Russian troops destroyed the capital of the breakaway state of Ichkeria, Grozny.
Chechen Wars [accept descriptions of the Chechen–Russian conflict or Chechnya Conflict; accept Second Chechen War or First Chechen War; accept Chechenskiy konflikt, Pervaya chechenskaya voyna, or Vtoraya chechenskaya voyna] (The general is Pavel Grachev. The reporters are Andrei Babitsky and Anna Politkovskaya.)
[ [ 0, 125 ], [ 126, 312 ], [ 313, 452 ], [ 453, 579 ], [ 580, 650 ], [ 651, 781 ], [ 782, 909 ] ]
{ "category": "history", "category_full": "History - European History", "category_main": "history-european-history", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 102, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "european-history" ] }
acf-co24-15-13_1
Measurements of an effect named after this phenomenon and of a torsional oscillator were used by Bishop and Reppy to confirm the BKT theory.
[ "first sound", "zeroth sound", "speed of sound", "third sound", "second sound", "sound" ]
acf-co24-15-13
1
Measurements of an effect named after this phenomenon and of a torsional oscillator were used by Bishop and Reppy to confirm the BKT theory. That effect named after this phenomenon is analogous to gravity waves and is exhibited in Rollin films. Landau predicted very-high-frequency oscillations in the orientation of the Fermi surface named after this phenomenon. The hydrodynamic modes corresponding to this phenomenon in a fluid arise due to coupling between the density and the momentum density. The two-fluid model of superfluids predicts a diverging thermal conductivity due to the existence of a temperature mode named the “second” kind of this phenomenon. A quantity associated with this phenomenon is equal to the square root of “adiabatic index times Boltzmann’s constant times temperature over mass.” For 10 points, Isaac Newton calculated the isothermal speed of what phenomenon, which he measured by clapping while walking around Trinity College?
sound [accept third sound; accept zeroth sound; accept second sound; accept first sound; accept speed of sound]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 244 ], [ 245, 363 ], [ 364, 498 ], [ 499, 663 ], [ 664, 811 ], [ 812, 959 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 99, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-15-13_2
That effect named after this phenomenon is analogous to gravity waves and is exhibited in Rollin films.
[ "first sound", "zeroth sound", "speed of sound", "third sound", "second sound", "sound" ]
acf-co24-15-13
2
Measurements of an effect named after this phenomenon and of a torsional oscillator were used by Bishop and Reppy to confirm the BKT theory. That effect named after this phenomenon is analogous to gravity waves and is exhibited in Rollin films. Landau predicted very-high-frequency oscillations in the orientation of the Fermi surface named after this phenomenon. The hydrodynamic modes corresponding to this phenomenon in a fluid arise due to coupling between the density and the momentum density. The two-fluid model of superfluids predicts a diverging thermal conductivity due to the existence of a temperature mode named the “second” kind of this phenomenon. A quantity associated with this phenomenon is equal to the square root of “adiabatic index times Boltzmann’s constant times temperature over mass.” For 10 points, Isaac Newton calculated the isothermal speed of what phenomenon, which he measured by clapping while walking around Trinity College?
sound [accept third sound; accept zeroth sound; accept second sound; accept first sound; accept speed of sound]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 244 ], [ 245, 363 ], [ 364, 498 ], [ 499, 663 ], [ 664, 811 ], [ 812, 959 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 99, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-15-13_3
Landau predicted very-high-frequency oscillations in the orientation of the Fermi surface named after this phenomenon.
[ "first sound", "zeroth sound", "speed of sound", "third sound", "second sound", "sound" ]
acf-co24-15-13
3
Measurements of an effect named after this phenomenon and of a torsional oscillator were used by Bishop and Reppy to confirm the BKT theory. That effect named after this phenomenon is analogous to gravity waves and is exhibited in Rollin films. Landau predicted very-high-frequency oscillations in the orientation of the Fermi surface named after this phenomenon. The hydrodynamic modes corresponding to this phenomenon in a fluid arise due to coupling between the density and the momentum density. The two-fluid model of superfluids predicts a diverging thermal conductivity due to the existence of a temperature mode named the “second” kind of this phenomenon. A quantity associated with this phenomenon is equal to the square root of “adiabatic index times Boltzmann’s constant times temperature over mass.” For 10 points, Isaac Newton calculated the isothermal speed of what phenomenon, which he measured by clapping while walking around Trinity College?
sound [accept third sound; accept zeroth sound; accept second sound; accept first sound; accept speed of sound]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 244 ], [ 245, 363 ], [ 364, 498 ], [ 499, 663 ], [ 664, 811 ], [ 812, 959 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 99, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-15-13_4
The hydrodynamic modes corresponding to this phenomenon in a fluid arise due to coupling between the density and the momentum density.
[ "first sound", "zeroth sound", "speed of sound", "third sound", "second sound", "sound" ]
acf-co24-15-13
4
Measurements of an effect named after this phenomenon and of a torsional oscillator were used by Bishop and Reppy to confirm the BKT theory. That effect named after this phenomenon is analogous to gravity waves and is exhibited in Rollin films. Landau predicted very-high-frequency oscillations in the orientation of the Fermi surface named after this phenomenon. The hydrodynamic modes corresponding to this phenomenon in a fluid arise due to coupling between the density and the momentum density. The two-fluid model of superfluids predicts a diverging thermal conductivity due to the existence of a temperature mode named the “second” kind of this phenomenon. A quantity associated with this phenomenon is equal to the square root of “adiabatic index times Boltzmann’s constant times temperature over mass.” For 10 points, Isaac Newton calculated the isothermal speed of what phenomenon, which he measured by clapping while walking around Trinity College?
sound [accept third sound; accept zeroth sound; accept second sound; accept first sound; accept speed of sound]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 244 ], [ 245, 363 ], [ 364, 498 ], [ 499, 663 ], [ 664, 811 ], [ 812, 959 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 99, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-15-13_5
The two-fluid model of superfluids predicts a diverging thermal conductivity due to the existence of a temperature mode named the “second” kind of this phenomenon.
[ "first sound", "zeroth sound", "speed of sound", "third sound", "second sound", "sound" ]
acf-co24-15-13
5
Measurements of an effect named after this phenomenon and of a torsional oscillator were used by Bishop and Reppy to confirm the BKT theory. That effect named after this phenomenon is analogous to gravity waves and is exhibited in Rollin films. Landau predicted very-high-frequency oscillations in the orientation of the Fermi surface named after this phenomenon. The hydrodynamic modes corresponding to this phenomenon in a fluid arise due to coupling between the density and the momentum density. The two-fluid model of superfluids predicts a diverging thermal conductivity due to the existence of a temperature mode named the “second” kind of this phenomenon. A quantity associated with this phenomenon is equal to the square root of “adiabatic index times Boltzmann’s constant times temperature over mass.” For 10 points, Isaac Newton calculated the isothermal speed of what phenomenon, which he measured by clapping while walking around Trinity College?
sound [accept third sound; accept zeroth sound; accept second sound; accept first sound; accept speed of sound]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 244 ], [ 245, 363 ], [ 364, 498 ], [ 499, 663 ], [ 664, 811 ], [ 812, 959 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 99, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-15-13_6
A quantity associated with this phenomenon is equal to the square root of “adiabatic index times Boltzmann’s constant times temperature over mass.”
[ "first sound", "zeroth sound", "speed of sound", "third sound", "second sound", "sound" ]
acf-co24-15-13
6
Measurements of an effect named after this phenomenon and of a torsional oscillator were used by Bishop and Reppy to confirm the BKT theory. That effect named after this phenomenon is analogous to gravity waves and is exhibited in Rollin films. Landau predicted very-high-frequency oscillations in the orientation of the Fermi surface named after this phenomenon. The hydrodynamic modes corresponding to this phenomenon in a fluid arise due to coupling between the density and the momentum density. The two-fluid model of superfluids predicts a diverging thermal conductivity due to the existence of a temperature mode named the “second” kind of this phenomenon. A quantity associated with this phenomenon is equal to the square root of “adiabatic index times Boltzmann’s constant times temperature over mass.” For 10 points, Isaac Newton calculated the isothermal speed of what phenomenon, which he measured by clapping while walking around Trinity College?
sound [accept third sound; accept zeroth sound; accept second sound; accept first sound; accept speed of sound]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 244 ], [ 245, 363 ], [ 364, 498 ], [ 499, 663 ], [ 664, 811 ], [ 812, 959 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 99, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-15-13_7
For 10 points, Isaac Newton calculated the isothermal speed of what phenomenon, which he measured by clapping while walking around Trinity College?
[ "first sound", "zeroth sound", "speed of sound", "third sound", "second sound", "sound" ]
acf-co24-15-13
7
Measurements of an effect named after this phenomenon and of a torsional oscillator were used by Bishop and Reppy to confirm the BKT theory. That effect named after this phenomenon is analogous to gravity waves and is exhibited in Rollin films. Landau predicted very-high-frequency oscillations in the orientation of the Fermi surface named after this phenomenon. The hydrodynamic modes corresponding to this phenomenon in a fluid arise due to coupling between the density and the momentum density. The two-fluid model of superfluids predicts a diverging thermal conductivity due to the existence of a temperature mode named the “second” kind of this phenomenon. A quantity associated with this phenomenon is equal to the square root of “adiabatic index times Boltzmann’s constant times temperature over mass.” For 10 points, Isaac Newton calculated the isothermal speed of what phenomenon, which he measured by clapping while walking around Trinity College?
sound [accept third sound; accept zeroth sound; accept second sound; accept first sound; accept speed of sound]
[ [ 0, 140 ], [ 141, 244 ], [ 245, 363 ], [ 364, 498 ], [ 499, 663 ], [ 664, 811 ], [ 812, 959 ] ]
{ "category": "science", "category_full": "Science - Physics", "category_main": "science-physics", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 99, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "physics" ] }
acf-co24-15-14_1
Varieties of this activity like the “seven finger high-glister” are practiced by Maudy Ghamus and Gamby Gholar in a cave home to a giant, lazy snake.
[ "cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring,", "The Conjure-Woman", "Conjure", "goopher", "The Conjure Man Dies", "conjure", "conjuration", "word forms", "conjuring", "word forms until goophered is read", "cunjuh conjuration conjuring", "cunjuh" ]
acf-co24-15-14
1
Varieties of this activity like the “seven finger high-glister” are practiced by Maudy Ghamus and Gamby Gholar in a cave home to a giant, lazy snake. In a book titled for this activity, moaning and groaning in the walls of Marrabo McSwayn’s new kitchen leads it to be torn down and its wood used for a schoolhouse. A practitioner of this activity helps solve his own murder before actually being shot by a railroad man in a Rudolph Fisher novel. The title character learns this activity in the Great Dismal Swamp in Blake; or the Huts of America by Martin Delany. A collection titled for this activity includes “Po’ Sandy” and a story in which a man anxious to protect his crop of scuppernong asks Aunt Peggy to make it poisonous to interlopers. For 10 points, Uncle Julius tells stories like “The Goophered Grapevine” in a Charles Chesnutt collection titled for a woman who practices what magical art?
conjure [accept cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring, or word forms; accept goopher or word forms until “goophered” is read; accept The Conjure Man Dies or The Conjure-Woman; prompt on hoodoo or rootwork; prompt on magic, spellcasting, fortune-telling, or synonyms]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 314 ], [ 315, 445 ], [ 446, 564 ], [ 565, 746 ], [ 747, 903 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 126, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-14_2
In a book titled for this activity, moaning and groaning in the walls of Marrabo McSwayn’s new kitchen leads it to be torn down and its wood used for a schoolhouse.
[ "cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring,", "The Conjure-Woman", "Conjure", "goopher", "The Conjure Man Dies", "conjure", "conjuration", "word forms", "conjuring", "word forms until goophered is read", "cunjuh conjuration conjuring", "cunjuh" ]
acf-co24-15-14
2
Varieties of this activity like the “seven finger high-glister” are practiced by Maudy Ghamus and Gamby Gholar in a cave home to a giant, lazy snake. In a book titled for this activity, moaning and groaning in the walls of Marrabo McSwayn’s new kitchen leads it to be torn down and its wood used for a schoolhouse. A practitioner of this activity helps solve his own murder before actually being shot by a railroad man in a Rudolph Fisher novel. The title character learns this activity in the Great Dismal Swamp in Blake; or the Huts of America by Martin Delany. A collection titled for this activity includes “Po’ Sandy” and a story in which a man anxious to protect his crop of scuppernong asks Aunt Peggy to make it poisonous to interlopers. For 10 points, Uncle Julius tells stories like “The Goophered Grapevine” in a Charles Chesnutt collection titled for a woman who practices what magical art?
conjure [accept cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring, or word forms; accept goopher or word forms until “goophered” is read; accept The Conjure Man Dies or The Conjure-Woman; prompt on hoodoo or rootwork; prompt on magic, spellcasting, fortune-telling, or synonyms]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 314 ], [ 315, 445 ], [ 446, 564 ], [ 565, 746 ], [ 747, 903 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 126, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-14_3
A practitioner of this activity helps solve his own murder before actually being shot by a railroad man in a Rudolph Fisher novel.
[ "cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring,", "The Conjure-Woman", "Conjure", "goopher", "The Conjure Man Dies", "conjure", "conjuration", "word forms", "conjuring", "word forms until goophered is read", "cunjuh conjuration conjuring", "cunjuh" ]
acf-co24-15-14
3
Varieties of this activity like the “seven finger high-glister” are practiced by Maudy Ghamus and Gamby Gholar in a cave home to a giant, lazy snake. In a book titled for this activity, moaning and groaning in the walls of Marrabo McSwayn’s new kitchen leads it to be torn down and its wood used for a schoolhouse. A practitioner of this activity helps solve his own murder before actually being shot by a railroad man in a Rudolph Fisher novel. The title character learns this activity in the Great Dismal Swamp in Blake; or the Huts of America by Martin Delany. A collection titled for this activity includes “Po’ Sandy” and a story in which a man anxious to protect his crop of scuppernong asks Aunt Peggy to make it poisonous to interlopers. For 10 points, Uncle Julius tells stories like “The Goophered Grapevine” in a Charles Chesnutt collection titled for a woman who practices what magical art?
conjure [accept cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring, or word forms; accept goopher or word forms until “goophered” is read; accept The Conjure Man Dies or The Conjure-Woman; prompt on hoodoo or rootwork; prompt on magic, spellcasting, fortune-telling, or synonyms]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 314 ], [ 315, 445 ], [ 446, 564 ], [ 565, 746 ], [ 747, 903 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 126, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-14_4
The title character learns this activity in the Great Dismal Swamp in Blake; or the Huts of America by Martin Delany.
[ "cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring,", "The Conjure-Woman", "Conjure", "goopher", "The Conjure Man Dies", "conjure", "conjuration", "word forms", "conjuring", "word forms until goophered is read", "cunjuh conjuration conjuring", "cunjuh" ]
acf-co24-15-14
4
Varieties of this activity like the “seven finger high-glister” are practiced by Maudy Ghamus and Gamby Gholar in a cave home to a giant, lazy snake. In a book titled for this activity, moaning and groaning in the walls of Marrabo McSwayn’s new kitchen leads it to be torn down and its wood used for a schoolhouse. A practitioner of this activity helps solve his own murder before actually being shot by a railroad man in a Rudolph Fisher novel. The title character learns this activity in the Great Dismal Swamp in Blake; or the Huts of America by Martin Delany. A collection titled for this activity includes “Po’ Sandy” and a story in which a man anxious to protect his crop of scuppernong asks Aunt Peggy to make it poisonous to interlopers. For 10 points, Uncle Julius tells stories like “The Goophered Grapevine” in a Charles Chesnutt collection titled for a woman who practices what magical art?
conjure [accept cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring, or word forms; accept goopher or word forms until “goophered” is read; accept The Conjure Man Dies or The Conjure-Woman; prompt on hoodoo or rootwork; prompt on magic, spellcasting, fortune-telling, or synonyms]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 314 ], [ 315, 445 ], [ 446, 564 ], [ 565, 746 ], [ 747, 903 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 126, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-14_5
A collection titled for this activity includes “Po’ Sandy” and a story in which a man anxious to protect his crop of scuppernong asks Aunt Peggy to make it poisonous to interlopers.
[ "cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring,", "The Conjure-Woman", "Conjure", "goopher", "The Conjure Man Dies", "conjure", "conjuration", "word forms", "conjuring", "word forms until goophered is read", "cunjuh conjuration conjuring", "cunjuh" ]
acf-co24-15-14
5
Varieties of this activity like the “seven finger high-glister” are practiced by Maudy Ghamus and Gamby Gholar in a cave home to a giant, lazy snake. In a book titled for this activity, moaning and groaning in the walls of Marrabo McSwayn’s new kitchen leads it to be torn down and its wood used for a schoolhouse. A practitioner of this activity helps solve his own murder before actually being shot by a railroad man in a Rudolph Fisher novel. The title character learns this activity in the Great Dismal Swamp in Blake; or the Huts of America by Martin Delany. A collection titled for this activity includes “Po’ Sandy” and a story in which a man anxious to protect his crop of scuppernong asks Aunt Peggy to make it poisonous to interlopers. For 10 points, Uncle Julius tells stories like “The Goophered Grapevine” in a Charles Chesnutt collection titled for a woman who practices what magical art?
conjure [accept cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring, or word forms; accept goopher or word forms until “goophered” is read; accept The Conjure Man Dies or The Conjure-Woman; prompt on hoodoo or rootwork; prompt on magic, spellcasting, fortune-telling, or synonyms]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 314 ], [ 315, 445 ], [ 446, 564 ], [ 565, 746 ], [ 747, 903 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 126, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-14_6
For 10 points, Uncle Julius tells stories like “The Goophered Grapevine” in a Charles Chesnutt collection titled for a woman who practices what magical art?
[ "cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring,", "The Conjure-Woman", "Conjure", "goopher", "The Conjure Man Dies", "conjure", "conjuration", "word forms", "conjuring", "word forms until goophered is read", "cunjuh conjuration conjuring", "cunjuh" ]
acf-co24-15-14
6
Varieties of this activity like the “seven finger high-glister” are practiced by Maudy Ghamus and Gamby Gholar in a cave home to a giant, lazy snake. In a book titled for this activity, moaning and groaning in the walls of Marrabo McSwayn’s new kitchen leads it to be torn down and its wood used for a schoolhouse. A practitioner of this activity helps solve his own murder before actually being shot by a railroad man in a Rudolph Fisher novel. The title character learns this activity in the Great Dismal Swamp in Blake; or the Huts of America by Martin Delany. A collection titled for this activity includes “Po’ Sandy” and a story in which a man anxious to protect his crop of scuppernong asks Aunt Peggy to make it poisonous to interlopers. For 10 points, Uncle Julius tells stories like “The Goophered Grapevine” in a Charles Chesnutt collection titled for a woman who practices what magical art?
conjure [accept cunjuh, conjuration, conjuring, or word forms; accept goopher or word forms until “goophered” is read; accept The Conjure Man Dies or The Conjure-Woman; prompt on hoodoo or rootwork; prompt on magic, spellcasting, fortune-telling, or synonyms]
[ [ 0, 149 ], [ 150, 314 ], [ 315, 445 ], [ 446, 564 ], [ 565, 746 ], [ 747, 903 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - American Literature", "category_main": "literature-american-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 126, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "american-literature" ] }
acf-co24-15-15_1
Jarrod Shanahan’s history of this place profiles the “welfarism” of former garment worker Anna Kross.
[ "Rikers Island Jail", "Rikers" ]
acf-co24-15-15
1
Jarrod Shanahan’s history of this place profiles the “welfarism” of former garment worker Anna Kross. A quilt by Jesse Krimes visualizes a 10-year deadline for this place that Jacques Jiha further delayed in 2024. In this place, members of the COBA union oversee the use of “the bing.” Until 2023, the main alternative to this place was a massive barge called the Vernon C. Bain Centre. An article by Jennifer Gonnerman drew attention to the case of a man who took his own life after spending three years in this place as a teenager, Kalief Browder. A 2014 report by Preet Bharara attacked the “culture of violence” at this place, whose sole access point is the Francis R. Buono bridge. This place has an average daily population of around 10,000 people, most of whom have not been charged. For 10 points, name this infamously hellish jail, the largest in New York City, which is located on an East River island.
Rikers Island Jail
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 213 ], [ 214, 285 ], [ 286, 386 ], [ 387, 550 ], [ 551, 687 ], [ 688, 791 ], [ 792, 913 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 84, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }
acf-co24-15-15_2
A quilt by Jesse Krimes visualizes a 10-year deadline for this place that Jacques Jiha further delayed in 2024.
[ "Rikers Island Jail", "Rikers" ]
acf-co24-15-15
2
Jarrod Shanahan’s history of this place profiles the “welfarism” of former garment worker Anna Kross. A quilt by Jesse Krimes visualizes a 10-year deadline for this place that Jacques Jiha further delayed in 2024. In this place, members of the COBA union oversee the use of “the bing.” Until 2023, the main alternative to this place was a massive barge called the Vernon C. Bain Centre. An article by Jennifer Gonnerman drew attention to the case of a man who took his own life after spending three years in this place as a teenager, Kalief Browder. A 2014 report by Preet Bharara attacked the “culture of violence” at this place, whose sole access point is the Francis R. Buono bridge. This place has an average daily population of around 10,000 people, most of whom have not been charged. For 10 points, name this infamously hellish jail, the largest in New York City, which is located on an East River island.
Rikers Island Jail
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 213 ], [ 214, 285 ], [ 286, 386 ], [ 387, 550 ], [ 551, 687 ], [ 688, 791 ], [ 792, 913 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 84, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }
acf-co24-15-15_3
In this place, members of the COBA union oversee the use of “the bing.”
[ "Rikers Island Jail", "Rikers" ]
acf-co24-15-15
3
Jarrod Shanahan’s history of this place profiles the “welfarism” of former garment worker Anna Kross. A quilt by Jesse Krimes visualizes a 10-year deadline for this place that Jacques Jiha further delayed in 2024. In this place, members of the COBA union oversee the use of “the bing.” Until 2023, the main alternative to this place was a massive barge called the Vernon C. Bain Centre. An article by Jennifer Gonnerman drew attention to the case of a man who took his own life after spending three years in this place as a teenager, Kalief Browder. A 2014 report by Preet Bharara attacked the “culture of violence” at this place, whose sole access point is the Francis R. Buono bridge. This place has an average daily population of around 10,000 people, most of whom have not been charged. For 10 points, name this infamously hellish jail, the largest in New York City, which is located on an East River island.
Rikers Island Jail
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 213 ], [ 214, 285 ], [ 286, 386 ], [ 387, 550 ], [ 551, 687 ], [ 688, 791 ], [ 792, 913 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 84, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }
acf-co24-15-15_4
Until 2023, the main alternative to this place was a massive barge called the Vernon C. Bain Centre.
[ "Rikers Island Jail", "Rikers" ]
acf-co24-15-15
4
Jarrod Shanahan’s history of this place profiles the “welfarism” of former garment worker Anna Kross. A quilt by Jesse Krimes visualizes a 10-year deadline for this place that Jacques Jiha further delayed in 2024. In this place, members of the COBA union oversee the use of “the bing.” Until 2023, the main alternative to this place was a massive barge called the Vernon C. Bain Centre. An article by Jennifer Gonnerman drew attention to the case of a man who took his own life after spending three years in this place as a teenager, Kalief Browder. A 2014 report by Preet Bharara attacked the “culture of violence” at this place, whose sole access point is the Francis R. Buono bridge. This place has an average daily population of around 10,000 people, most of whom have not been charged. For 10 points, name this infamously hellish jail, the largest in New York City, which is located on an East River island.
Rikers Island Jail
[ [ 0, 101 ], [ 102, 213 ], [ 214, 285 ], [ 286, 386 ], [ 387, 550 ], [ 551, 687 ], [ 688, 791 ], [ 792, 913 ] ]
{ "category": "modern-world", "category_full": "Modern World - Modern World", "category_main": "modern-world", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 84, 15 ] ], "packet": "Packet O. Editors 9", "question_set": "2024-chicago-open", "subcategory": [ "modern-world" ] }