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acf-regs25-1-16_4
This author drew on his upbringing in St. Louis in a poem that evokes the Mississippi River as a “strong brown god.”
[ "Eliot", "Thomas Stearns Eliot", "T. S. Eliot" ]
acf-regs25-1-16
4
A poem by this author describes a “man and woman daunsinge, signifying matrimonie,” quoting an ancestor’s work, The Boke Named The Governour. Another poem by this author moves from an empty pool in a rose garden to a “place of disaffection,” the London Underground. A personal motto of Mary, Queen of Scots ends a poem by this author titled for a village that now holds his ashes. This author drew on his upbringing in St. Louis in a poem that evokes the Mississippi River as a “strong brown god.” A set of poems by this author includes the opening lines, “time present and time past / are both perhaps present in time future” and “in my beginning is my end.” For 10 points, name this poet who included “The Dry Salvages” and “Burnt Norton” in the collection Four Quartets.
T. S. Eliot [or Thomas Stearns Eliot] (The Boke Named the Governour is by Thomas Elyot, a distant ancestor of Eliot.)
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acf-regs25-1-16_5
A set of poems by this author includes the opening lines, “time present and time past / are both perhaps present in time future” and “in my beginning is my end.”
[ "Eliot", "Thomas Stearns Eliot", "T. S. Eliot" ]
acf-regs25-1-16
5
A poem by this author describes a “man and woman daunsinge, signifying matrimonie,” quoting an ancestor’s work, The Boke Named The Governour. Another poem by this author moves from an empty pool in a rose garden to a “place of disaffection,” the London Underground. A personal motto of Mary, Queen of Scots ends a poem by this author titled for a village that now holds his ashes. This author drew on his upbringing in St. Louis in a poem that evokes the Mississippi River as a “strong brown god.” A set of poems by this author includes the opening lines, “time present and time past / are both perhaps present in time future” and “in my beginning is my end.” For 10 points, name this poet who included “The Dry Salvages” and “Burnt Norton” in the collection Four Quartets.
T. S. Eliot [or Thomas Stearns Eliot] (The Boke Named the Governour is by Thomas Elyot, a distant ancestor of Eliot.)
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acf-regs25-1-16_6
For 10 points, name this poet who included “The Dry Salvages” and “Burnt Norton” in the collection Four Quartets.
[ "Eliot", "Thomas Stearns Eliot", "T. S. Eliot" ]
acf-regs25-1-16
6
A poem by this author describes a “man and woman daunsinge, signifying matrimonie,” quoting an ancestor’s work, The Boke Named The Governour. Another poem by this author moves from an empty pool in a rose garden to a “place of disaffection,” the London Underground. A personal motto of Mary, Queen of Scots ends a poem by this author titled for a village that now holds his ashes. This author drew on his upbringing in St. Louis in a poem that evokes the Mississippi River as a “strong brown god.” A set of poems by this author includes the opening lines, “time present and time past / are both perhaps present in time future” and “in my beginning is my end.” For 10 points, name this poet who included “The Dry Salvages” and “Burnt Norton” in the collection Four Quartets.
T. S. Eliot [or Thomas Stearns Eliot] (The Boke Named the Governour is by Thomas Elyot, a distant ancestor of Eliot.)
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acf-regs25-1-17_1
A five-stage archaeological sequence of styles composed primarily of objects from this polity was proposed by Max Loehr.
[ "Yīn", "Shāng cháo", "Yīn dài until Yīn is read", "Shāng dynasty", "Yīn dynasty", "Shāng" ]
acf-regs25-1-17
1
A five-stage archaeological sequence of styles composed primarily of objects from this polity was proposed by Max Loehr. A royal consort from this polity, whose head was later hung from a white flag to indicate that she had led to its downfall, supposedly prompted her husband to create a torture method involving walking over a greased metal beam heated with coal. After losing a battle, this polity’s final ruler committed suicide at the Deer Terrace Pavilion, which was legendarily home to excesses of meat and wine. The tomb of Fù Hǎo, a queen and general from this polity, was excavated in Ānyáng. The Hòumǔwù dǐng bronze vessel was found at this dynasty’s last capital, Yīn. This dynasty fell after the Battle of Mùyě in 1046 BCE. For 10 points, name this Chinese dynasty preceded by the Xià and succeeded by the Zhōu.
Shāng dynasty [or Shāng cháo; accept Yīn dynasty or Yīn dài until “Yīn” is read; prompt on Èrlǐtóu or Èrlǐgǎng by asking “what dynasty?”] (Max Loehr presented a sequence of bronze styles. Dájǐ was the consort of Zhòu of Shāng.)
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acf-regs25-1-17_2
A royal consort from this polity, whose head was later hung from a white flag to indicate that she had led to its downfall, supposedly prompted her husband to create a torture method involving walking over a greased metal beam heated with coal.
[ "Yīn", "Shāng cháo", "Yīn dài until Yīn is read", "Shāng dynasty", "Yīn dynasty", "Shāng" ]
acf-regs25-1-17
2
A five-stage archaeological sequence of styles composed primarily of objects from this polity was proposed by Max Loehr. A royal consort from this polity, whose head was later hung from a white flag to indicate that she had led to its downfall, supposedly prompted her husband to create a torture method involving walking over a greased metal beam heated with coal. After losing a battle, this polity’s final ruler committed suicide at the Deer Terrace Pavilion, which was legendarily home to excesses of meat and wine. The tomb of Fù Hǎo, a queen and general from this polity, was excavated in Ānyáng. The Hòumǔwù dǐng bronze vessel was found at this dynasty’s last capital, Yīn. This dynasty fell after the Battle of Mùyě in 1046 BCE. For 10 points, name this Chinese dynasty preceded by the Xià and succeeded by the Zhōu.
Shāng dynasty [or Shāng cháo; accept Yīn dynasty or Yīn dài until “Yīn” is read; prompt on Èrlǐtóu or Èrlǐgǎng by asking “what dynasty?”] (Max Loehr presented a sequence of bronze styles. Dájǐ was the consort of Zhòu of Shāng.)
[ [ 0, 120 ], [ 121, 365 ], [ 366, 519 ], [ 520, 602 ], [ 603, 680 ], [ 681, 736 ], [ 737, 824 ] ]
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acf-regs25-1-17_3
After losing a battle, this polity’s final ruler committed suicide at the Deer Terrace Pavilion, which was legendarily home to excesses of meat and wine.
[ "Yīn", "Shāng cháo", "Yīn dài until Yīn is read", "Shāng dynasty", "Yīn dynasty", "Shāng" ]
acf-regs25-1-17
3
A five-stage archaeological sequence of styles composed primarily of objects from this polity was proposed by Max Loehr. A royal consort from this polity, whose head was later hung from a white flag to indicate that she had led to its downfall, supposedly prompted her husband to create a torture method involving walking over a greased metal beam heated with coal. After losing a battle, this polity’s final ruler committed suicide at the Deer Terrace Pavilion, which was legendarily home to excesses of meat and wine. The tomb of Fù Hǎo, a queen and general from this polity, was excavated in Ānyáng. The Hòumǔwù dǐng bronze vessel was found at this dynasty’s last capital, Yīn. This dynasty fell after the Battle of Mùyě in 1046 BCE. For 10 points, name this Chinese dynasty preceded by the Xià and succeeded by the Zhōu.
Shāng dynasty [or Shāng cháo; accept Yīn dynasty or Yīn dài until “Yīn” is read; prompt on Èrlǐtóu or Èrlǐgǎng by asking “what dynasty?”] (Max Loehr presented a sequence of bronze styles. Dájǐ was the consort of Zhòu of Shāng.)
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acf-regs25-1-17_4
The tomb of Fù Hǎo, a queen and general from this polity, was excavated in Ānyáng.
[ "Yīn", "Shāng cháo", "Yīn dài until Yīn is read", "Shāng dynasty", "Yīn dynasty", "Shāng" ]
acf-regs25-1-17
4
A five-stage archaeological sequence of styles composed primarily of objects from this polity was proposed by Max Loehr. A royal consort from this polity, whose head was later hung from a white flag to indicate that she had led to its downfall, supposedly prompted her husband to create a torture method involving walking over a greased metal beam heated with coal. After losing a battle, this polity’s final ruler committed suicide at the Deer Terrace Pavilion, which was legendarily home to excesses of meat and wine. The tomb of Fù Hǎo, a queen and general from this polity, was excavated in Ānyáng. The Hòumǔwù dǐng bronze vessel was found at this dynasty’s last capital, Yīn. This dynasty fell after the Battle of Mùyě in 1046 BCE. For 10 points, name this Chinese dynasty preceded by the Xià and succeeded by the Zhōu.
Shāng dynasty [or Shāng cháo; accept Yīn dynasty or Yīn dài until “Yīn” is read; prompt on Èrlǐtóu or Èrlǐgǎng by asking “what dynasty?”] (Max Loehr presented a sequence of bronze styles. Dájǐ was the consort of Zhòu of Shāng.)
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acf-regs25-1-17_5
The Hòumǔwù dǐng bronze vessel was found at this dynasty’s last capital, Yīn.
[ "Yīn", "Shāng cháo", "Yīn dài until Yīn is read", "Shāng dynasty", "Yīn dynasty", "Shāng" ]
acf-regs25-1-17
5
A five-stage archaeological sequence of styles composed primarily of objects from this polity was proposed by Max Loehr. A royal consort from this polity, whose head was later hung from a white flag to indicate that she had led to its downfall, supposedly prompted her husband to create a torture method involving walking over a greased metal beam heated with coal. After losing a battle, this polity’s final ruler committed suicide at the Deer Terrace Pavilion, which was legendarily home to excesses of meat and wine. The tomb of Fù Hǎo, a queen and general from this polity, was excavated in Ānyáng. The Hòumǔwù dǐng bronze vessel was found at this dynasty’s last capital, Yīn. This dynasty fell after the Battle of Mùyě in 1046 BCE. For 10 points, name this Chinese dynasty preceded by the Xià and succeeded by the Zhōu.
Shāng dynasty [or Shāng cháo; accept Yīn dynasty or Yīn dài until “Yīn” is read; prompt on Èrlǐtóu or Èrlǐgǎng by asking “what dynasty?”] (Max Loehr presented a sequence of bronze styles. Dájǐ was the consort of Zhòu of Shāng.)
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acf-regs25-1-17_6
This dynasty fell after the Battle of Mùyě in 1046 BCE.
[ "Yīn", "Shāng cháo", "Yīn dài until Yīn is read", "Shāng dynasty", "Yīn dynasty", "Shāng" ]
acf-regs25-1-17
6
A five-stage archaeological sequence of styles composed primarily of objects from this polity was proposed by Max Loehr. A royal consort from this polity, whose head was later hung from a white flag to indicate that she had led to its downfall, supposedly prompted her husband to create a torture method involving walking over a greased metal beam heated with coal. After losing a battle, this polity’s final ruler committed suicide at the Deer Terrace Pavilion, which was legendarily home to excesses of meat and wine. The tomb of Fù Hǎo, a queen and general from this polity, was excavated in Ānyáng. The Hòumǔwù dǐng bronze vessel was found at this dynasty’s last capital, Yīn. This dynasty fell after the Battle of Mùyě in 1046 BCE. For 10 points, name this Chinese dynasty preceded by the Xià and succeeded by the Zhōu.
Shāng dynasty [or Shāng cháo; accept Yīn dynasty or Yīn dài until “Yīn” is read; prompt on Èrlǐtóu or Èrlǐgǎng by asking “what dynasty?”] (Max Loehr presented a sequence of bronze styles. Dájǐ was the consort of Zhòu of Shāng.)
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acf-regs25-1-17_7
For 10 points, name this Chinese dynasty preceded by the Xià and succeeded by the Zhōu.
[ "Yīn", "Shāng cháo", "Yīn dài until Yīn is read", "Shāng dynasty", "Yīn dynasty", "Shāng" ]
acf-regs25-1-17
7
A five-stage archaeological sequence of styles composed primarily of objects from this polity was proposed by Max Loehr. A royal consort from this polity, whose head was later hung from a white flag to indicate that she had led to its downfall, supposedly prompted her husband to create a torture method involving walking over a greased metal beam heated with coal. After losing a battle, this polity’s final ruler committed suicide at the Deer Terrace Pavilion, which was legendarily home to excesses of meat and wine. The tomb of Fù Hǎo, a queen and general from this polity, was excavated in Ānyáng. The Hòumǔwù dǐng bronze vessel was found at this dynasty’s last capital, Yīn. This dynasty fell after the Battle of Mùyě in 1046 BCE. For 10 points, name this Chinese dynasty preceded by the Xià and succeeded by the Zhōu.
Shāng dynasty [or Shāng cháo; accept Yīn dynasty or Yīn dài until “Yīn” is read; prompt on Èrlǐtóu or Èrlǐgǎng by asking “what dynasty?”] (Max Loehr presented a sequence of bronze styles. Dájǐ was the consort of Zhòu of Shāng.)
[ [ 0, 120 ], [ 121, 365 ], [ 366, 519 ], [ 520, 602 ], [ 603, 680 ], [ 681, 736 ], [ 737, 824 ] ]
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acf-regs25-1-18_1
Changes in this quantity are associated with changes in radar reflectivity in a form of interferometry whose control variables are “persistent scatterers.”
[ "altitude", "height", "elevation" ]
acf-regs25-1-18
1
Changes in this quantity are associated with changes in radar reflectivity in a form of interferometry whose control variables are “persistent scatterers.” Measurements of this quantity standardized to the GTOPO30 system have since been improved by the ASTER instrument. Techniques like IfSAR and InSAR are used to obtain image representations of this quantity called DEMs. Temperature gradients relative to this quantity in dry and moist air parcels define the adiabatic lapse rate. High values of latitude and this quantity form the “tree line” of a habitat. Constant values of this quantity are represented by contour lines on topographic maps. For 10 points, what quantity is defined as zero at sea level?
elevation [accept altitude or height]
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acf-regs25-1-18_2
Measurements of this quantity standardized to the GTOPO30 system have since been improved by the ASTER instrument.
[ "altitude", "height", "elevation" ]
acf-regs25-1-18
2
Changes in this quantity are associated with changes in radar reflectivity in a form of interferometry whose control variables are “persistent scatterers.” Measurements of this quantity standardized to the GTOPO30 system have since been improved by the ASTER instrument. Techniques like IfSAR and InSAR are used to obtain image representations of this quantity called DEMs. Temperature gradients relative to this quantity in dry and moist air parcels define the adiabatic lapse rate. High values of latitude and this quantity form the “tree line” of a habitat. Constant values of this quantity are represented by contour lines on topographic maps. For 10 points, what quantity is defined as zero at sea level?
elevation [accept altitude or height]
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acf-regs25-1-18_3
Techniques like IfSAR and InSAR are used to obtain image representations of this quantity called DEMs.
[ "altitude", "height", "elevation" ]
acf-regs25-1-18
3
Changes in this quantity are associated with changes in radar reflectivity in a form of interferometry whose control variables are “persistent scatterers.” Measurements of this quantity standardized to the GTOPO30 system have since been improved by the ASTER instrument. Techniques like IfSAR and InSAR are used to obtain image representations of this quantity called DEMs. Temperature gradients relative to this quantity in dry and moist air parcels define the adiabatic lapse rate. High values of latitude and this quantity form the “tree line” of a habitat. Constant values of this quantity are represented by contour lines on topographic maps. For 10 points, what quantity is defined as zero at sea level?
elevation [accept altitude or height]
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acf-regs25-1-18_4
Temperature gradients relative to this quantity in dry and moist air parcels define the adiabatic lapse rate.
[ "altitude", "height", "elevation" ]
acf-regs25-1-18
4
Changes in this quantity are associated with changes in radar reflectivity in a form of interferometry whose control variables are “persistent scatterers.” Measurements of this quantity standardized to the GTOPO30 system have since been improved by the ASTER instrument. Techniques like IfSAR and InSAR are used to obtain image representations of this quantity called DEMs. Temperature gradients relative to this quantity in dry and moist air parcels define the adiabatic lapse rate. High values of latitude and this quantity form the “tree line” of a habitat. Constant values of this quantity are represented by contour lines on topographic maps. For 10 points, what quantity is defined as zero at sea level?
elevation [accept altitude or height]
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acf-regs25-1-18_5
High values of latitude and this quantity form the “tree line” of a habitat.
[ "altitude", "height", "elevation" ]
acf-regs25-1-18
5
Changes in this quantity are associated with changes in radar reflectivity in a form of interferometry whose control variables are “persistent scatterers.” Measurements of this quantity standardized to the GTOPO30 system have since been improved by the ASTER instrument. Techniques like IfSAR and InSAR are used to obtain image representations of this quantity called DEMs. Temperature gradients relative to this quantity in dry and moist air parcels define the adiabatic lapse rate. High values of latitude and this quantity form the “tree line” of a habitat. Constant values of this quantity are represented by contour lines on topographic maps. For 10 points, what quantity is defined as zero at sea level?
elevation [accept altitude or height]
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acf-regs25-1-18_6
Constant values of this quantity are represented by contour lines on topographic maps.
[ "altitude", "height", "elevation" ]
acf-regs25-1-18
6
Changes in this quantity are associated with changes in radar reflectivity in a form of interferometry whose control variables are “persistent scatterers.” Measurements of this quantity standardized to the GTOPO30 system have since been improved by the ASTER instrument. Techniques like IfSAR and InSAR are used to obtain image representations of this quantity called DEMs. Temperature gradients relative to this quantity in dry and moist air parcels define the adiabatic lapse rate. High values of latitude and this quantity form the “tree line” of a habitat. Constant values of this quantity are represented by contour lines on topographic maps. For 10 points, what quantity is defined as zero at sea level?
elevation [accept altitude or height]
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acf-regs25-1-18_7
For 10 points, what quantity is defined as zero at sea level?
[ "altitude", "height", "elevation" ]
acf-regs25-1-18
7
Changes in this quantity are associated with changes in radar reflectivity in a form of interferometry whose control variables are “persistent scatterers.” Measurements of this quantity standardized to the GTOPO30 system have since been improved by the ASTER instrument. Techniques like IfSAR and InSAR are used to obtain image representations of this quantity called DEMs. Temperature gradients relative to this quantity in dry and moist air parcels define the adiabatic lapse rate. High values of latitude and this quantity form the “tree line” of a habitat. Constant values of this quantity are represented by contour lines on topographic maps. For 10 points, what quantity is defined as zero at sea level?
elevation [accept altitude or height]
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acf-regs25-1-19_1
A variant of this tradition that places its central figure as the highest of the “fourteen gods” was founded in the same region as an ancient site associated with this tradition, Unakoti.
[ "word forms like Shaivites", "Shaivism", "Shaivite", "Pāshupata Shaivism", "answers describing worship of Shiva", "Shiv" ]
acf-regs25-1-19
1
A variant of this tradition that places its central figure as the highest of the “fourteen gods” was founded in the same region as an ancient site associated with this tradition, Unakoti. This tradition historically developed from two paths, the “outer path” and the “path of mantras.” Lakulisha founded a variant of this tradition whose adherents engage in odd behavior to attract public disapproval, called the Pāshupata school. It’s not bhakti, but the Tirumurai hymns were composed by 63 saints of this tradition known as the Nayanars. Adherents of this tradition wear the tripundra, which consists of three horizontal lines of ash on the forehead. This tradition’s central figure is represented by a pillar-like symbol called a lingam. For 10 points, name this tradition that worships the “Destroyer” of the Hindu Trimurti.
Shaivism [or word forms like Shaivites; accept answers describing worship of Shiva; accept Pāshupata Shaivism; prompt on Hinduism until “Hindu” is read] (The “fourteen gods” refer to Chaturdasa Devata in Tripura. The paths in the second line refer to atimarga and mantramarga.)
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acf-regs25-1-19_2
This tradition historically developed from two paths, the “outer path” and the “path of mantras.”
[ "word forms like Shaivites", "Shaivism", "Shaivite", "Pāshupata Shaivism", "answers describing worship of Shiva", "Shiv" ]
acf-regs25-1-19
2
A variant of this tradition that places its central figure as the highest of the “fourteen gods” was founded in the same region as an ancient site associated with this tradition, Unakoti. This tradition historically developed from two paths, the “outer path” and the “path of mantras.” Lakulisha founded a variant of this tradition whose adherents engage in odd behavior to attract public disapproval, called the Pāshupata school. It’s not bhakti, but the Tirumurai hymns were composed by 63 saints of this tradition known as the Nayanars. Adherents of this tradition wear the tripundra, which consists of three horizontal lines of ash on the forehead. This tradition’s central figure is represented by a pillar-like symbol called a lingam. For 10 points, name this tradition that worships the “Destroyer” of the Hindu Trimurti.
Shaivism [or word forms like Shaivites; accept answers describing worship of Shiva; accept Pāshupata Shaivism; prompt on Hinduism until “Hindu” is read] (The “fourteen gods” refer to Chaturdasa Devata in Tripura. The paths in the second line refer to atimarga and mantramarga.)
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acf-regs25-1-19_3
Lakulisha founded a variant of this tradition whose adherents engage in odd behavior to attract public disapproval, called the Pāshupata school.
[ "word forms like Shaivites", "Shaivism", "Shaivite", "Pāshupata Shaivism", "answers describing worship of Shiva", "Shiv" ]
acf-regs25-1-19
3
A variant of this tradition that places its central figure as the highest of the “fourteen gods” was founded in the same region as an ancient site associated with this tradition, Unakoti. This tradition historically developed from two paths, the “outer path” and the “path of mantras.” Lakulisha founded a variant of this tradition whose adherents engage in odd behavior to attract public disapproval, called the Pāshupata school. It’s not bhakti, but the Tirumurai hymns were composed by 63 saints of this tradition known as the Nayanars. Adherents of this tradition wear the tripundra, which consists of three horizontal lines of ash on the forehead. This tradition’s central figure is represented by a pillar-like symbol called a lingam. For 10 points, name this tradition that worships the “Destroyer” of the Hindu Trimurti.
Shaivism [or word forms like Shaivites; accept answers describing worship of Shiva; accept Pāshupata Shaivism; prompt on Hinduism until “Hindu” is read] (The “fourteen gods” refer to Chaturdasa Devata in Tripura. The paths in the second line refer to atimarga and mantramarga.)
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acf-regs25-1-19_4
It’s not bhakti, but the Tirumurai hymns were composed by 63 saints of this tradition known as the Nayanars.
[ "word forms like Shaivites", "Shaivism", "Shaivite", "Pāshupata Shaivism", "answers describing worship of Shiva", "Shiv" ]
acf-regs25-1-19
4
A variant of this tradition that places its central figure as the highest of the “fourteen gods” was founded in the same region as an ancient site associated with this tradition, Unakoti. This tradition historically developed from two paths, the “outer path” and the “path of mantras.” Lakulisha founded a variant of this tradition whose adherents engage in odd behavior to attract public disapproval, called the Pāshupata school. It’s not bhakti, but the Tirumurai hymns were composed by 63 saints of this tradition known as the Nayanars. Adherents of this tradition wear the tripundra, which consists of three horizontal lines of ash on the forehead. This tradition’s central figure is represented by a pillar-like symbol called a lingam. For 10 points, name this tradition that worships the “Destroyer” of the Hindu Trimurti.
Shaivism [or word forms like Shaivites; accept answers describing worship of Shiva; accept Pāshupata Shaivism; prompt on Hinduism until “Hindu” is read] (The “fourteen gods” refer to Chaturdasa Devata in Tripura. The paths in the second line refer to atimarga and mantramarga.)
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acf-regs25-1-19_5
Adherents of this tradition wear the tripundra, which consists of three horizontal lines of ash on the forehead.
[ "word forms like Shaivites", "Shaivism", "Shaivite", "Pāshupata Shaivism", "answers describing worship of Shiva", "Shiv" ]
acf-regs25-1-19
5
A variant of this tradition that places its central figure as the highest of the “fourteen gods” was founded in the same region as an ancient site associated with this tradition, Unakoti. This tradition historically developed from two paths, the “outer path” and the “path of mantras.” Lakulisha founded a variant of this tradition whose adherents engage in odd behavior to attract public disapproval, called the Pāshupata school. It’s not bhakti, but the Tirumurai hymns were composed by 63 saints of this tradition known as the Nayanars. Adherents of this tradition wear the tripundra, which consists of three horizontal lines of ash on the forehead. This tradition’s central figure is represented by a pillar-like symbol called a lingam. For 10 points, name this tradition that worships the “Destroyer” of the Hindu Trimurti.
Shaivism [or word forms like Shaivites; accept answers describing worship of Shiva; accept Pāshupata Shaivism; prompt on Hinduism until “Hindu” is read] (The “fourteen gods” refer to Chaturdasa Devata in Tripura. The paths in the second line refer to atimarga and mantramarga.)
[ [ 0, 187 ], [ 188, 285 ], [ 286, 430 ], [ 431, 539 ], [ 540, 653 ], [ 654, 741 ], [ 742, 829 ] ]
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acf-regs25-1-19_6
This tradition’s central figure is represented by a pillar-like symbol called a lingam.
[ "word forms like Shaivites", "Shaivism", "Shaivite", "Pāshupata Shaivism", "answers describing worship of Shiva", "Shiv" ]
acf-regs25-1-19
6
A variant of this tradition that places its central figure as the highest of the “fourteen gods” was founded in the same region as an ancient site associated with this tradition, Unakoti. This tradition historically developed from two paths, the “outer path” and the “path of mantras.” Lakulisha founded a variant of this tradition whose adherents engage in odd behavior to attract public disapproval, called the Pāshupata school. It’s not bhakti, but the Tirumurai hymns were composed by 63 saints of this tradition known as the Nayanars. Adherents of this tradition wear the tripundra, which consists of three horizontal lines of ash on the forehead. This tradition’s central figure is represented by a pillar-like symbol called a lingam. For 10 points, name this tradition that worships the “Destroyer” of the Hindu Trimurti.
Shaivism [or word forms like Shaivites; accept answers describing worship of Shiva; accept Pāshupata Shaivism; prompt on Hinduism until “Hindu” is read] (The “fourteen gods” refer to Chaturdasa Devata in Tripura. The paths in the second line refer to atimarga and mantramarga.)
[ [ 0, 187 ], [ 188, 285 ], [ 286, 430 ], [ 431, 539 ], [ 540, 653 ], [ 654, 741 ], [ 742, 829 ] ]
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acf-regs25-1-19_7
For 10 points, name this tradition that worships the “Destroyer” of the Hindu Trimurti.
[ "word forms like Shaivites", "Shaivism", "Shaivite", "Pāshupata Shaivism", "answers describing worship of Shiva", "Shiv" ]
acf-regs25-1-19
7
A variant of this tradition that places its central figure as the highest of the “fourteen gods” was founded in the same region as an ancient site associated with this tradition, Unakoti. This tradition historically developed from two paths, the “outer path” and the “path of mantras.” Lakulisha founded a variant of this tradition whose adherents engage in odd behavior to attract public disapproval, called the Pāshupata school. It’s not bhakti, but the Tirumurai hymns were composed by 63 saints of this tradition known as the Nayanars. Adherents of this tradition wear the tripundra, which consists of three horizontal lines of ash on the forehead. This tradition’s central figure is represented by a pillar-like symbol called a lingam. For 10 points, name this tradition that worships the “Destroyer” of the Hindu Trimurti.
Shaivism [or word forms like Shaivites; accept answers describing worship of Shiva; accept Pāshupata Shaivism; prompt on Hinduism until “Hindu” is read] (The “fourteen gods” refer to Chaturdasa Devata in Tripura. The paths in the second line refer to atimarga and mantramarga.)
[ [ 0, 187 ], [ 188, 285 ], [ 286, 430 ], [ 431, 539 ], [ 540, 653 ], [ 654, 741 ], [ 742, 829 ] ]
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acf-regs25-1-20_1
In a Thomas Kinsella poem titled for one of these objects, the speaker feels a chattering “at my ear” upon visiting his grandmother’s deathbed.
[ "tears", "teardrops", "Tears, Idle Tears", "tear" ]
acf-regs25-1-20
1
In a Thomas Kinsella poem titled for one of these objects, the speaker feels a chattering “at my ear” upon visiting his grandmother’s deathbed. The narrator notes parenthetically that he heard some of these objects in the last line of Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s “The Blessed Damozel.” These objects title a poem that mentions periods “Dear as remember’d kisses after death.” In the last stanza of Dylan Thomas’s “Do not go gentle into that good night,” the speaker asks his father to “curse, bless, me now” with “fierce” objects of this type. In a poem excerpted from the longer poem The Princess, the speaker says “I know not what [these objects] mean” before repeatedly invoking “the days that are no more.” For 10 points, name these objects that are “idle” in the title of a mournful Tennyson poem.
tears [or teardrops; accept “Tears, Idle Tears”]
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acf-regs25-1-20_2
The narrator notes parenthetically that he heard some of these objects in the last line of Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s “The Blessed Damozel.”
[ "tears", "teardrops", "Tears, Idle Tears", "tear" ]
acf-regs25-1-20
2
In a Thomas Kinsella poem titled for one of these objects, the speaker feels a chattering “at my ear” upon visiting his grandmother’s deathbed. The narrator notes parenthetically that he heard some of these objects in the last line of Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s “The Blessed Damozel.” These objects title a poem that mentions periods “Dear as remember’d kisses after death.” In the last stanza of Dylan Thomas’s “Do not go gentle into that good night,” the speaker asks his father to “curse, bless, me now” with “fierce” objects of this type. In a poem excerpted from the longer poem The Princess, the speaker says “I know not what [these objects] mean” before repeatedly invoking “the days that are no more.” For 10 points, name these objects that are “idle” in the title of a mournful Tennyson poem.
tears [or teardrops; accept “Tears, Idle Tears”]
[ [ 0, 143 ], [ 144, 282 ], [ 283, 372 ], [ 373, 540 ], [ 541, 707 ], [ 708, 799 ] ]
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acf-regs25-1-20_3
These objects title a poem that mentions periods “Dear as remember’d kisses after death.”
[ "tears", "teardrops", "Tears, Idle Tears", "tear" ]
acf-regs25-1-20
3
In a Thomas Kinsella poem titled for one of these objects, the speaker feels a chattering “at my ear” upon visiting his grandmother’s deathbed. The narrator notes parenthetically that he heard some of these objects in the last line of Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s “The Blessed Damozel.” These objects title a poem that mentions periods “Dear as remember’d kisses after death.” In the last stanza of Dylan Thomas’s “Do not go gentle into that good night,” the speaker asks his father to “curse, bless, me now” with “fierce” objects of this type. In a poem excerpted from the longer poem The Princess, the speaker says “I know not what [these objects] mean” before repeatedly invoking “the days that are no more.” For 10 points, name these objects that are “idle” in the title of a mournful Tennyson poem.
tears [or teardrops; accept “Tears, Idle Tears”]
[ [ 0, 143 ], [ 144, 282 ], [ 283, 372 ], [ 373, 540 ], [ 541, 707 ], [ 708, 799 ] ]
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acf-regs25-1-20_4
In the last stanza of Dylan Thomas’s “Do not go gentle into that good night,” the speaker asks his father to “curse, bless, me now” with “fierce” objects of this type.
[ "tears", "teardrops", "Tears, Idle Tears", "tear" ]
acf-regs25-1-20
4
In a Thomas Kinsella poem titled for one of these objects, the speaker feels a chattering “at my ear” upon visiting his grandmother’s deathbed. The narrator notes parenthetically that he heard some of these objects in the last line of Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s “The Blessed Damozel.” These objects title a poem that mentions periods “Dear as remember’d kisses after death.” In the last stanza of Dylan Thomas’s “Do not go gentle into that good night,” the speaker asks his father to “curse, bless, me now” with “fierce” objects of this type. In a poem excerpted from the longer poem The Princess, the speaker says “I know not what [these objects] mean” before repeatedly invoking “the days that are no more.” For 10 points, name these objects that are “idle” in the title of a mournful Tennyson poem.
tears [or teardrops; accept “Tears, Idle Tears”]
[ [ 0, 143 ], [ 144, 282 ], [ 283, 372 ], [ 373, 540 ], [ 541, 707 ], [ 708, 799 ] ]
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acf-regs25-1-20_5
In a poem excerpted from the longer poem The Princess, the speaker says “I know not what [these objects] mean” before repeatedly invoking “the days that are no more.”
[ "tears", "teardrops", "Tears, Idle Tears", "tear" ]
acf-regs25-1-20
5
In a Thomas Kinsella poem titled for one of these objects, the speaker feels a chattering “at my ear” upon visiting his grandmother’s deathbed. The narrator notes parenthetically that he heard some of these objects in the last line of Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s “The Blessed Damozel.” These objects title a poem that mentions periods “Dear as remember’d kisses after death.” In the last stanza of Dylan Thomas’s “Do not go gentle into that good night,” the speaker asks his father to “curse, bless, me now” with “fierce” objects of this type. In a poem excerpted from the longer poem The Princess, the speaker says “I know not what [these objects] mean” before repeatedly invoking “the days that are no more.” For 10 points, name these objects that are “idle” in the title of a mournful Tennyson poem.
tears [or teardrops; accept “Tears, Idle Tears”]
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acf-regs25-1-20_6
For 10 points, name these objects that are “idle” in the title of a mournful Tennyson poem.
[ "tears", "teardrops", "Tears, Idle Tears", "tear" ]
acf-regs25-1-20
6
In a Thomas Kinsella poem titled for one of these objects, the speaker feels a chattering “at my ear” upon visiting his grandmother’s deathbed. The narrator notes parenthetically that he heard some of these objects in the last line of Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s “The Blessed Damozel.” These objects title a poem that mentions periods “Dear as remember’d kisses after death.” In the last stanza of Dylan Thomas’s “Do not go gentle into that good night,” the speaker asks his father to “curse, bless, me now” with “fierce” objects of this type. In a poem excerpted from the longer poem The Princess, the speaker says “I know not what [these objects] mean” before repeatedly invoking “the days that are no more.” For 10 points, name these objects that are “idle” in the title of a mournful Tennyson poem.
tears [or teardrops; accept “Tears, Idle Tears”]
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acf-regs25-2-1_1
During this war, the Spanish diplomat Diego de Gardoqui lent his home to Catholic dignitaries such as Thomas Fitzsimmons.
[ "American War of Independence", "American", "American Revolution", "Independence", "American Revolutionary War", "American Independence", "American Revolutionary" ]
acf-regs25-2-1
1
During this war, the Spanish diplomat Diego de Gardoqui lent his home to Catholic dignitaries such as Thomas Fitzsimmons. José Solano y Bote commanded a squadron during this war after the Spanish capture of Fort Bute. To provide arms to a side in this conflict, Luis de Unzaga created Roderigue Hortalez and Company with Pierre Beaumarchais, who conducted business with Silas Deane. Bernardo de Gálvez led the siege of Pensacola in this war’s Gulf Coast campaign. Spain provided gold to the victors of a battle in this conflict in which the Comte de Grasse provided naval assistance. During this war, Charles III sent livestock to a commander at Mount Vernon. For 10 points, name this war in which Spain provided funding during the Battle of Yorktown.
American Revolution [or American Revolutionary War; or American War of Independence]
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acf-regs25-2-1_2
José Solano y Bote commanded a squadron during this war after the Spanish capture of Fort Bute.
[ "American War of Independence", "American", "American Revolution", "Independence", "American Revolutionary War", "American Independence", "American Revolutionary" ]
acf-regs25-2-1
2
During this war, the Spanish diplomat Diego de Gardoqui lent his home to Catholic dignitaries such as Thomas Fitzsimmons. José Solano y Bote commanded a squadron during this war after the Spanish capture of Fort Bute. To provide arms to a side in this conflict, Luis de Unzaga created Roderigue Hortalez and Company with Pierre Beaumarchais, who conducted business with Silas Deane. Bernardo de Gálvez led the siege of Pensacola in this war’s Gulf Coast campaign. Spain provided gold to the victors of a battle in this conflict in which the Comte de Grasse provided naval assistance. During this war, Charles III sent livestock to a commander at Mount Vernon. For 10 points, name this war in which Spain provided funding during the Battle of Yorktown.
American Revolution [or American Revolutionary War; or American War of Independence]
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acf-regs25-2-1_3
To provide arms to a side in this conflict, Luis de Unzaga created Roderigue Hortalez and Company with Pierre Beaumarchais, who conducted business with Silas Deane.
[ "American War of Independence", "American", "American Revolution", "Independence", "American Revolutionary War", "American Independence", "American Revolutionary" ]
acf-regs25-2-1
3
During this war, the Spanish diplomat Diego de Gardoqui lent his home to Catholic dignitaries such as Thomas Fitzsimmons. José Solano y Bote commanded a squadron during this war after the Spanish capture of Fort Bute. To provide arms to a side in this conflict, Luis de Unzaga created Roderigue Hortalez and Company with Pierre Beaumarchais, who conducted business with Silas Deane. Bernardo de Gálvez led the siege of Pensacola in this war’s Gulf Coast campaign. Spain provided gold to the victors of a battle in this conflict in which the Comte de Grasse provided naval assistance. During this war, Charles III sent livestock to a commander at Mount Vernon. For 10 points, name this war in which Spain provided funding during the Battle of Yorktown.
American Revolution [or American Revolutionary War; or American War of Independence]
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acf-regs25-2-1_4
Bernardo de Gálvez led the siege of Pensacola in this war’s Gulf Coast campaign.
[ "American War of Independence", "American", "American Revolution", "Independence", "American Revolutionary War", "American Independence", "American Revolutionary" ]
acf-regs25-2-1
4
During this war, the Spanish diplomat Diego de Gardoqui lent his home to Catholic dignitaries such as Thomas Fitzsimmons. José Solano y Bote commanded a squadron during this war after the Spanish capture of Fort Bute. To provide arms to a side in this conflict, Luis de Unzaga created Roderigue Hortalez and Company with Pierre Beaumarchais, who conducted business with Silas Deane. Bernardo de Gálvez led the siege of Pensacola in this war’s Gulf Coast campaign. Spain provided gold to the victors of a battle in this conflict in which the Comte de Grasse provided naval assistance. During this war, Charles III sent livestock to a commander at Mount Vernon. For 10 points, name this war in which Spain provided funding during the Battle of Yorktown.
American Revolution [or American Revolutionary War; or American War of Independence]
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acf-regs25-2-1_5
Spain provided gold to the victors of a battle in this conflict in which the Comte de Grasse provided naval assistance.
[ "American War of Independence", "American", "American Revolution", "Independence", "American Revolutionary War", "American Independence", "American Revolutionary" ]
acf-regs25-2-1
5
During this war, the Spanish diplomat Diego de Gardoqui lent his home to Catholic dignitaries such as Thomas Fitzsimmons. José Solano y Bote commanded a squadron during this war after the Spanish capture of Fort Bute. To provide arms to a side in this conflict, Luis de Unzaga created Roderigue Hortalez and Company with Pierre Beaumarchais, who conducted business with Silas Deane. Bernardo de Gálvez led the siege of Pensacola in this war’s Gulf Coast campaign. Spain provided gold to the victors of a battle in this conflict in which the Comte de Grasse provided naval assistance. During this war, Charles III sent livestock to a commander at Mount Vernon. For 10 points, name this war in which Spain provided funding during the Battle of Yorktown.
American Revolution [or American Revolutionary War; or American War of Independence]
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acf-regs25-2-1_6
During this war, Charles III sent livestock to a commander at Mount Vernon.
[ "American War of Independence", "American", "American Revolution", "Independence", "American Revolutionary War", "American Independence", "American Revolutionary" ]
acf-regs25-2-1
6
During this war, the Spanish diplomat Diego de Gardoqui lent his home to Catholic dignitaries such as Thomas Fitzsimmons. José Solano y Bote commanded a squadron during this war after the Spanish capture of Fort Bute. To provide arms to a side in this conflict, Luis de Unzaga created Roderigue Hortalez and Company with Pierre Beaumarchais, who conducted business with Silas Deane. Bernardo de Gálvez led the siege of Pensacola in this war’s Gulf Coast campaign. Spain provided gold to the victors of a battle in this conflict in which the Comte de Grasse provided naval assistance. During this war, Charles III sent livestock to a commander at Mount Vernon. For 10 points, name this war in which Spain provided funding during the Battle of Yorktown.
American Revolution [or American Revolutionary War; or American War of Independence]
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acf-regs25-2-1_7
For 10 points, name this war in which Spain provided funding during the Battle of Yorktown.
[ "American War of Independence", "American", "American Revolution", "Independence", "American Revolutionary War", "American Independence", "American Revolutionary" ]
acf-regs25-2-1
7
During this war, the Spanish diplomat Diego de Gardoqui lent his home to Catholic dignitaries such as Thomas Fitzsimmons. José Solano y Bote commanded a squadron during this war after the Spanish capture of Fort Bute. To provide arms to a side in this conflict, Luis de Unzaga created Roderigue Hortalez and Company with Pierre Beaumarchais, who conducted business with Silas Deane. Bernardo de Gálvez led the siege of Pensacola in this war’s Gulf Coast campaign. Spain provided gold to the victors of a battle in this conflict in which the Comte de Grasse provided naval assistance. During this war, Charles III sent livestock to a commander at Mount Vernon. For 10 points, name this war in which Spain provided funding during the Battle of Yorktown.
American Revolution [or American Revolutionary War; or American War of Independence]
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acf-regs25-2-2_1
The speaker of a poem in this collection bemoans the “happy highways where I went / And cannot come again” after invoking a “land of lost content”.
[ "A Shropshire Lad", "Shropshire Lad" ]
acf-regs25-2-2
1
The speaker of a poem in this collection bemoans the “happy highways where I went / And cannot come again” after invoking a “land of lost content”. In another poem in this collection, a character commands “noisy bells” to “be dumb” after his lover dies as snow falls on Bredon Hill. A tree in this collection “stands about the woodland ride / Wearing white for Eastertide.” A speaker in this collection ignores the advice of a “wise man” who says “Give pearls away and rubies / But keep your fancy free.” The nostalgic poems “1887” and “Loveliest of trees, the cherry now” open this 1919 collection, which drew on its author’s childhood in a West Midlands county. For 10 points, “When I Was One-and-Twenty” appears in what debut collection by A. E. Housman?
A Shropshire Lad (The first poem is “Into my heart an air that kills.”)
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acf-regs25-2-2_2
In another poem in this collection, a character commands “noisy bells” to “be dumb” after his lover dies as snow falls on Bredon Hill.
[ "A Shropshire Lad", "Shropshire Lad" ]
acf-regs25-2-2
2
The speaker of a poem in this collection bemoans the “happy highways where I went / And cannot come again” after invoking a “land of lost content”. In another poem in this collection, a character commands “noisy bells” to “be dumb” after his lover dies as snow falls on Bredon Hill. A tree in this collection “stands about the woodland ride / Wearing white for Eastertide.” A speaker in this collection ignores the advice of a “wise man” who says “Give pearls away and rubies / But keep your fancy free.” The nostalgic poems “1887” and “Loveliest of trees, the cherry now” open this 1919 collection, which drew on its author’s childhood in a West Midlands county. For 10 points, “When I Was One-and-Twenty” appears in what debut collection by A. E. Housman?
A Shropshire Lad (The first poem is “Into my heart an air that kills.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 282 ], [ 283, 373 ], [ 374, 504 ], [ 505, 663 ], [ 664, 757 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 14, 10 ], [ 20, 10 ], [ 26, 10 ], [ 26, 10 ], [ 37, 10 ], [ 50, 10 ], [ 50, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 67, 10 ], [ 71, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, -5 ], [ 90, -5 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-regs25-2-2_3
A tree in this collection “stands about the woodland ride / Wearing white for Eastertide.”
[ "A Shropshire Lad", "Shropshire Lad" ]
acf-regs25-2-2
3
The speaker of a poem in this collection bemoans the “happy highways where I went / And cannot come again” after invoking a “land of lost content”. In another poem in this collection, a character commands “noisy bells” to “be dumb” after his lover dies as snow falls on Bredon Hill. A tree in this collection “stands about the woodland ride / Wearing white for Eastertide.” A speaker in this collection ignores the advice of a “wise man” who says “Give pearls away and rubies / But keep your fancy free.” The nostalgic poems “1887” and “Loveliest of trees, the cherry now” open this 1919 collection, which drew on its author’s childhood in a West Midlands county. For 10 points, “When I Was One-and-Twenty” appears in what debut collection by A. E. Housman?
A Shropshire Lad (The first poem is “Into my heart an air that kills.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 282 ], [ 283, 373 ], [ 374, 504 ], [ 505, 663 ], [ 664, 757 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 14, 10 ], [ 20, 10 ], [ 26, 10 ], [ 26, 10 ], [ 37, 10 ], [ 50, 10 ], [ 50, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 67, 10 ], [ 71, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, -5 ], [ 90, -5 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-regs25-2-2_4
A speaker in this collection ignores the advice of a “wise man” who says “Give pearls away and rubies / But keep your fancy free.”
[ "A Shropshire Lad", "Shropshire Lad" ]
acf-regs25-2-2
4
The speaker of a poem in this collection bemoans the “happy highways where I went / And cannot come again” after invoking a “land of lost content”. In another poem in this collection, a character commands “noisy bells” to “be dumb” after his lover dies as snow falls on Bredon Hill. A tree in this collection “stands about the woodland ride / Wearing white for Eastertide.” A speaker in this collection ignores the advice of a “wise man” who says “Give pearls away and rubies / But keep your fancy free.” The nostalgic poems “1887” and “Loveliest of trees, the cherry now” open this 1919 collection, which drew on its author’s childhood in a West Midlands county. For 10 points, “When I Was One-and-Twenty” appears in what debut collection by A. E. Housman?
A Shropshire Lad (The first poem is “Into my heart an air that kills.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 282 ], [ 283, 373 ], [ 374, 504 ], [ 505, 663 ], [ 664, 757 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 14, 10 ], [ 20, 10 ], [ 26, 10 ], [ 26, 10 ], [ 37, 10 ], [ 50, 10 ], [ 50, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 67, 10 ], [ 71, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, -5 ], [ 90, -5 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-regs25-2-2_5
The nostalgic poems “1887” and “Loveliest of trees, the cherry now” open this 1919 collection, which drew on its author’s childhood in a West Midlands county.
[ "A Shropshire Lad", "Shropshire Lad" ]
acf-regs25-2-2
5
The speaker of a poem in this collection bemoans the “happy highways where I went / And cannot come again” after invoking a “land of lost content”. In another poem in this collection, a character commands “noisy bells” to “be dumb” after his lover dies as snow falls on Bredon Hill. A tree in this collection “stands about the woodland ride / Wearing white for Eastertide.” A speaker in this collection ignores the advice of a “wise man” who says “Give pearls away and rubies / But keep your fancy free.” The nostalgic poems “1887” and “Loveliest of trees, the cherry now” open this 1919 collection, which drew on its author’s childhood in a West Midlands county. For 10 points, “When I Was One-and-Twenty” appears in what debut collection by A. E. Housman?
A Shropshire Lad (The first poem is “Into my heart an air that kills.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 282 ], [ 283, 373 ], [ 374, 504 ], [ 505, 663 ], [ 664, 757 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 14, 10 ], [ 20, 10 ], [ 26, 10 ], [ 26, 10 ], [ 37, 10 ], [ 50, 10 ], [ 50, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 67, 10 ], [ 71, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, -5 ], [ 90, -5 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-regs25-2-2_6
For 10 points, “When I Was One-and-Twenty” appears in what debut collection by A. E. Housman?
[ "A Shropshire Lad", "Shropshire Lad" ]
acf-regs25-2-2
6
The speaker of a poem in this collection bemoans the “happy highways where I went / And cannot come again” after invoking a “land of lost content”. In another poem in this collection, a character commands “noisy bells” to “be dumb” after his lover dies as snow falls on Bredon Hill. A tree in this collection “stands about the woodland ride / Wearing white for Eastertide.” A speaker in this collection ignores the advice of a “wise man” who says “Give pearls away and rubies / But keep your fancy free.” The nostalgic poems “1887” and “Loveliest of trees, the cherry now” open this 1919 collection, which drew on its author’s childhood in a West Midlands county. For 10 points, “When I Was One-and-Twenty” appears in what debut collection by A. E. Housman?
A Shropshire Lad (The first poem is “Into my heart an air that kills.”)
[ [ 0, 147 ], [ 148, 282 ], [ 283, 373 ], [ 374, 504 ], [ 505, 663 ], [ 664, 757 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - British Literature", "category_main": "literature-british-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 14, 10 ], [ 20, 10 ], [ 26, 10 ], [ 26, 10 ], [ 37, 10 ], [ 50, 10 ], [ 50, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 67, 10 ], [ 71, 10 ], [ 77, 10 ], [ 82, 10 ], [ 84, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, -5 ], [ 90, -5 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 123, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 131, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 132, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ], [ 133, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "british-literature" ] }
acf-regs25-2-3_1
A virtuosic A minor sonata for this group of instruments was written for Queen Elisabeth of Belgium.
[ "equivalents", "violin duo", "TwoSet Violin", "violin AND violin", "two violins" ]
acf-regs25-2-3
1
A virtuosic A minor sonata for this group of instruments was written for Queen Elisabeth of Belgium. Students often perform from a set of 44 works for this group of instruments by Bartók. A concerto opens with this group of instruments in fugue playing a theme beginning with the sixteenth-note run “D E F G A, up to eighth-note D.” Piano accompanies this group of instruments in a Sarasate piece inspired by his birthplace of Navarre. Six B2TSM music videos were released in 2024 as a send-off for an Australian YouTube channel whose name references this group of instruments. Bach’s D minor concerto for this pair of instruments was performed in 1905 by Fritz Kreisler and Eugène Ysaÿe. For 10 points, what pair of instruments are joined by viola and cello in a string quartet?
two violins [accept violin duo or violin AND violin or equivalents; accept TwoSet Violin; prompt on violins by asking “how many?”; reject “violin”] (The first clue is about Ysaÿe’s Sonata for Two Violins.)
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 187 ], [ 188, 436 ], [ 437, 578 ], [ 579, 689 ], [ 690, 780 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 16, 10 ], [ 28, 10 ], [ 32, 10 ], [ 38, 10 ], [ 42, -5 ], [ 49, 10 ], [ 58, 10 ], [ 59, 10 ], [ 61, 10 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 78, -5 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 96, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, -5 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "classical-music" ] }
acf-regs25-2-3_2
Students often perform from a set of 44 works for this group of instruments by Bartók.
[ "equivalents", "violin duo", "TwoSet Violin", "violin AND violin", "two violins" ]
acf-regs25-2-3
2
A virtuosic A minor sonata for this group of instruments was written for Queen Elisabeth of Belgium. Students often perform from a set of 44 works for this group of instruments by Bartók. A concerto opens with this group of instruments in fugue playing a theme beginning with the sixteenth-note run “D E F G A, up to eighth-note D.” Piano accompanies this group of instruments in a Sarasate piece inspired by his birthplace of Navarre. Six B2TSM music videos were released in 2024 as a send-off for an Australian YouTube channel whose name references this group of instruments. Bach’s D minor concerto for this pair of instruments was performed in 1905 by Fritz Kreisler and Eugène Ysaÿe. For 10 points, what pair of instruments are joined by viola and cello in a string quartet?
two violins [accept violin duo or violin AND violin or equivalents; accept TwoSet Violin; prompt on violins by asking “how many?”; reject “violin”] (The first clue is about Ysaÿe’s Sonata for Two Violins.)
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 187 ], [ 188, 436 ], [ 437, 578 ], [ 579, 689 ], [ 690, 780 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 16, 10 ], [ 28, 10 ], [ 32, 10 ], [ 38, 10 ], [ 42, -5 ], [ 49, 10 ], [ 58, 10 ], [ 59, 10 ], [ 61, 10 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 78, -5 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 96, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, -5 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "classical-music" ] }
acf-regs25-2-3_3
A concerto opens with this group of instruments in fugue playing a theme beginning with the sixteenth-note run “D E F G A, up to eighth-note D.” Piano accompanies this group of instruments in a Sarasate piece inspired by his birthplace of Navarre.
[ "equivalents", "violin duo", "TwoSet Violin", "violin AND violin", "two violins" ]
acf-regs25-2-3
3
A virtuosic A minor sonata for this group of instruments was written for Queen Elisabeth of Belgium. Students often perform from a set of 44 works for this group of instruments by Bartók. A concerto opens with this group of instruments in fugue playing a theme beginning with the sixteenth-note run “D E F G A, up to eighth-note D.” Piano accompanies this group of instruments in a Sarasate piece inspired by his birthplace of Navarre. Six B2TSM music videos were released in 2024 as a send-off for an Australian YouTube channel whose name references this group of instruments. Bach’s D minor concerto for this pair of instruments was performed in 1905 by Fritz Kreisler and Eugène Ysaÿe. For 10 points, what pair of instruments are joined by viola and cello in a string quartet?
two violins [accept violin duo or violin AND violin or equivalents; accept TwoSet Violin; prompt on violins by asking “how many?”; reject “violin”] (The first clue is about Ysaÿe’s Sonata for Two Violins.)
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 187 ], [ 188, 436 ], [ 437, 578 ], [ 579, 689 ], [ 690, 780 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 16, 10 ], [ 28, 10 ], [ 32, 10 ], [ 38, 10 ], [ 42, -5 ], [ 49, 10 ], [ 58, 10 ], [ 59, 10 ], [ 61, 10 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 78, -5 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 96, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, -5 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "classical-music" ] }
acf-regs25-2-3_4
Six B2TSM music videos were released in 2024 as a send-off for an Australian YouTube channel whose name references this group of instruments.
[ "equivalents", "violin duo", "TwoSet Violin", "violin AND violin", "two violins" ]
acf-regs25-2-3
4
A virtuosic A minor sonata for this group of instruments was written for Queen Elisabeth of Belgium. Students often perform from a set of 44 works for this group of instruments by Bartók. A concerto opens with this group of instruments in fugue playing a theme beginning with the sixteenth-note run “D E F G A, up to eighth-note D.” Piano accompanies this group of instruments in a Sarasate piece inspired by his birthplace of Navarre. Six B2TSM music videos were released in 2024 as a send-off for an Australian YouTube channel whose name references this group of instruments. Bach’s D minor concerto for this pair of instruments was performed in 1905 by Fritz Kreisler and Eugène Ysaÿe. For 10 points, what pair of instruments are joined by viola and cello in a string quartet?
two violins [accept violin duo or violin AND violin or equivalents; accept TwoSet Violin; prompt on violins by asking “how many?”; reject “violin”] (The first clue is about Ysaÿe’s Sonata for Two Violins.)
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 187 ], [ 188, 436 ], [ 437, 578 ], [ 579, 689 ], [ 690, 780 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 16, 10 ], [ 28, 10 ], [ 32, 10 ], [ 38, 10 ], [ 42, -5 ], [ 49, 10 ], [ 58, 10 ], [ 59, 10 ], [ 61, 10 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 78, -5 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 96, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, -5 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "classical-music" ] }
acf-regs25-2-3_5
Bach’s D minor concerto for this pair of instruments was performed in 1905 by Fritz Kreisler and Eugène Ysaÿe.
[ "equivalents", "violin duo", "TwoSet Violin", "violin AND violin", "two violins" ]
acf-regs25-2-3
5
A virtuosic A minor sonata for this group of instruments was written for Queen Elisabeth of Belgium. Students often perform from a set of 44 works for this group of instruments by Bartók. A concerto opens with this group of instruments in fugue playing a theme beginning with the sixteenth-note run “D E F G A, up to eighth-note D.” Piano accompanies this group of instruments in a Sarasate piece inspired by his birthplace of Navarre. Six B2TSM music videos were released in 2024 as a send-off for an Australian YouTube channel whose name references this group of instruments. Bach’s D minor concerto for this pair of instruments was performed in 1905 by Fritz Kreisler and Eugène Ysaÿe. For 10 points, what pair of instruments are joined by viola and cello in a string quartet?
two violins [accept violin duo or violin AND violin or equivalents; accept TwoSet Violin; prompt on violins by asking “how many?”; reject “violin”] (The first clue is about Ysaÿe’s Sonata for Two Violins.)
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 187 ], [ 188, 436 ], [ 437, 578 ], [ 579, 689 ], [ 690, 780 ] ]
{ "category": "fine-arts", "category_full": "Fine Arts - Classical Music", "category_main": "fine-arts-classical-music", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 16, 10 ], [ 28, 10 ], [ 32, 10 ], [ 38, 10 ], [ 42, -5 ], [ 49, 10 ], [ 58, 10 ], [ 59, 10 ], [ 61, 10 ], [ 65, -5 ], [ 65, 10 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 69, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 78, -5 ], [ 81, -5 ], [ 83, -5 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 86, 10 ], [ 88, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 89, 10 ], [ 90, 10 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, -5 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 93, -5 ], [ 96, -5 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, -5 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 100, -5 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 128, -5 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 131, -5 ], [ 134, 0 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 134, 10 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 0 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ], [ 135, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "classical-music" ] }
acf-regs25-2-3_6
For 10 points, what pair of instruments are joined by viola and cello in a string quartet?
[ "equivalents", "violin duo", "TwoSet Violin", "violin AND violin", "two violins" ]
acf-regs25-2-3
6
A virtuosic A minor sonata for this group of instruments was written for Queen Elisabeth of Belgium. Students often perform from a set of 44 works for this group of instruments by Bartók. A concerto opens with this group of instruments in fugue playing a theme beginning with the sixteenth-note run “D E F G A, up to eighth-note D.” Piano accompanies this group of instruments in a Sarasate piece inspired by his birthplace of Navarre. Six B2TSM music videos were released in 2024 as a send-off for an Australian YouTube channel whose name references this group of instruments. Bach’s D minor concerto for this pair of instruments was performed in 1905 by Fritz Kreisler and Eugène Ysaÿe. For 10 points, what pair of instruments are joined by viola and cello in a string quartet?
two violins [accept violin duo or violin AND violin or equivalents; accept TwoSet Violin; prompt on violins by asking “how many?”; reject “violin”] (The first clue is about Ysaÿe’s Sonata for Two Violins.)
[ [ 0, 100 ], [ 101, 187 ], [ 188, 436 ], [ 437, 578 ], [ 579, 689 ], [ 690, 780 ] ]
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acf-regs25-2-4_1
Shot noise in the detector of this technique induces a standard deviation in its main output T proportional to the square root of T times T plus one.
[ "ultraviolet", "UV/Vis spectroscopy", "ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy", "UV spectroscopy", "ultraviolet spectroscopy", "spectrophotometry", "UV" ]
acf-regs25-2-4
1
Shot noise in the detector of this technique induces a standard deviation in its main output T proportional to the square root of T times T plus one. In this technique, using the octant rule to predict the Cotton effect can distinguish enantiomers through circular dichroism. Potassium dichromate is a calibration standard for this technique. Using this technique, the purity of a DNA or RNA mixture is characterized by the 260 to 280 ratio. This technique’s input value for a highly conjugated compound can be estimated by applying the Woodward–Fieser rules. This technique’s primary measurement equals the product of concentration, the path length of a cuvette, and the molar extinction coefficient, by the Beer–Lambert law. For 10 points, name this technique that tracks the absorbance of a sample with respect to low wavelengths.
ultraviolet spectroscopy [or ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy or UV spectroscopy or UV/Vis spectroscopy; accept spectrophotometry; prompt on spectroscopy]
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acf-regs25-2-4_2
In this technique, using the octant rule to predict the Cotton effect can distinguish enantiomers through circular dichroism.
[ "ultraviolet", "UV/Vis spectroscopy", "ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy", "UV spectroscopy", "ultraviolet spectroscopy", "spectrophotometry", "UV" ]
acf-regs25-2-4
2
Shot noise in the detector of this technique induces a standard deviation in its main output T proportional to the square root of T times T plus one. In this technique, using the octant rule to predict the Cotton effect can distinguish enantiomers through circular dichroism. Potassium dichromate is a calibration standard for this technique. Using this technique, the purity of a DNA or RNA mixture is characterized by the 260 to 280 ratio. This technique’s input value for a highly conjugated compound can be estimated by applying the Woodward–Fieser rules. This technique’s primary measurement equals the product of concentration, the path length of a cuvette, and the molar extinction coefficient, by the Beer–Lambert law. For 10 points, name this technique that tracks the absorbance of a sample with respect to low wavelengths.
ultraviolet spectroscopy [or ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy or UV spectroscopy or UV/Vis spectroscopy; accept spectrophotometry; prompt on spectroscopy]
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acf-regs25-2-4_3
Potassium dichromate is a calibration standard for this technique.
[ "ultraviolet", "UV/Vis spectroscopy", "ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy", "UV spectroscopy", "ultraviolet spectroscopy", "spectrophotometry", "UV" ]
acf-regs25-2-4
3
Shot noise in the detector of this technique induces a standard deviation in its main output T proportional to the square root of T times T plus one. In this technique, using the octant rule to predict the Cotton effect can distinguish enantiomers through circular dichroism. Potassium dichromate is a calibration standard for this technique. Using this technique, the purity of a DNA or RNA mixture is characterized by the 260 to 280 ratio. This technique’s input value for a highly conjugated compound can be estimated by applying the Woodward–Fieser rules. This technique’s primary measurement equals the product of concentration, the path length of a cuvette, and the molar extinction coefficient, by the Beer–Lambert law. For 10 points, name this technique that tracks the absorbance of a sample with respect to low wavelengths.
ultraviolet spectroscopy [or ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy or UV spectroscopy or UV/Vis spectroscopy; accept spectrophotometry; prompt on spectroscopy]
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acf-regs25-2-4_4
Using this technique, the purity of a DNA or RNA mixture is characterized by the 260 to 280 ratio.
[ "ultraviolet", "UV/Vis spectroscopy", "ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy", "UV spectroscopy", "ultraviolet spectroscopy", "spectrophotometry", "UV" ]
acf-regs25-2-4
4
Shot noise in the detector of this technique induces a standard deviation in its main output T proportional to the square root of T times T plus one. In this technique, using the octant rule to predict the Cotton effect can distinguish enantiomers through circular dichroism. Potassium dichromate is a calibration standard for this technique. Using this technique, the purity of a DNA or RNA mixture is characterized by the 260 to 280 ratio. This technique’s input value for a highly conjugated compound can be estimated by applying the Woodward–Fieser rules. This technique’s primary measurement equals the product of concentration, the path length of a cuvette, and the molar extinction coefficient, by the Beer–Lambert law. For 10 points, name this technique that tracks the absorbance of a sample with respect to low wavelengths.
ultraviolet spectroscopy [or ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy or UV spectroscopy or UV/Vis spectroscopy; accept spectrophotometry; prompt on spectroscopy]
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acf-regs25-2-4_5
This technique’s input value for a highly conjugated compound can be estimated by applying the Woodward–Fieser rules.
[ "ultraviolet", "UV/Vis spectroscopy", "ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy", "UV spectroscopy", "ultraviolet spectroscopy", "spectrophotometry", "UV" ]
acf-regs25-2-4
5
Shot noise in the detector of this technique induces a standard deviation in its main output T proportional to the square root of T times T plus one. In this technique, using the octant rule to predict the Cotton effect can distinguish enantiomers through circular dichroism. Potassium dichromate is a calibration standard for this technique. Using this technique, the purity of a DNA or RNA mixture is characterized by the 260 to 280 ratio. This technique’s input value for a highly conjugated compound can be estimated by applying the Woodward–Fieser rules. This technique’s primary measurement equals the product of concentration, the path length of a cuvette, and the molar extinction coefficient, by the Beer–Lambert law. For 10 points, name this technique that tracks the absorbance of a sample with respect to low wavelengths.
ultraviolet spectroscopy [or ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy or UV spectroscopy or UV/Vis spectroscopy; accept spectrophotometry; prompt on spectroscopy]
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acf-regs25-2-4_6
This technique’s primary measurement equals the product of concentration, the path length of a cuvette, and the molar extinction coefficient, by the Beer–Lambert law.
[ "ultraviolet", "UV/Vis spectroscopy", "ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy", "UV spectroscopy", "ultraviolet spectroscopy", "spectrophotometry", "UV" ]
acf-regs25-2-4
6
Shot noise in the detector of this technique induces a standard deviation in its main output T proportional to the square root of T times T plus one. In this technique, using the octant rule to predict the Cotton effect can distinguish enantiomers through circular dichroism. Potassium dichromate is a calibration standard for this technique. Using this technique, the purity of a DNA or RNA mixture is characterized by the 260 to 280 ratio. This technique’s input value for a highly conjugated compound can be estimated by applying the Woodward–Fieser rules. This technique’s primary measurement equals the product of concentration, the path length of a cuvette, and the molar extinction coefficient, by the Beer–Lambert law. For 10 points, name this technique that tracks the absorbance of a sample with respect to low wavelengths.
ultraviolet spectroscopy [or ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy or UV spectroscopy or UV/Vis spectroscopy; accept spectrophotometry; prompt on spectroscopy]
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acf-regs25-2-4_7
For 10 points, name this technique that tracks the absorbance of a sample with respect to low wavelengths.
[ "ultraviolet", "UV/Vis spectroscopy", "ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy", "UV spectroscopy", "ultraviolet spectroscopy", "spectrophotometry", "UV" ]
acf-regs25-2-4
7
Shot noise in the detector of this technique induces a standard deviation in its main output T proportional to the square root of T times T plus one. In this technique, using the octant rule to predict the Cotton effect can distinguish enantiomers through circular dichroism. Potassium dichromate is a calibration standard for this technique. Using this technique, the purity of a DNA or RNA mixture is characterized by the 260 to 280 ratio. This technique’s input value for a highly conjugated compound can be estimated by applying the Woodward–Fieser rules. This technique’s primary measurement equals the product of concentration, the path length of a cuvette, and the molar extinction coefficient, by the Beer–Lambert law. For 10 points, name this technique that tracks the absorbance of a sample with respect to low wavelengths.
ultraviolet spectroscopy [or ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy or UV spectroscopy or UV/Vis spectroscopy; accept spectrophotometry; prompt on spectroscopy]
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acf-regs25-2-5_1
This thinker claimed that God created the world instantaneously rather than over the course of six days in the work The Literal Meaning of Genesis.
[ "Saint Augustine", "Augustine of Hippo", "Augustine" ]
acf-regs25-2-5
1
This thinker claimed that God created the world instantaneously rather than over the course of six days in the work The Literal Meaning of Genesis. This thinker quoted Ticonius’s seven rules of interpretation in a work that argued for using signs to properly teach scripture. This thinker influenced Wesleyan–Arminian theology with his distinction between “prevenient” and “operative” grace, which he used to justify predestination. The theologian Pelagius was condemned for denying this thinker’s conception of original sin. This author of On Christian Doctrine and On the Trinity originated the term “just war” in a book contrasting an “earthly” realm with a metaphysical “heavenly” realm. For 10 points, name this theologian who wrote The City of God and Confessions.
Augustine of Hippo [or Saint Augustine]
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acf-regs25-2-5_2
This thinker quoted Ticonius’s seven rules of interpretation in a work that argued for using signs to properly teach scripture.
[ "Saint Augustine", "Augustine of Hippo", "Augustine" ]
acf-regs25-2-5
2
This thinker claimed that God created the world instantaneously rather than over the course of six days in the work The Literal Meaning of Genesis. This thinker quoted Ticonius’s seven rules of interpretation in a work that argued for using signs to properly teach scripture. This thinker influenced Wesleyan–Arminian theology with his distinction between “prevenient” and “operative” grace, which he used to justify predestination. The theologian Pelagius was condemned for denying this thinker’s conception of original sin. This author of On Christian Doctrine and On the Trinity originated the term “just war” in a book contrasting an “earthly” realm with a metaphysical “heavenly” realm. For 10 points, name this theologian who wrote The City of God and Confessions.
Augustine of Hippo [or Saint Augustine]
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acf-regs25-2-5_3
This thinker influenced Wesleyan–Arminian theology with his distinction between “prevenient” and “operative” grace, which he used to justify predestination.
[ "Saint Augustine", "Augustine of Hippo", "Augustine" ]
acf-regs25-2-5
3
This thinker claimed that God created the world instantaneously rather than over the course of six days in the work The Literal Meaning of Genesis. This thinker quoted Ticonius’s seven rules of interpretation in a work that argued for using signs to properly teach scripture. This thinker influenced Wesleyan–Arminian theology with his distinction between “prevenient” and “operative” grace, which he used to justify predestination. The theologian Pelagius was condemned for denying this thinker’s conception of original sin. This author of On Christian Doctrine and On the Trinity originated the term “just war” in a book contrasting an “earthly” realm with a metaphysical “heavenly” realm. For 10 points, name this theologian who wrote The City of God and Confessions.
Augustine of Hippo [or Saint Augustine]
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acf-regs25-2-5_4
The theologian Pelagius was condemned for denying this thinker’s conception of original sin.
[ "Saint Augustine", "Augustine of Hippo", "Augustine" ]
acf-regs25-2-5
4
This thinker claimed that God created the world instantaneously rather than over the course of six days in the work The Literal Meaning of Genesis. This thinker quoted Ticonius’s seven rules of interpretation in a work that argued for using signs to properly teach scripture. This thinker influenced Wesleyan–Arminian theology with his distinction between “prevenient” and “operative” grace, which he used to justify predestination. The theologian Pelagius was condemned for denying this thinker’s conception of original sin. This author of On Christian Doctrine and On the Trinity originated the term “just war” in a book contrasting an “earthly” realm with a metaphysical “heavenly” realm. For 10 points, name this theologian who wrote The City of God and Confessions.
Augustine of Hippo [or Saint Augustine]
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acf-regs25-2-5_5
This author of On Christian Doctrine and On the Trinity originated the term “just war” in a book contrasting an “earthly” realm with a metaphysical “heavenly” realm.
[ "Saint Augustine", "Augustine of Hippo", "Augustine" ]
acf-regs25-2-5
5
This thinker claimed that God created the world instantaneously rather than over the course of six days in the work The Literal Meaning of Genesis. This thinker quoted Ticonius’s seven rules of interpretation in a work that argued for using signs to properly teach scripture. This thinker influenced Wesleyan–Arminian theology with his distinction between “prevenient” and “operative” grace, which he used to justify predestination. The theologian Pelagius was condemned for denying this thinker’s conception of original sin. This author of On Christian Doctrine and On the Trinity originated the term “just war” in a book contrasting an “earthly” realm with a metaphysical “heavenly” realm. For 10 points, name this theologian who wrote The City of God and Confessions.
Augustine of Hippo [or Saint Augustine]
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acf-regs25-2-5_6
For 10 points, name this theologian who wrote The City of God and Confessions.
[ "Saint Augustine", "Augustine of Hippo", "Augustine" ]
acf-regs25-2-5
6
This thinker claimed that God created the world instantaneously rather than over the course of six days in the work The Literal Meaning of Genesis. This thinker quoted Ticonius’s seven rules of interpretation in a work that argued for using signs to properly teach scripture. This thinker influenced Wesleyan–Arminian theology with his distinction between “prevenient” and “operative” grace, which he used to justify predestination. The theologian Pelagius was condemned for denying this thinker’s conception of original sin. This author of On Christian Doctrine and On the Trinity originated the term “just war” in a book contrasting an “earthly” realm with a metaphysical “heavenly” realm. For 10 points, name this theologian who wrote The City of God and Confessions.
Augustine of Hippo [or Saint Augustine]
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acf-regs25-2-6_1
A ruler of this dynasty legendarily discovered the Coronation Gospels in a tomb where a ghost cursed him to die without any heirs.
[ "Ludolfing", "Saxon dynasty", "Ludolfing dynasty", "Ottonen", "Saxon", "Ottonian", "Ottonian dynasty" ]
acf-regs25-2-6
1
A ruler of this dynasty legendarily discovered the Coronation Gospels in a tomb where a ghost cursed him to die without any heirs. The first ruler of this dynasty briefly married the then-nun Hatheburg of Merseburg, causing their son Thankmar to be of questionable legitimacy, before remarrying the queen St. Matilda. The Liber Tertius recounting the rise of this dynasty was written by its contemporary Hrotvistha of Gandersheim. A ruler of this dynasty shared power with his canonized wife Adelaide of Italy. The East Francian king Henry the Fowler fathered the namesake of this dynasty, who defeated the Magyars at the 955 Battle of Lechfeld and revived a title first given to Charlemagne. For 10 points, name this first German dynasty to rule the Holy Roman Empire.
Ottonian dynasty [or Ottonen; accept Saxon dynasty or Ludolfing dynasty]
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acf-regs25-2-6_2
The first ruler of this dynasty briefly married the then-nun Hatheburg of Merseburg, causing their son Thankmar to be of questionable legitimacy, before remarrying the queen St. Matilda.
[ "Ludolfing", "Saxon dynasty", "Ludolfing dynasty", "Ottonen", "Saxon", "Ottonian", "Ottonian dynasty" ]
acf-regs25-2-6
2
A ruler of this dynasty legendarily discovered the Coronation Gospels in a tomb where a ghost cursed him to die without any heirs. The first ruler of this dynasty briefly married the then-nun Hatheburg of Merseburg, causing their son Thankmar to be of questionable legitimacy, before remarrying the queen St. Matilda. The Liber Tertius recounting the rise of this dynasty was written by its contemporary Hrotvistha of Gandersheim. A ruler of this dynasty shared power with his canonized wife Adelaide of Italy. The East Francian king Henry the Fowler fathered the namesake of this dynasty, who defeated the Magyars at the 955 Battle of Lechfeld and revived a title first given to Charlemagne. For 10 points, name this first German dynasty to rule the Holy Roman Empire.
Ottonian dynasty [or Ottonen; accept Saxon dynasty or Ludolfing dynasty]
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acf-regs25-2-6_3
The Liber Tertius recounting the rise of this dynasty was written by its contemporary Hrotvistha of Gandersheim.
[ "Ludolfing", "Saxon dynasty", "Ludolfing dynasty", "Ottonen", "Saxon", "Ottonian", "Ottonian dynasty" ]
acf-regs25-2-6
3
A ruler of this dynasty legendarily discovered the Coronation Gospels in a tomb where a ghost cursed him to die without any heirs. The first ruler of this dynasty briefly married the then-nun Hatheburg of Merseburg, causing their son Thankmar to be of questionable legitimacy, before remarrying the queen St. Matilda. The Liber Tertius recounting the rise of this dynasty was written by its contemporary Hrotvistha of Gandersheim. A ruler of this dynasty shared power with his canonized wife Adelaide of Italy. The East Francian king Henry the Fowler fathered the namesake of this dynasty, who defeated the Magyars at the 955 Battle of Lechfeld and revived a title first given to Charlemagne. For 10 points, name this first German dynasty to rule the Holy Roman Empire.
Ottonian dynasty [or Ottonen; accept Saxon dynasty or Ludolfing dynasty]
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acf-regs25-2-6_4
A ruler of this dynasty shared power with his canonized wife Adelaide of Italy.
[ "Ludolfing", "Saxon dynasty", "Ludolfing dynasty", "Ottonen", "Saxon", "Ottonian", "Ottonian dynasty" ]
acf-regs25-2-6
4
A ruler of this dynasty legendarily discovered the Coronation Gospels in a tomb where a ghost cursed him to die without any heirs. The first ruler of this dynasty briefly married the then-nun Hatheburg of Merseburg, causing their son Thankmar to be of questionable legitimacy, before remarrying the queen St. Matilda. The Liber Tertius recounting the rise of this dynasty was written by its contemporary Hrotvistha of Gandersheim. A ruler of this dynasty shared power with his canonized wife Adelaide of Italy. The East Francian king Henry the Fowler fathered the namesake of this dynasty, who defeated the Magyars at the 955 Battle of Lechfeld and revived a title first given to Charlemagne. For 10 points, name this first German dynasty to rule the Holy Roman Empire.
Ottonian dynasty [or Ottonen; accept Saxon dynasty or Ludolfing dynasty]
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acf-regs25-2-6_5
The East Francian king Henry the Fowler fathered the namesake of this dynasty, who defeated the Magyars at the 955 Battle of Lechfeld and revived a title first given to Charlemagne.
[ "Ludolfing", "Saxon dynasty", "Ludolfing dynasty", "Ottonen", "Saxon", "Ottonian", "Ottonian dynasty" ]
acf-regs25-2-6
5
A ruler of this dynasty legendarily discovered the Coronation Gospels in a tomb where a ghost cursed him to die without any heirs. The first ruler of this dynasty briefly married the then-nun Hatheburg of Merseburg, causing their son Thankmar to be of questionable legitimacy, before remarrying the queen St. Matilda. The Liber Tertius recounting the rise of this dynasty was written by its contemporary Hrotvistha of Gandersheim. A ruler of this dynasty shared power with his canonized wife Adelaide of Italy. The East Francian king Henry the Fowler fathered the namesake of this dynasty, who defeated the Magyars at the 955 Battle of Lechfeld and revived a title first given to Charlemagne. For 10 points, name this first German dynasty to rule the Holy Roman Empire.
Ottonian dynasty [or Ottonen; accept Saxon dynasty or Ludolfing dynasty]
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acf-regs25-2-6_6
For 10 points, name this first German dynasty to rule the Holy Roman Empire.
[ "Ludolfing", "Saxon dynasty", "Ludolfing dynasty", "Ottonen", "Saxon", "Ottonian", "Ottonian dynasty" ]
acf-regs25-2-6
6
A ruler of this dynasty legendarily discovered the Coronation Gospels in a tomb where a ghost cursed him to die without any heirs. The first ruler of this dynasty briefly married the then-nun Hatheburg of Merseburg, causing their son Thankmar to be of questionable legitimacy, before remarrying the queen St. Matilda. The Liber Tertius recounting the rise of this dynasty was written by its contemporary Hrotvistha of Gandersheim. A ruler of this dynasty shared power with his canonized wife Adelaide of Italy. The East Francian king Henry the Fowler fathered the namesake of this dynasty, who defeated the Magyars at the 955 Battle of Lechfeld and revived a title first given to Charlemagne. For 10 points, name this first German dynasty to rule the Holy Roman Empire.
Ottonian dynasty [or Ottonen; accept Saxon dynasty or Ludolfing dynasty]
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acf-regs25-2-7_1
The ideas of Kant, Heisenberg, and this author are considered in parallel in William Egginton’s book The Rigor of Angels.
[ "Jorge Luis Borges", "Borges" ]
acf-regs25-2-7
1
The ideas of Kant, Heisenberg, and this author are considered in parallel in William Egginton’s book The Rigor of Angels. A character created by this author is irritated that the “dog of three-fourteen” “seen in profile” and the “dog of three-fifteen, seen frontally” are indicated by the same noun. This author may have anticipated the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics via a story in which a prisoner telegraphs the location of an artillery park by shooting a man. This author wrote a story about a boy who is unable to generalize after falling from a horse and gaining perfect memory. In a story by this author, the German spy Yu Tsun learns that his ancestor’s unfinished novel and labyrinth are one and the same. For 10 points, name this author of “Funes the Memorious” and “The Garden of Forking Paths.”
Jorge Luis Borges (“BOR-hess”)
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acf-regs25-2-7_2
A character created by this author is irritated that the “dog of three-fourteen” “seen in profile” and the “dog of three-fifteen, seen frontally” are indicated by the same noun.
[ "Jorge Luis Borges", "Borges" ]
acf-regs25-2-7
2
The ideas of Kant, Heisenberg, and this author are considered in parallel in William Egginton’s book The Rigor of Angels. A character created by this author is irritated that the “dog of three-fourteen” “seen in profile” and the “dog of three-fifteen, seen frontally” are indicated by the same noun. This author may have anticipated the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics via a story in which a prisoner telegraphs the location of an artillery park by shooting a man. This author wrote a story about a boy who is unable to generalize after falling from a horse and gaining perfect memory. In a story by this author, the German spy Yu Tsun learns that his ancestor’s unfinished novel and labyrinth are one and the same. For 10 points, name this author of “Funes the Memorious” and “The Garden of Forking Paths.”
Jorge Luis Borges (“BOR-hess”)
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acf-regs25-2-7_3
This author may have anticipated the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics via a story in which a prisoner telegraphs the location of an artillery park by shooting a man.
[ "Jorge Luis Borges", "Borges" ]
acf-regs25-2-7
3
The ideas of Kant, Heisenberg, and this author are considered in parallel in William Egginton’s book The Rigor of Angels. A character created by this author is irritated that the “dog of three-fourteen” “seen in profile” and the “dog of three-fifteen, seen frontally” are indicated by the same noun. This author may have anticipated the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics via a story in which a prisoner telegraphs the location of an artillery park by shooting a man. This author wrote a story about a boy who is unable to generalize after falling from a horse and gaining perfect memory. In a story by this author, the German spy Yu Tsun learns that his ancestor’s unfinished novel and labyrinth are one and the same. For 10 points, name this author of “Funes the Memorious” and “The Garden of Forking Paths.”
Jorge Luis Borges (“BOR-hess”)
[ [ 0, 121 ], [ 122, 299 ], [ 300, 480 ], [ 481, 601 ], [ 602, 731 ], [ 732, 823 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 9, 10 ], [ 42, 10 ], [ 53, 10 ], [ 63, 10 ], [ 63, 10 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 80, 10 ], [ 83, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 111, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-regs25-2-7_4
This author wrote a story about a boy who is unable to generalize after falling from a horse and gaining perfect memory.
[ "Jorge Luis Borges", "Borges" ]
acf-regs25-2-7
4
The ideas of Kant, Heisenberg, and this author are considered in parallel in William Egginton’s book The Rigor of Angels. A character created by this author is irritated that the “dog of three-fourteen” “seen in profile” and the “dog of three-fifteen, seen frontally” are indicated by the same noun. This author may have anticipated the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics via a story in which a prisoner telegraphs the location of an artillery park by shooting a man. This author wrote a story about a boy who is unable to generalize after falling from a horse and gaining perfect memory. In a story by this author, the German spy Yu Tsun learns that his ancestor’s unfinished novel and labyrinth are one and the same. For 10 points, name this author of “Funes the Memorious” and “The Garden of Forking Paths.”
Jorge Luis Borges (“BOR-hess”)
[ [ 0, 121 ], [ 122, 299 ], [ 300, 480 ], [ 481, 601 ], [ 602, 731 ], [ 732, 823 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 9, 10 ], [ 42, 10 ], [ 53, 10 ], [ 63, 10 ], [ 63, 10 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 80, 10 ], [ 83, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 111, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-regs25-2-7_5
In a story by this author, the German spy Yu Tsun learns that his ancestor’s unfinished novel and labyrinth are one and the same.
[ "Jorge Luis Borges", "Borges" ]
acf-regs25-2-7
5
The ideas of Kant, Heisenberg, and this author are considered in parallel in William Egginton’s book The Rigor of Angels. A character created by this author is irritated that the “dog of three-fourteen” “seen in profile” and the “dog of three-fifteen, seen frontally” are indicated by the same noun. This author may have anticipated the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics via a story in which a prisoner telegraphs the location of an artillery park by shooting a man. This author wrote a story about a boy who is unable to generalize after falling from a horse and gaining perfect memory. In a story by this author, the German spy Yu Tsun learns that his ancestor’s unfinished novel and labyrinth are one and the same. For 10 points, name this author of “Funes the Memorious” and “The Garden of Forking Paths.”
Jorge Luis Borges (“BOR-hess”)
[ [ 0, 121 ], [ 122, 299 ], [ 300, 480 ], [ 481, 601 ], [ 602, 731 ], [ 732, 823 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 9, 10 ], [ 42, 10 ], [ 53, 10 ], [ 63, 10 ], [ 63, 10 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 80, 10 ], [ 83, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 111, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-regs25-2-7_6
For 10 points, name this author of “Funes the Memorious” and “The Garden of Forking Paths.”
[ "Jorge Luis Borges", "Borges" ]
acf-regs25-2-7
6
The ideas of Kant, Heisenberg, and this author are considered in parallel in William Egginton’s book The Rigor of Angels. A character created by this author is irritated that the “dog of three-fourteen” “seen in profile” and the “dog of three-fifteen, seen frontally” are indicated by the same noun. This author may have anticipated the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics via a story in which a prisoner telegraphs the location of an artillery park by shooting a man. This author wrote a story about a boy who is unable to generalize after falling from a horse and gaining perfect memory. In a story by this author, the German spy Yu Tsun learns that his ancestor’s unfinished novel and labyrinth are one and the same. For 10 points, name this author of “Funes the Memorious” and “The Garden of Forking Paths.”
Jorge Luis Borges (“BOR-hess”)
[ [ 0, 121 ], [ 122, 299 ], [ 300, 480 ], [ 481, 601 ], [ 602, 731 ], [ 732, 823 ] ]
{ "category": "literature", "category_full": "Literature - World Literature", "category_main": "literature-world-literature", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 9, 10 ], [ 42, 10 ], [ 53, 10 ], [ 63, 10 ], [ 63, 10 ], [ 68, -5 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 73, 10 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 78, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 80, 10 ], [ 83, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 98, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 109, 10 ], [ 111, -5 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 111, 10 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 116, 10 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 140, 10 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 0 ], [ 141, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "world-literature" ] }
acf-regs25-2-8_1
After his death, one of these places housed the body of the African-born Viennese Freemason Angelo Soliman.
[ "cabinet of curiosities", "cabinet curiosities", "Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari", "cabinet", "kammer", "Cabinet", "cabinet curiosity", "curiosity cabinet", "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari", "curiosities", "Wunderkammer", "cabinet of curiosity", "Kunstkammer", "curiosity", "cabinets" ]
acf-regs25-2-8
1
After his death, one of these places housed the body of the African-born Viennese Freemason Angelo Soliman. Ferrante Imperato created a woodcut of one of these places, another of which was set up at Roman College by Athanasius Kircher. Narwhal tusks were popular in these places, such as one kept by Danish polymath Ole Worm. A film titled for one of these places is linked to Hitler’s rise in the title of a book by Siegfried Kracauer, used painted sets with pointy forms, and ends with the twist that Franzis is in an asylum. These places name “wonder-rooms” of natural oddities that predated museums, which were called these places “of curiosities.” For 10 points, a 1920 German Expressionist horror film is titled for what sort of place “of Dr. Caligari”?
cabinets [accept cabinet of curiosities or cabinet of curiosity; accept curiosity cabinet; accept The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari or Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari; accept Wunderkammer or Kunstkammer; prompt on wonder-rooms or museums until read]
[ [ 0, 107 ], [ 108, 235 ], [ 236, 325 ], [ 326, 527 ], [ 528, 652 ], [ 653, 759 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 42, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 52, 10 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 62, 10 ], [ 66, 10 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 102, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 129, 0 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-regs25-2-8_2
Ferrante Imperato created a woodcut of one of these places, another of which was set up at Roman College by Athanasius Kircher.
[ "cabinet of curiosities", "cabinet curiosities", "Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari", "cabinet", "kammer", "Cabinet", "cabinet curiosity", "curiosity cabinet", "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari", "curiosities", "Wunderkammer", "cabinet of curiosity", "Kunstkammer", "curiosity", "cabinets" ]
acf-regs25-2-8
2
After his death, one of these places housed the body of the African-born Viennese Freemason Angelo Soliman. Ferrante Imperato created a woodcut of one of these places, another of which was set up at Roman College by Athanasius Kircher. Narwhal tusks were popular in these places, such as one kept by Danish polymath Ole Worm. A film titled for one of these places is linked to Hitler’s rise in the title of a book by Siegfried Kracauer, used painted sets with pointy forms, and ends with the twist that Franzis is in an asylum. These places name “wonder-rooms” of natural oddities that predated museums, which were called these places “of curiosities.” For 10 points, a 1920 German Expressionist horror film is titled for what sort of place “of Dr. Caligari”?
cabinets [accept cabinet of curiosities or cabinet of curiosity; accept curiosity cabinet; accept The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari or Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari; accept Wunderkammer or Kunstkammer; prompt on wonder-rooms or museums until read]
[ [ 0, 107 ], [ 108, 235 ], [ 236, 325 ], [ 326, 527 ], [ 528, 652 ], [ 653, 759 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 42, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 52, 10 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 62, 10 ], [ 66, 10 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 102, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 129, 0 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-regs25-2-8_3
Narwhal tusks were popular in these places, such as one kept by Danish polymath Ole Worm.
[ "cabinet of curiosities", "cabinet curiosities", "Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari", "cabinet", "kammer", "Cabinet", "cabinet curiosity", "curiosity cabinet", "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari", "curiosities", "Wunderkammer", "cabinet of curiosity", "Kunstkammer", "curiosity", "cabinets" ]
acf-regs25-2-8
3
After his death, one of these places housed the body of the African-born Viennese Freemason Angelo Soliman. Ferrante Imperato created a woodcut of one of these places, another of which was set up at Roman College by Athanasius Kircher. Narwhal tusks were popular in these places, such as one kept by Danish polymath Ole Worm. A film titled for one of these places is linked to Hitler’s rise in the title of a book by Siegfried Kracauer, used painted sets with pointy forms, and ends with the twist that Franzis is in an asylum. These places name “wonder-rooms” of natural oddities that predated museums, which were called these places “of curiosities.” For 10 points, a 1920 German Expressionist horror film is titled for what sort of place “of Dr. Caligari”?
cabinets [accept cabinet of curiosities or cabinet of curiosity; accept curiosity cabinet; accept The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari or Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari; accept Wunderkammer or Kunstkammer; prompt on wonder-rooms or museums until read]
[ [ 0, 107 ], [ 108, 235 ], [ 236, 325 ], [ 326, 527 ], [ 528, 652 ], [ 653, 759 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 42, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 52, 10 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 62, 10 ], [ 66, 10 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 102, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 129, 0 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-regs25-2-8_4
A film titled for one of these places is linked to Hitler’s rise in the title of a book by Siegfried Kracauer, used painted sets with pointy forms, and ends with the twist that Franzis is in an asylum.
[ "cabinet of curiosities", "cabinet curiosities", "Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari", "cabinet", "kammer", "Cabinet", "cabinet curiosity", "curiosity cabinet", "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari", "curiosities", "Wunderkammer", "cabinet of curiosity", "Kunstkammer", "curiosity", "cabinets" ]
acf-regs25-2-8
4
After his death, one of these places housed the body of the African-born Viennese Freemason Angelo Soliman. Ferrante Imperato created a woodcut of one of these places, another of which was set up at Roman College by Athanasius Kircher. Narwhal tusks were popular in these places, such as one kept by Danish polymath Ole Worm. A film titled for one of these places is linked to Hitler’s rise in the title of a book by Siegfried Kracauer, used painted sets with pointy forms, and ends with the twist that Franzis is in an asylum. These places name “wonder-rooms” of natural oddities that predated museums, which were called these places “of curiosities.” For 10 points, a 1920 German Expressionist horror film is titled for what sort of place “of Dr. Caligari”?
cabinets [accept cabinet of curiosities or cabinet of curiosity; accept curiosity cabinet; accept The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari or Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari; accept Wunderkammer or Kunstkammer; prompt on wonder-rooms or museums until read]
[ [ 0, 107 ], [ 108, 235 ], [ 236, 325 ], [ 326, 527 ], [ 528, 652 ], [ 653, 759 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 42, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 52, 10 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 62, 10 ], [ 66, 10 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 102, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 129, 0 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-regs25-2-8_5
These places name “wonder-rooms” of natural oddities that predated museums, which were called these places “of curiosities.”
[ "cabinet of curiosities", "cabinet curiosities", "Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari", "cabinet", "kammer", "Cabinet", "cabinet curiosity", "curiosity cabinet", "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari", "curiosities", "Wunderkammer", "cabinet of curiosity", "Kunstkammer", "curiosity", "cabinets" ]
acf-regs25-2-8
5
After his death, one of these places housed the body of the African-born Viennese Freemason Angelo Soliman. Ferrante Imperato created a woodcut of one of these places, another of which was set up at Roman College by Athanasius Kircher. Narwhal tusks were popular in these places, such as one kept by Danish polymath Ole Worm. A film titled for one of these places is linked to Hitler’s rise in the title of a book by Siegfried Kracauer, used painted sets with pointy forms, and ends with the twist that Franzis is in an asylum. These places name “wonder-rooms” of natural oddities that predated museums, which were called these places “of curiosities.” For 10 points, a 1920 German Expressionist horror film is titled for what sort of place “of Dr. Caligari”?
cabinets [accept cabinet of curiosities or cabinet of curiosity; accept curiosity cabinet; accept The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari or Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari; accept Wunderkammer or Kunstkammer; prompt on wonder-rooms or museums until read]
[ [ 0, 107 ], [ 108, 235 ], [ 236, 325 ], [ 326, 527 ], [ 528, 652 ], [ 653, 759 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 42, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 52, 10 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 62, 10 ], [ 66, 10 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 102, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 129, 0 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-regs25-2-8_6
For 10 points, a 1920 German Expressionist horror film is titled for what sort of place “of Dr. Caligari”?
[ "cabinet of curiosities", "cabinet curiosities", "Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari", "cabinet", "kammer", "Cabinet", "cabinet curiosity", "curiosity cabinet", "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari", "curiosities", "Wunderkammer", "cabinet of curiosity", "Kunstkammer", "curiosity", "cabinets" ]
acf-regs25-2-8
6
After his death, one of these places housed the body of the African-born Viennese Freemason Angelo Soliman. Ferrante Imperato created a woodcut of one of these places, another of which was set up at Roman College by Athanasius Kircher. Narwhal tusks were popular in these places, such as one kept by Danish polymath Ole Worm. A film titled for one of these places is linked to Hitler’s rise in the title of a book by Siegfried Kracauer, used painted sets with pointy forms, and ends with the twist that Franzis is in an asylum. These places name “wonder-rooms” of natural oddities that predated museums, which were called these places “of curiosities.” For 10 points, a 1920 German Expressionist horror film is titled for what sort of place “of Dr. Caligari”?
cabinets [accept cabinet of curiosities or cabinet of curiosity; accept curiosity cabinet; accept The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari or Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari; accept Wunderkammer or Kunstkammer; prompt on wonder-rooms or museums until read]
[ [ 0, 107 ], [ 108, 235 ], [ 236, 325 ], [ 326, 527 ], [ 528, 652 ], [ 653, 759 ] ]
{ "category": "other-academic", "category_full": "Other Academic - Other Academic", "category_main": "other-academic", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 42, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 45, 10 ], [ 47, -5 ], [ 52, 10 ], [ 54, -5 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 54, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 56, 10 ], [ 62, -5 ], [ 62, 10 ], [ 66, 10 ], [ 73, -5 ], [ 74, 10 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, -5 ], [ 75, 10 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, -5 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 79, 10 ], [ 96, 10 ], [ 99, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 102, -5 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 108, -5 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 113, -5 ], [ 113, 10 ], [ 115, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 124, 10 ], [ 126, 10 ], [ 129, 0 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 129, 10 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 0 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ], [ 130, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "other-academic" ] }
acf-regs25-2-9_1
Systems that admit low-cost implementations of these constructs may be described as “embarrassingly easy.”
[ "processes until processors is read", "multithreading", "thread", "process", "threads" ]
acf-regs25-2-9
1
Systems that admit low-cost implementations of these constructs may be described as “embarrassingly easy.” Hybrid implementations of these constructs may be described as “M:N” systems, where M is the number of these constructs being mapped and N is the number of virtual processors. Two operations commonly used when implementing these constructs are denoted P and V, based on two Dutch terms. “Pools” of these constructs consist of “workers” waiting to be allocated to tasks. Issues of synchronization between these constructs are illustrated by the dining philosophers problem. Unlike another construct, these constructs share heap memory, which can cause race conditions when modified at different times. For 10 points, name these smallest units of execution for a process that allow for parallel computation.
threads [accept multithreading; accept processes until “processors” is read; prompt on parallel or concurrent architectures until “parallel” is read]
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acf-regs25-2-9_2
Hybrid implementations of these constructs may be described as “M:N” systems, where M is the number of these constructs being mapped and N is the number of virtual processors.
[ "processes until processors is read", "multithreading", "thread", "process", "threads" ]
acf-regs25-2-9
2
Systems that admit low-cost implementations of these constructs may be described as “embarrassingly easy.” Hybrid implementations of these constructs may be described as “M:N” systems, where M is the number of these constructs being mapped and N is the number of virtual processors. Two operations commonly used when implementing these constructs are denoted P and V, based on two Dutch terms. “Pools” of these constructs consist of “workers” waiting to be allocated to tasks. Issues of synchronization between these constructs are illustrated by the dining philosophers problem. Unlike another construct, these constructs share heap memory, which can cause race conditions when modified at different times. For 10 points, name these smallest units of execution for a process that allow for parallel computation.
threads [accept multithreading; accept processes until “processors” is read; prompt on parallel or concurrent architectures until “parallel” is read]
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acf-regs25-2-9_3
Two operations commonly used when implementing these constructs are denoted P and V, based on two Dutch terms.
[ "processes until processors is read", "multithreading", "thread", "process", "threads" ]
acf-regs25-2-9
3
Systems that admit low-cost implementations of these constructs may be described as “embarrassingly easy.” Hybrid implementations of these constructs may be described as “M:N” systems, where M is the number of these constructs being mapped and N is the number of virtual processors. Two operations commonly used when implementing these constructs are denoted P and V, based on two Dutch terms. “Pools” of these constructs consist of “workers” waiting to be allocated to tasks. Issues of synchronization between these constructs are illustrated by the dining philosophers problem. Unlike another construct, these constructs share heap memory, which can cause race conditions when modified at different times. For 10 points, name these smallest units of execution for a process that allow for parallel computation.
threads [accept multithreading; accept processes until “processors” is read; prompt on parallel or concurrent architectures until “parallel” is read]
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acf-regs25-2-9_4
“Pools” of these constructs consist of “workers” waiting to be allocated to tasks.
[ "processes until processors is read", "multithreading", "thread", "process", "threads" ]
acf-regs25-2-9
4
Systems that admit low-cost implementations of these constructs may be described as “embarrassingly easy.” Hybrid implementations of these constructs may be described as “M:N” systems, where M is the number of these constructs being mapped and N is the number of virtual processors. Two operations commonly used when implementing these constructs are denoted P and V, based on two Dutch terms. “Pools” of these constructs consist of “workers” waiting to be allocated to tasks. Issues of synchronization between these constructs are illustrated by the dining philosophers problem. Unlike another construct, these constructs share heap memory, which can cause race conditions when modified at different times. For 10 points, name these smallest units of execution for a process that allow for parallel computation.
threads [accept multithreading; accept processes until “processors” is read; prompt on parallel or concurrent architectures until “parallel” is read]
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acf-regs25-2-9_5
Issues of synchronization between these constructs are illustrated by the dining philosophers problem.
[ "processes until processors is read", "multithreading", "thread", "process", "threads" ]
acf-regs25-2-9
5
Systems that admit low-cost implementations of these constructs may be described as “embarrassingly easy.” Hybrid implementations of these constructs may be described as “M:N” systems, where M is the number of these constructs being mapped and N is the number of virtual processors. Two operations commonly used when implementing these constructs are denoted P and V, based on two Dutch terms. “Pools” of these constructs consist of “workers” waiting to be allocated to tasks. Issues of synchronization between these constructs are illustrated by the dining philosophers problem. Unlike another construct, these constructs share heap memory, which can cause race conditions when modified at different times. For 10 points, name these smallest units of execution for a process that allow for parallel computation.
threads [accept multithreading; accept processes until “processors” is read; prompt on parallel or concurrent architectures until “parallel” is read]
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acf-regs25-2-9_6
Unlike another construct, these constructs share heap memory, which can cause race conditions when modified at different times.
[ "processes until processors is read", "multithreading", "thread", "process", "threads" ]
acf-regs25-2-9
6
Systems that admit low-cost implementations of these constructs may be described as “embarrassingly easy.” Hybrid implementations of these constructs may be described as “M:N” systems, where M is the number of these constructs being mapped and N is the number of virtual processors. Two operations commonly used when implementing these constructs are denoted P and V, based on two Dutch terms. “Pools” of these constructs consist of “workers” waiting to be allocated to tasks. Issues of synchronization between these constructs are illustrated by the dining philosophers problem. Unlike another construct, these constructs share heap memory, which can cause race conditions when modified at different times. For 10 points, name these smallest units of execution for a process that allow for parallel computation.
threads [accept multithreading; accept processes until “processors” is read; prompt on parallel or concurrent architectures until “parallel” is read]
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acf-regs25-2-9_7
For 10 points, name these smallest units of execution for a process that allow for parallel computation.
[ "processes until processors is read", "multithreading", "thread", "process", "threads" ]
acf-regs25-2-9
7
Systems that admit low-cost implementations of these constructs may be described as “embarrassingly easy.” Hybrid implementations of these constructs may be described as “M:N” systems, where M is the number of these constructs being mapped and N is the number of virtual processors. Two operations commonly used when implementing these constructs are denoted P and V, based on two Dutch terms. “Pools” of these constructs consist of “workers” waiting to be allocated to tasks. Issues of synchronization between these constructs are illustrated by the dining philosophers problem. Unlike another construct, these constructs share heap memory, which can cause race conditions when modified at different times. For 10 points, name these smallest units of execution for a process that allow for parallel computation.
threads [accept multithreading; accept processes until “processors” is read; prompt on parallel or concurrent architectures until “parallel” is read]
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acf-regs25-2-10_1
An article analogizes evidence for a form of this ideology to leaving a room with scratches from a black cat on one’s arm.
[ "liberalization", "liberal constructivism", "neoliberalism", "embedded liberalism", "liberalism", "liberal" ]
acf-regs25-2-10
1
An article analogizes evidence for a form of this ideology to leaving a room with scratches from a black cat on one’s arm. That “embedded” form of this ideology was discussed in an article by John Ruggie about the “Postwar Economic Order.” In a Stephen Walt essay, a system described by this ideology in the context of the international order is considered “bound to fail.” A theory named for this ideology’s adjectival form was described in After Hegemony by Robert Keohane and extended by Joseph Nye. A process named for this ideology involves reducing government involvement within industry, leading to increased privatization. For 10 points, laissez-faire capitalism associated with Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman is part of what political ideology’s “neo” form?
liberalism [accept liberalization; accept embedded liberalism; accept neoliberalism; accept liberal constructivism]
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acf-regs25-2-10_2
That “embedded” form of this ideology was discussed in an article by John Ruggie about the “Postwar Economic Order.”
[ "liberalization", "liberal constructivism", "neoliberalism", "embedded liberalism", "liberalism", "liberal" ]
acf-regs25-2-10
2
An article analogizes evidence for a form of this ideology to leaving a room with scratches from a black cat on one’s arm. That “embedded” form of this ideology was discussed in an article by John Ruggie about the “Postwar Economic Order.” In a Stephen Walt essay, a system described by this ideology in the context of the international order is considered “bound to fail.” A theory named for this ideology’s adjectival form was described in After Hegemony by Robert Keohane and extended by Joseph Nye. A process named for this ideology involves reducing government involvement within industry, leading to increased privatization. For 10 points, laissez-faire capitalism associated with Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman is part of what political ideology’s “neo” form?
liberalism [accept liberalization; accept embedded liberalism; accept neoliberalism; accept liberal constructivism]
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acf-regs25-2-10_3
In a Stephen Walt essay, a system described by this ideology in the context of the international order is considered “bound to fail.”
[ "liberalization", "liberal constructivism", "neoliberalism", "embedded liberalism", "liberalism", "liberal" ]
acf-regs25-2-10
3
An article analogizes evidence for a form of this ideology to leaving a room with scratches from a black cat on one’s arm. That “embedded” form of this ideology was discussed in an article by John Ruggie about the “Postwar Economic Order.” In a Stephen Walt essay, a system described by this ideology in the context of the international order is considered “bound to fail.” A theory named for this ideology’s adjectival form was described in After Hegemony by Robert Keohane and extended by Joseph Nye. A process named for this ideology involves reducing government involvement within industry, leading to increased privatization. For 10 points, laissez-faire capitalism associated with Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman is part of what political ideology’s “neo” form?
liberalism [accept liberalization; accept embedded liberalism; accept neoliberalism; accept liberal constructivism]
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acf-regs25-2-10_4
A theory named for this ideology’s adjectival form was described in After Hegemony by Robert Keohane and extended by Joseph Nye.
[ "liberalization", "liberal constructivism", "neoliberalism", "embedded liberalism", "liberalism", "liberal" ]
acf-regs25-2-10
4
An article analogizes evidence for a form of this ideology to leaving a room with scratches from a black cat on one’s arm. That “embedded” form of this ideology was discussed in an article by John Ruggie about the “Postwar Economic Order.” In a Stephen Walt essay, a system described by this ideology in the context of the international order is considered “bound to fail.” A theory named for this ideology’s adjectival form was described in After Hegemony by Robert Keohane and extended by Joseph Nye. A process named for this ideology involves reducing government involvement within industry, leading to increased privatization. For 10 points, laissez-faire capitalism associated with Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman is part of what political ideology’s “neo” form?
liberalism [accept liberalization; accept embedded liberalism; accept neoliberalism; accept liberal constructivism]
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acf-regs25-2-10_5
A process named for this ideology involves reducing government involvement within industry, leading to increased privatization.
[ "liberalization", "liberal constructivism", "neoliberalism", "embedded liberalism", "liberalism", "liberal" ]
acf-regs25-2-10
5
An article analogizes evidence for a form of this ideology to leaving a room with scratches from a black cat on one’s arm. That “embedded” form of this ideology was discussed in an article by John Ruggie about the “Postwar Economic Order.” In a Stephen Walt essay, a system described by this ideology in the context of the international order is considered “bound to fail.” A theory named for this ideology’s adjectival form was described in After Hegemony by Robert Keohane and extended by Joseph Nye. A process named for this ideology involves reducing government involvement within industry, leading to increased privatization. For 10 points, laissez-faire capitalism associated with Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman is part of what political ideology’s “neo” form?
liberalism [accept liberalization; accept embedded liberalism; accept neoliberalism; accept liberal constructivism]
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acf-regs25-2-10_6
For 10 points, laissez-faire capitalism associated with Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman is part of what political ideology’s “neo” form?
[ "liberalization", "liberal constructivism", "neoliberalism", "embedded liberalism", "liberalism", "liberal" ]
acf-regs25-2-10
6
An article analogizes evidence for a form of this ideology to leaving a room with scratches from a black cat on one’s arm. That “embedded” form of this ideology was discussed in an article by John Ruggie about the “Postwar Economic Order.” In a Stephen Walt essay, a system described by this ideology in the context of the international order is considered “bound to fail.” A theory named for this ideology’s adjectival form was described in After Hegemony by Robert Keohane and extended by Joseph Nye. A process named for this ideology involves reducing government involvement within industry, leading to increased privatization. For 10 points, laissez-faire capitalism associated with Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman is part of what political ideology’s “neo” form?
liberalism [accept liberalization; accept embedded liberalism; accept neoliberalism; accept liberal constructivism]
[ [ 0, 122 ], [ 123, 239 ], [ 240, 373 ], [ 374, 502 ], [ 503, 630 ], [ 631, 771 ] ]
{ "category": "social-science", "category_full": "Social Science - Social Science", "category_main": "social-science", "difficulty": "Open", "human_buzz_positions": [ [ 28, 10 ], [ 39, 10 ], [ 59, -5 ], [ 63, 10 ], [ 64, -5 ], [ 64, -5 ], [ 64, -5 ], [ 64, 10 ], [ 67, 10 ], [ 76, 10 ], [ 77, -5 ], [ 80, -5 ], [ 80, 10 ], [ 80, 10 ], [ 85, -5 ], [ 85, 10 ], [ 91, 10 ], [ 93, 10 ], [ 95, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 97, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 100, 10 ], [ 101, -5 ], [ 101, -5 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 101, 10 ], [ 103, 10 ], [ 104, 10 ], [ 105, 10 ], [ 106, -5 ], [ 106, -5 ], [ 106, -5 ], [ 106, 10 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 107, 10 ], [ 108, 10 ], [ 110, 10 ], [ 117, 10 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 118, 10 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 119, -5 ], [ 119, 10 ], [ 120, -5 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 120, 10 ], [ 121, 0 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 121, 10 ], [ 122, 0 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ], [ 122, 10 ] ], "packet": "Packet-B_Harvard-A_UNC-B_Virginia-Tech_Waterloo-A_Yale", "question_set": "2025-acf-regionals", "subcategory": [ "social-science" ] }
acf-regs25-2-11_1
Members of the genus Roridula exhibit a borderline form of this process that involves symbiosis with species of assassin bugs.
[ "insects", "descriptions of plants eating meat", "insect", "carnivore", "insectivore", "carnivorous plants", "animal", "plant carnivory", "eating meat", "carnivory", "animals", "word forms", "carnivorous" ]
acf-regs25-2-11
1
Members of the genus Roridula exhibit a borderline form of this process that involves symbiosis with species of assassin bugs. This process was first detailed in an 1875 book by Charles Darwin describing years of experiments studying activity in the Drosera genus. Organisms in the genuses Utricularia and Dionaea have evolved a thigmonastic response to aid this process. The cost–benefit model posits that modifications for this process explain why it is only observed in sunny, moist, and nutrient poor areas. A method for performing this process used by Nepenthes jamban involves a combination of sticky mucilage and a pool of enzymes. “Lobster-pot” and “pitfall” traps are used by some species exhibiting this behavior. For 10 points, name this method of deriving nutrients used by the Venus flytrap.
plant carnivory [accept carnivore or carnivorous plants; accept insectivore or word forms; accept descriptions of plants eating meat or insects or animals; prompt on eating or digestion; prompt on tropism or movement by asking “what behavior are they engaging in by moving?”; prompt on trapping or attracting insects or animals until “traps” is read] (The Charles Darwin book is Insectivorous Plants.)
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acf-regs25-2-11_2
This process was first detailed in an 1875 book by Charles Darwin describing years of experiments studying activity in the Drosera genus.
[ "insects", "descriptions of plants eating meat", "insect", "carnivore", "insectivore", "carnivorous plants", "animal", "plant carnivory", "eating meat", "carnivory", "animals", "word forms", "carnivorous" ]
acf-regs25-2-11
2
Members of the genus Roridula exhibit a borderline form of this process that involves symbiosis with species of assassin bugs. This process was first detailed in an 1875 book by Charles Darwin describing years of experiments studying activity in the Drosera genus. Organisms in the genuses Utricularia and Dionaea have evolved a thigmonastic response to aid this process. The cost–benefit model posits that modifications for this process explain why it is only observed in sunny, moist, and nutrient poor areas. A method for performing this process used by Nepenthes jamban involves a combination of sticky mucilage and a pool of enzymes. “Lobster-pot” and “pitfall” traps are used by some species exhibiting this behavior. For 10 points, name this method of deriving nutrients used by the Venus flytrap.
plant carnivory [accept carnivore or carnivorous plants; accept insectivore or word forms; accept descriptions of plants eating meat or insects or animals; prompt on eating or digestion; prompt on tropism or movement by asking “what behavior are they engaging in by moving?”; prompt on trapping or attracting insects or animals until “traps” is read] (The Charles Darwin book is Insectivorous Plants.)
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acf-regs25-2-11_3
Organisms in the genuses Utricularia and Dionaea have evolved a thigmonastic response to aid this process.
[ "insects", "descriptions of plants eating meat", "insect", "carnivore", "insectivore", "carnivorous plants", "animal", "plant carnivory", "eating meat", "carnivory", "animals", "word forms", "carnivorous" ]
acf-regs25-2-11
3
Members of the genus Roridula exhibit a borderline form of this process that involves symbiosis with species of assassin bugs. This process was first detailed in an 1875 book by Charles Darwin describing years of experiments studying activity in the Drosera genus. Organisms in the genuses Utricularia and Dionaea have evolved a thigmonastic response to aid this process. The cost–benefit model posits that modifications for this process explain why it is only observed in sunny, moist, and nutrient poor areas. A method for performing this process used by Nepenthes jamban involves a combination of sticky mucilage and a pool of enzymes. “Lobster-pot” and “pitfall” traps are used by some species exhibiting this behavior. For 10 points, name this method of deriving nutrients used by the Venus flytrap.
plant carnivory [accept carnivore or carnivorous plants; accept insectivore or word forms; accept descriptions of plants eating meat or insects or animals; prompt on eating or digestion; prompt on tropism or movement by asking “what behavior are they engaging in by moving?”; prompt on trapping or attracting insects or animals until “traps” is read] (The Charles Darwin book is Insectivorous Plants.)
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acf-regs25-2-11_4
The cost–benefit model posits that modifications for this process explain why it is only observed in sunny, moist, and nutrient poor areas.
[ "insects", "descriptions of plants eating meat", "insect", "carnivore", "insectivore", "carnivorous plants", "animal", "plant carnivory", "eating meat", "carnivory", "animals", "word forms", "carnivorous" ]
acf-regs25-2-11
4
Members of the genus Roridula exhibit a borderline form of this process that involves symbiosis with species of assassin bugs. This process was first detailed in an 1875 book by Charles Darwin describing years of experiments studying activity in the Drosera genus. Organisms in the genuses Utricularia and Dionaea have evolved a thigmonastic response to aid this process. The cost–benefit model posits that modifications for this process explain why it is only observed in sunny, moist, and nutrient poor areas. A method for performing this process used by Nepenthes jamban involves a combination of sticky mucilage and a pool of enzymes. “Lobster-pot” and “pitfall” traps are used by some species exhibiting this behavior. For 10 points, name this method of deriving nutrients used by the Venus flytrap.
plant carnivory [accept carnivore or carnivorous plants; accept insectivore or word forms; accept descriptions of plants eating meat or insects or animals; prompt on eating or digestion; prompt on tropism or movement by asking “what behavior are they engaging in by moving?”; prompt on trapping or attracting insects or animals until “traps” is read] (The Charles Darwin book is Insectivorous Plants.)
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acf-regs25-2-11_5
A method for performing this process used by Nepenthes jamban involves a combination of sticky mucilage and a pool of enzymes.
[ "insects", "descriptions of plants eating meat", "insect", "carnivore", "insectivore", "carnivorous plants", "animal", "plant carnivory", "eating meat", "carnivory", "animals", "word forms", "carnivorous" ]
acf-regs25-2-11
5
Members of the genus Roridula exhibit a borderline form of this process that involves symbiosis with species of assassin bugs. This process was first detailed in an 1875 book by Charles Darwin describing years of experiments studying activity in the Drosera genus. Organisms in the genuses Utricularia and Dionaea have evolved a thigmonastic response to aid this process. The cost–benefit model posits that modifications for this process explain why it is only observed in sunny, moist, and nutrient poor areas. A method for performing this process used by Nepenthes jamban involves a combination of sticky mucilage and a pool of enzymes. “Lobster-pot” and “pitfall” traps are used by some species exhibiting this behavior. For 10 points, name this method of deriving nutrients used by the Venus flytrap.
plant carnivory [accept carnivore or carnivorous plants; accept insectivore or word forms; accept descriptions of plants eating meat or insects or animals; prompt on eating or digestion; prompt on tropism or movement by asking “what behavior are they engaging in by moving?”; prompt on trapping or attracting insects or animals until “traps” is read] (The Charles Darwin book is Insectivorous Plants.)
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acf-regs25-2-11_6
“Lobster-pot” and “pitfall” traps are used by some species exhibiting this behavior.
[ "insects", "descriptions of plants eating meat", "insect", "carnivore", "insectivore", "carnivorous plants", "animal", "plant carnivory", "eating meat", "carnivory", "animals", "word forms", "carnivorous" ]
acf-regs25-2-11
6
Members of the genus Roridula exhibit a borderline form of this process that involves symbiosis with species of assassin bugs. This process was first detailed in an 1875 book by Charles Darwin describing years of experiments studying activity in the Drosera genus. Organisms in the genuses Utricularia and Dionaea have evolved a thigmonastic response to aid this process. The cost–benefit model posits that modifications for this process explain why it is only observed in sunny, moist, and nutrient poor areas. A method for performing this process used by Nepenthes jamban involves a combination of sticky mucilage and a pool of enzymes. “Lobster-pot” and “pitfall” traps are used by some species exhibiting this behavior. For 10 points, name this method of deriving nutrients used by the Venus flytrap.
plant carnivory [accept carnivore or carnivorous plants; accept insectivore or word forms; accept descriptions of plants eating meat or insects or animals; prompt on eating or digestion; prompt on tropism or movement by asking “what behavior are they engaging in by moving?”; prompt on trapping or attracting insects or animals until “traps” is read] (The Charles Darwin book is Insectivorous Plants.)
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acf-regs25-2-11_7
For 10 points, name this method of deriving nutrients used by the Venus flytrap.
[ "insects", "descriptions of plants eating meat", "insect", "carnivore", "insectivore", "carnivorous plants", "animal", "plant carnivory", "eating meat", "carnivory", "animals", "word forms", "carnivorous" ]
acf-regs25-2-11
7
Members of the genus Roridula exhibit a borderline form of this process that involves symbiosis with species of assassin bugs. This process was first detailed in an 1875 book by Charles Darwin describing years of experiments studying activity in the Drosera genus. Organisms in the genuses Utricularia and Dionaea have evolved a thigmonastic response to aid this process. The cost–benefit model posits that modifications for this process explain why it is only observed in sunny, moist, and nutrient poor areas. A method for performing this process used by Nepenthes jamban involves a combination of sticky mucilage and a pool of enzymes. “Lobster-pot” and “pitfall” traps are used by some species exhibiting this behavior. For 10 points, name this method of deriving nutrients used by the Venus flytrap.
plant carnivory [accept carnivore or carnivorous plants; accept insectivore or word forms; accept descriptions of plants eating meat or insects or animals; prompt on eating or digestion; prompt on tropism or movement by asking “what behavior are they engaging in by moving?”; prompt on trapping or attracting insects or animals until “traps” is read] (The Charles Darwin book is Insectivorous Plants.)
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