- QFTCIBP Game 10, Rounds 9-10: old insults, challenge - 2 Updates
- Calvin's Quiz #523 - 1 Update
Dan Tilque <dtilque@frontier.com>: Jun 20 01:55PM -0700 Mark Brader wrote: > | Mollisher | Wandought > 1. A toothless beggar. (Derived from the name of a stock character > in medieval theatrical farces.) Mumblecrust > 2. Someone who's clumsy and heavy of foot. Stampcrab > 3. In Victorian England, the lover of a villain or gangster. Mollisher > 4. An adulterer. Bedswerver > | Hedge-creeper | Whiffle-whaffle > 5. Noted in 1594 as a term for a lazy slacker. Literally somebody > who seems to spend all day in bed. Loiter-sack > 6. In the late 19th century, it applied to an amateur or part-time > prostitute. Dolly-mop > 7. A married man that keeps a mistress, whom he visits only at > night, for fear of discovery. Hedge-creeper > 8. Someone who turns up uninvited at a meal or party and expects > to be fed. Smell-feast > 9. An 1800s term for a prostitute who worked in the countryside. Dark cully > 10. Someone who not only talks a lot, but who seems to constantly > swear. Muck-spout > * A. Corporate Headquarters > In each case, in what city does the company have its headquarters? > A1. Proctor & Gamble. Cinncinati -- Dan Tilque |
Jason Kreitzer <jk71875@gmail.com>: Jun 20 06:33PM -0700 On Tuesday, June 19, 2018 at 12:17:14 AM UTC-4, Mark Brader wrote: > | Mollisher | Wandought > 1. A toothless beggar. (Derived from the name of a stock character > in medieval theatrical farces.) Mumblecrust > 2. Someone who's clumsy and heavy of foot. Foozle > 3. In Victorian England, the lover of a villain or gangster. Mollisher > 4. An adulterer. Stampcrab > | Hedge-creeper | Whiffle-whaffle > 5. Noted in 1594 as a term for a lazy slacker. Literally somebody > who seems to spend all day in bed. Loiter-sack > 6. In the late 19th century, it applied to an amateur or part-time > prostitute. Dolly-mop > 7. A married man that keeps a mistress, whom he visits only at > night, for fear of discovery. Hedge-creeper > 8. Someone who turns up uninvited at a meal or party and expects > to be fed. Smell-feast > 9. An 1800s term for a prostitute who worked in the countryside. Dark cully > 10. Someone who not only talks a lot, but who seems to constantly > swear. Dirty Puzzle > B1. One of the headlining shows this year is a Meredith Willson > musical about a fraudulent salesman who comes to River City. > Name that musical. "The Music Man" |
Dan Tilque <dtilque@frontier.com>: Jun 20 02:08PM -0700 Calvin wrote: > 1 Which famous writer did Danny Kaye portray in a 1952 biopic? > 2 In which country are the palace and gardens of Schönbrunn? Austria > 3 Who or what does a philogynist like or admire? women > 4 According to a 1974 Barry Manilow hit, who "came and gave…without taking?" Mandy > 5 What, according to the proverb, is always twenty-twenty? hindsight > 6 Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie I is considered to be the reincarnation of Christ by which religious / cultural movement? Rastafarians > 7 Faith, Hope, Charity, Fortitude, Justice, Prudence and Temperance are collectively known as the Seven what? virtues > 8 How many Tour de France wins did Lance Armstrong have taken away from him? 5 > 9 In an Olympic medley race, which swimming stroke is usually the slowest? breast stroke > 10 In Roman numerals, what is DCCCXC + CMXLIX? MDCCCXXXIX -- Dan Tilque |
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