Friday, February 26, 2021

Digest for rec.games.trivia@googlegroups.com - 1 update in 1 topic

Pete Gayde <pete.gayde@gmail.com>: Feb 25 11:15AM -0600

Mark Brader wrote:
> the 4 decoys with the others. Answer for the decoys if you like
> for fun, but for no points.
 
> 1. Name it.
 
Ottawa; Winnipeg
 
 
> 2. Name it. If the photographer had turned around, they would
> have seen this city's most recognizable landmark.
 
Ottawa
 
 
> 3. Name this western Canadian city that's known locally, for
> obvious reasons, as the City of Bridges.
 
Fraser; Kelowna
 
 
> 4. (decoy)
> 5. (decoy)
> 6. Name it.
 
Quebec
 
> 7. Name it. This city is also in western Canada.
 
Calgary; Edmonton
 
> 8. Name it.
 
Montreal; Toronto
 
> 9. Name it.
 
Montreal
 
> 10. (decoy)
> 11. Name it.
 
Winnipeg; Calgary
 
> 12. Name it.
 
Vancouver
 
> 13. (decoy)
> 14. Name this city in Ontario. The building on the left is one
> of its newer landmarks.
 
Windsor
 
 
> 1. The verse form used in the oldest English poetry, including
> "Beowulf". Chaucer's work was influenced by it, although his
> verse was rhymed and had fixed meter.
 
Blank verse; Free verse
 
 
> 2. A verse form consisting of unrhymed iambic pentameter, this is
> the meter of "Paradise" Lost as well as Shakespeare's plays.
 
Free verse; Blank verse
 
> A-B-B-A A-B-B-A and a "sestet" of 6 lines whose rhyme pattern
> varies, but is most often C-D-E-C-D-E or C-D-C-D-C-D. A turn --
> a shift in pattern or mood -- occurs after the octet.
 
Ottava rima; Sestina
 
> Sang a paean
> To love and pain
> And ladies layin'.
 
Clerihew; Ghazal
 
 
> 5. A stately lyric form, often on a serious theme, it incorporates
> various types of versification. Different variants of this
> form are known as Pindaric, Sapphic, and Horatian.
 
Ode
 
> "Ode to the West Wind": any number of three-line stanzas, or
> "tercets", concluding with a couplet. The tercets have an
> interlocking rhyme: A-B-A, B-C-B, C-D-C, and so on.
 
Ottava rima; Sestina
 
 
> 7. A short stanza of 4 or 5 lines that ends a ballade and some
> other medieval verse forms. Originally, it stated the poem's
> dedication.
 
Dithyramb; Tercet
 
 
> 8. A rhyming couplet, usually end-stopped (meaning that each line
> ends with punctuation and the couplet often forms a sentence),
> written in iambic pentameter. Alexander Pope used these.
 
Dithyramb
 
> and fourth stanzas; the third line of the poem is also the last
> line of the third and fifth stanzas. These two repeated lines
> also end the poem.
 
Villanelle
 
> stanza. All six words are used in the final 3 lines (but three
> are "buried" within it, and the other three are used as the
> end words).
 
Sestina
 
 
Pete Gayde
You received this digest because you're subscribed to updates for this group. You can change your settings on the group membership page.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it send an email to rec.games.trivia+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.

No comments:

Post a Comment