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South African (Off-Topic) Quiz


DamhuisClan

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Posted

Purple?

 

Good attempt! The little obscure word "curple" rhymes with it, though, which has a fun enough meaning to quote here:

 

curple (plural curples)

1.) the hindquarters or the rump of a horse, a strap under the girth of a horse's saddle to stop the saddle from kicking forward

2.) (transf.) the rump, the posterior

Posted

Here's a little bit of information I learnt yesterday - it is well known that there is no word in English that rhymes with the word "orange", but there is another English word with the same property. What is that word?

 

Strangely enough this came up in conversation a few weeks ago, my daughter is learning rhyming at school. For them it's all about the sound and it doesn't matter whether the word exists or not. However she started asking words that rhyme with 'X and Y etc.' and occasionally I really struggled so it got me thinking and doing some research. A contentious question.... by definition it seems there are many more and depends on whether a strict rhyming sequence is applied or not.

 

I'll just answer with the ones that I could recall as typical examples given before I started my research; orange, silver, month, pint, and purple although there are some obscure words that do rhyme with these :D

Posted

Strangely enough this came up in conversation a few weeks ago, my daughter is learning rhyming at school. For them it's all about the sound and it doesn't matter whether the word exists or not. However she started asking words that rhyme with 'X and Y etc.' and occasionally I really struggled so it got me thinking and doing some research. A contentious question.... by definition it seems there are many more and depends on whether a strict rhyming sequence is applied or not.

 

I'll just answer with the ones that I could recall as typical examples given before I started my research; orange, silver, month, pint, and purple although there are some obscure words that do rhyme with these :D

 

Globalrat has the stage! According to the Oxford website, "orange" and "silver" are the only words without a rhyming word (according to a fairly strict definition of rhyming). The two words *do* have the half-rhymes "lozenge" and "salver". One has to assume they're talking about the "proper" BBC pronunciation. :D

Posted

I have to agree with Carbon Hunter on this one.

It was indeed Helen of Troy. Following her abduction to Paris a thousand ships were launched to reclaim her. This was pretty much the start of the trojan war...

 

Must have been one good looking lady!!! :D

Posted

Who was South Africa's first Olympic Gold Medallist?

Ironically this person was not included in the Springbok Team, but the people of his/her Colony were so sure of a Gold Medal that they raised the fare money!

Posted

Go for it Globalrat! :D

Reggie Walker won the 100m's in 1908 in a time of 10,8sec.

He was not included in the South African team of 14. The people of Natal (the Colony) were so sure that he would succeed that they paid for him to attend the Games.

Posted

Karen Muir? I'll try again

 

If memory serves me correctly Karen Muir was the youngest World Record holder at the age of 12 or 13, but she never competed in the Olympics due to SA's exclusion in those days.

Posted

That answer came from the An part of Dan.

 

Her question: Who painted Guernica and what does it symbolize? (She is an artist!)

Posted

Picasso

 

Love & War ;)

 

picasso_guernica1937.jpg

 

The Spanish town Guernica was bombed by the Germans in 1937. This prompted Picasso to this black and white oil painting. Guernica was not a military target but civilian. The bombing took place in aid of Genl Franco. The painting is 3,5 meters tall and 7 meters wide! Picasso protests against the atrocities of war.

 

You are on Huskies!

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