Friday, 19 July 2013

The Daily Teaser — 19-7-2013: The SS Great Britain

Bloody HELL … !

I have to admit, I’ve got a documentary on, I recorded last night: a repeat of one I’d already seen about household killers in the Victorian home.

Amazing what they’d feed kids, back then … !

At ANY rate, that wasn’t quite what caught my eyes, on the news, for however briefly I had it on.

Seemingly … ?   Mars was habitable.   OK, four billion years ago: but it WAS habitable.

Wow … !

That made my eyes water.   And if THAT hasn’t set a thousand or so science-fiction writers into an ideas frenzy, then Julian May was right about the human brain … 

~≈∏≈~

Let’s move on, shall we?

Yesterday’s Teaser saw Debbi putting in her answers: along with bagging four out of six*,  she was keeping her fingers crossed about her answers.

Let’s see how she — and you — do with today’s questions, shall we?

Here they are, along with the ‘How To’, License and video … 

Q1) 19th July, 1843 saw the launch of the SS Great Britain: what was then the largest ship afloat.   It was also the first to made largely of which metal … ?
Q2) The ship was also one of the first ocean-going ships to be propelled by what: sails, a paddlewheel or a screw-propellor?
Q3) What does the SS in SS Great Britain stand for … ?
Q4) On which set of islands was the ship famously retired to, in 1884?
Q5) Finally … which (then) member of the Royal Family took part in the the ship’s launch … ?
And here’s yesterday’s questions and answers …
Q1) 18th July, 1555, saw the Royal College of Arms reincorporated: by which English Queen … ?
A1) Mary 1st.
Q2) The study, creation, granting and blazoning of those arms is known by what name … ?
A2) Heraldry.
Q3) The main part of a coat of arms is the escutcheon, which is also known as what: the shield, helmet or background … ?
A3) Shield.
Q4) If you’re a lady with a coat of arms, what shape IS your escutcheon … ?
A4) Lozenge shaped for British ladies: Cartouche shaped for continental ladies.   Oh, and vicars … 
Q5) If you’re entitled to a Coat of Arms, you are said to be … what … ?
A5) Armigerous: or an armiger.
Q6) Finally … what’s the term for the Japanese equivalent to a coat of arms … ?
A6) Mon: also known as a monsho, mondokoro and kamon.
Enjoy those, folks.

I’ll leave you with this thought the ship’s designer …
“… an explosion in the engine room … would have destroyed a lesser ship”
Isambard Kingdom Brunel.
And — in lieu of music — this helpful video.


Have a good day.
















*        Sorry, Debbi†, there’s actually a word for being eligible for a coat of arms: armigerous.   And a woman’s escutcheon is either lozenge or cartouche shaped, depending on whether she’s from Britain, or the continent.   Priests and vicars get a cartouche, too.   It’s an oval, so you know.   (I’ve said it before, and I’ll probably say it again, it always amazes me what I find out … !)

†        Oh, by the way, Debbi, about Neuromancer?   HAve you come across Molly, yet … ?   Gibson always claimed her look, on the cover of the Pretenders first album: personally, I can go with that … 

2 comments:

Debbi said...

Molly? That name sounds familiar. Forgive me, but I'm reading 3 books at the moment, and the list just keeps growing. :)

1. iron
2. screw propeller
3. Steam Ship
4. the Falkland Islands
5. Prince Philip

Pink Fluff said...

1. steel
2. propellor
3. super ship ;p
4. Falklands
5. Prince Albert

I've been on it (but knowing about ships isn't my thing)

Simon always knew there was life on Mars, and he has contacted it.