Q1)12th June , 1550, saw the founding of the capital of Finland: by Gustav 1st of Sweden. What IS that capital?
Q2)Karl Drais rode a dandy horse on 12th June, 1817. The horse was a forerunner to what: the motor car, bicycle or pogo stick?
Q3)Dr Cyclops, the first film of its type to be filmed in three strip Technicolor, started filming on 12th June, 1939. What kind of film was it: a horror, western or rom-com?
Q4)The Queen opened a theatre on 12th June, 1997. Which theatre: the Globe, the Dysk or the Barbican?
Q5)Finally … ? 12th July, 1981, saw the release of Raiders of the Lost Ark. Which production company made Raiders of the Lost Ark: Paramount, Lucasfilms or Amblin?
Q2)He studied theatre at the University of Iowa. He also studied at which theatre school: the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School or the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art?
* Blimey, Little Anna’s got her work cut out for her, Olga! And, hang on, she didn’t realise what ‘sunset,’ meant? Or just set? Because the thought occurs that ‘set,’ can also be applied to groups of questions. OR to jelly, or concrete: they go from liquid to a solid.
And cheers! Being poked whilst flat on my back seems to have helped!
(Oh … I sent Debbi something to help with her Spanish. She’s about to met the Strength and Honour squad.)
† Hello, Mum!
‡ I don’t think we use it often, Debbi: but I knew what it meant. West End Games used it a lot in the first edition of Paranoia. And there was a chap called Clive Mulcahy who played at the Essex Arms, when I worked there: everyone would sing along along to SNAFU.
Don’t it, and frag, date back to the Vietnam War … ?
Oh, enjoy the contents. Alonso’s bonkers … but that’s being a Tercio for you. Oh, and Amy Pond is not the only time travelling Amelia doing the rounds …
(Oh, let me know if the USB sticks contents play!)
^ Oh, bless him! Cary Grant looks like he’s swept Jean off her feet, there, Edith! :D
Q5) Lucasfilm The issue with set, is that she didn't realise what it meant when used as a verb with sun (ponerse el sol, o puesta de sol in Spanish). She asked why the verb required after sun was "set" in the exercise, as the exercise was a gap-filling one, a lot of the answers involved phrasal verbs, and she was wondering which one could be suitable. (Set, like get, and many other verbs, have so many meanings in English, it is very difficult to teach them, as you never get done with all the different meanings. You have to simplify things, but there are always surprises). When I explained that the sun "sets"... it suddenly clicked what "sunset" meant. Happy birthday to your sister!
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Q1) Helsinki
ReplyDeleteQ2) A bicycle
Q3) Horror
Q4) The Globe
Q5) Lucasfilm
The issue with set, is that she didn't realise what it meant when used as a verb with sun (ponerse el sol, o puesta de sol in Spanish). She asked why the verb required after sun was "set" in the exercise, as the exercise was a gap-filling one, a lot of the answers involved phrasal verbs, and she was wondering which one could be suitable. (Set, like get, and many other verbs, have so many meanings in English, it is very difficult to teach them, as you never get done with all the different meanings. You have to simplify things, but there are always surprises). When I explained that the sun "sets"... it suddenly clicked what "sunset" meant.
Happy birthday to your sister!
1 Helsinki
ReplyDelete2 Bicycle
3 Horror
4 The Globe
5 Lucasfilms
Will do, Paul! :)
ReplyDeleteI'm pitching a screenplay to a manager today. Virtually, of course. Good thing I have nerves of ... um, steel? :)
Right then. Chin up, eh? LOL!
1. Helsinki
2. bicycle
3. a horror
4. the Globe
5. Lucasfilms
I think snafu may go back to WWII. Fragging, on the other hand, could've been Vietnam.
Maybe.
I'll let you how well the watch works, so to speak. Nudge nudge, etc. :)