Q1)Emma Elizabeth Smith was killed on 3rd April, 1888. She was thought to have been a victim of whom?
Q2)3rd April is the feast day of Richard of Chichester. He’s the patron of which historic English county: Essex, Sussex or Kent?
Q3)June Brown died on 3rd April, 2022. She played Dot Branning in which BBC show?
Q4)2001: A Space Odyssey debuted on 3rd April, 1968. Who wrote the short stories the film is based on: Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke or Robert Heinlein?
Q5)Finally … ? The one hundredth Boat Race took place on 3rd April, 1954. Who won: Oxford or Cambridge?
Q5)Finally … ? The 2005 TV serial about Casanova starred David Tennent and Peter O’Toole as Giacomo. Who wrote the series: Stephen Moffat, Russell T. Davies or Chris Chibnall?
“The least I can do is speak out for the hundreds of chimpanzees who, right now, sit hunched, miserable and without hope, staring out with dead eyes from their metal prisons. They cannot speak for themselves.”
Jane Goodall, 3 April 1934 – 1 October 2025.
And music …
The next ten-question set is on 16th April: it’s about World Voice Day.
Your comments, and today’s answers, will be published in tomorrow’sTeaser.
AI is avoided when writing these questions.
Answers are as accurate as possible: at the time of writing.
Decisions about scores are final.
Thank you for coming: have a good day.
* Hello, Mum! (He was born in 1725, Mum, and *died* in 1798. The film was Hungarian.)
† Yeah, that’s I figured, Debbi: about the word ‘shiksa’. It’s one of those words with two different uses. I don’t think counts as doublespeak: that was words with two different meanings, wasn’t it?
I think doublespeak is more about using words in a way that obfuscates the purported meaning. Like saying, "There is no war." when the truth is "We're only providing military support." Or something else that obscures the whole truth.
According to Wikipedia, "Doublespeak is language that deliberately obscures, disguises, distorts, or reverses the meaning of words."
The definition includes some interesting background information about Orwell's writing and the term's loose connection to Nineteen Eighty-Four and another book he wrote: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doublespeak
1. Jack the Ripper 2. Sussex 3. EastEnders 4. Arthur C. Clarke 5. Oxford
Good luck with your foot exam. Wishing you good health.
I love it when someone comments. But, having had anonymous comments I feel may be libellous, actionable or just plain offensive, over the years?
I’d appreciate you* leaving your name — with a link to your website or social-media profile†, for preference — before you post a comment.
Should you choose to use a pseudonym/name, I’d appreciate it if that name were to be polite and inoffensive. I’d rather you kept it clean, and relatively grown up. Comments left with a pseudonym will be posted at my discretion: I really prefer a link.
Contentious, actionable or abusive posts left anonymously will not be posted. Nor will comments using offensive pseudonyms or language, or that are abusive of other commenters.
Thank you.
* I know many value their online privacy. I respect that. But hope you respect my wish to see who’s commenting on my blog: and my wish for you to introduce your self to me, and to your fellow commentors.
† Your Facebook, X/Twitter, Blogger, Instagram, TikTok or LinkedIn profile are acceptable. I also like seeing folks webpages.
1 Jack the Ripper
ReplyDelete2 Sussex
3 Eastenders
4 Arthur C Clarke
5 Oxford
I think doublespeak is more about using words in a way that obfuscates the purported meaning. Like saying, "There is no war." when the truth is "We're only providing military support." Or something else that obscures the whole truth.
ReplyDeleteAccording to Wikipedia, "Doublespeak is language that deliberately obscures, disguises, distorts, or reverses the meaning of words."
The definition includes some interesting background information about Orwell's writing and the term's loose connection to Nineteen Eighty-Four and another book he wrote: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doublespeak
1. Jack the Ripper
2. Sussex
3. EastEnders
4. Arthur C. Clarke
5. Oxford
Good luck with your foot exam. Wishing you good health.
And good luck with your trip to Romford.