Sunday, April 19, 2009

April 15 Geography Bee


Winner: Halina Pavels



Winner Halina (second from right) with hosts Abbi and Jen and runners-up Altin and Raeli.

Given the word list Republic, Kingdom, Sultanate, Principality, State, States, Federation, Confederation, Islamic, Arab, Hashemite, Oriental, Bolivarian, Democratic, Federal, Socialist, People’s, United, and of, could you tell us what kind of country Mauritania is? (It's an Islamic Republic). Spain? (A Kingdom). Somalia? (A Democratic Republic). This and other challenges faced contestants at last Wednesday's geography bee. (In case anyone's wondering, word order doesn't count, since many country names are, of course, translated from other languages).

Rather wonderfully, Libya's full name is "Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriyya," although, for that, reason, Libya was not a question at Wednesday's bee.


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Saturday, April 11, 2009

April 8 Warmup Quiz Answers

Each week at 6:30 we put out a warmup quiz.  The quizzes are due at 7:30, and the rule is "anything goes" -- logic puzzles, history, math, geography, pop culture, etc.  

The idea is that no one person could possibly get the whole thing right -- a winning score is often something like 22/40 points (so don't feel intimidated!)  

Last week's warmup was won by Rich Zwelling.  

Warmup winners win a small handful of free beer tickets, which we hope will keep them from totally dominating the game to follow ;)


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Friday, April 10, 2009

April 8 Vocabulary Tournament


Winner: Jenny Brown



Winner Jenny Brown with host Jen and 2nd runner-up Paul (runner-up M. G. Duke not pictured).

In round one, in which contestants are given three words that they must use correctly in a single sentence, our two child competitors, Ryo and Ayumu, gave us, "My mother is a murderous warlock who is sometimes intellectual" and "My brother is a rhythmic nuisance, and that's really tardy."  And from one of our adult contestants: "I went to visit my grandmother, who was looking really oblique because her bones were ameliorating, as she was suffering from a bad case of antithesis."

In round two, contestants were given a list of three words (one of them made up) and two definitions, and asked to match the words with the definitions.  For example:
THE WORDS:
ceruminous
apious
susurrant

One of these words means "WHISPERING." One means "EARWAXY." Which is which? (Answer at bottom).
In the third round, we tried a new challenge called SYNONYM ANTONYM TRUE FALSE: contestants were given thirty seconds to answer as many questions as possible with only the answers synonym, antonym, true,or false. Most contestants were able to answer between 3 and 7 of these within 30 seconds. Here is a sample (imagine you and me speeding through these as fast as possible -- answers are below):
lachrymose ebullient

bastinado is a form of torture

reticent taciturn

pastime has two t’s in it

the plural of neurosis is neuroses

gammon is a meat

withdrawal contains two a’s

ingenuous candid

deciduous trees do not shed their leaves
Jenny Brown led the pack, with 8 correct in the final round and 18 points overall!













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Come on out next Wednesday, April 15, for Geography!

(Answers: Ceruminous is earwaxy; apious is made up; susurrant is whispering.  ANT, TRUE, SYN, FALSE, TRUE, TRUE, TRUE, SYN, FALSE. Obviously, the spelling-related ones are pretty obvious when you're reading them, but much more challenging when read aloud).

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Welcome to the Chelsea Mind Games Blog

I've been posting "Winners and Photos" on a page of that title on the Chelsea Mind Games site for awhile, until that page started looking a lot like a blog, and I figured this would be easier. Want to see previous games' results?

Click here for the Winners and Photos from April 23, 2008 (the first-ever Mind Games) through April 1, 2009.