News0 min ago
Quiz-entrants' mentality
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Quizmonster. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think Google is largely to blame as we've seen with Inf*ntigo et al. Anyone typing "Sunday Times Quiz", may well be brought to Answerbank.
It is however very blunt to just post a question as thus; "Sunday Times Quiz No 23 b & c also 25 a & e ", I think.
Yeah, Boo! to quiz wimps. They could also try looking in newsgroups; rec.puzzles for instance 128,00 threads there. http://groups.google.co.uk/groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF
-8&oe=UTF-8&safe=off&group=rec.puzzles
Dede, My post referred to quiz-competitions. As I do not take any of the newspapers apparently involved in inciting the current frenzy for 'labour-free' answers, I have no idea what closing-dates are involved. However - though this may well not apply to you personally - it seems pretty clear to me that people are still hoping to enter and perhaps win by using them.
I asked earlier whether you would provide - or even ask for - answers to/from other teams at a pub quiz. Well, would you? If you ever do attend such quizzes, you will almost certainly have come across one of life's most annoying bores. He's the guy at the corner of the bar who insists on doing what you seem to believe is OK..."sharing answers" loudly with all and sundry.
All newspapers publish the answers to their quizzes eventually, so why not just wait? If the curiosity to know them is overwhelming and genuine, why not wait until after the closing-date at least before asking around on sites such as this one? Doing so before that is clearly, at best, 'suspect', whether that fact annoys you or not.
(Internet research is perfectly acceptable, but I hope you're not suggesting that posting an AnswerBank question that reads: "What's the answer to Question 24 in the 'Sunday Times' quiz?" amounts to Internet research!)
'Hoe' is a standard abbreviation among American rap-artists etc for a word meaning 'lady of easy virtue', though for them it appears to signify little more than a somewhat downmarket 'girlfriend'. In addition, Norfolk is a city in Virginia, USA, as well as an English county. I thought combining the two words/ideas was a brilliant concept. So, I certainly do know what a "Norfolk hoe" is as far as I'm concerned! Given that the OED has never heard of any such implement, I'm quite happy never to have heard of it either. Cheers
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.