Weekly Quiz 2015: 5 Quiz by Michele Lopez “Reggie”

RESULTS:  Michele Lopez “Reggie” has created a winner!  Lots of positive comments on this week’s quiz. Taking honours were: Denny Dobry “Kirby,” Elinor Gray “Misty” and our Team, Margie Deck “Gwen” and Sheila Holtgrieve “Daisy.”  Well done, all!  And “Thank You” Michele for a Canonical Taste of Italy.  Answers here:  2015-5 Weekly Quiz Italy Answers

Sorry, Buttons is a day late . . . Download here:  2015-5 Weekly Quiz Italy

This week’s quiz was created by our Member from Italy and President of Uno Studio in Holmes, Michele Lopez “Reggie.”  Please submit your solutions by noon Wednesday, January 28 to: buttons@johnhwatsonsociety.com

Weekly Quiz: 2015 #4

RESULTS:  Michele Lopez, Denny Dobry, Margie Deck and Sheila Holtgrieve all got the usual answer of Paganini, who played on a single E string.  However, Michele Lopez “Reggie” also added the oft-overlooked Canonical reference to Charlie Peace in ILLU. Charlie was a real criminal who appeared on stage with a one-string violin act. He can be found in Tracy’s Encyclodpedia Sherlockiana and in Wikipedia. Congratulations all!

Here is a single question quiz for this week. Please submit answer by Noon Wednesday, January 21, 2015 to buttons@johnhwatsonsociety.com.

Who was a skilled player of the single-stringed violin?

Weekly Quiz 2015:2 Denny Dobry’s “Kirby” Quiz

RESULTS: Sheila Holtgrieve “Daisy” and Margie Deck “Gwen” took honors this week, as they usually do. THanks to Denny Dobry “Kirby” for creating the quiz. Anyone else feel up to writing a quiz? Send them to Buttons.

This week’s quiz is written by Quiz Master Denny Dobry “Kirby” of Reading PA. Denny is the two-time Honors holder in the Individual category of The John H Watson International Invitational Canonical Treasure Hunt.

Please submit answers to Buttons by Wednesday noon, January 14, 2015. buttons@johnhwatsonsociety.com

Enjoy!

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Weekly Quiz:  51  The Pawky Puzzler’s Christmas Quiz

This week’s quiz is the Pawky Puzzler’s Christmas Quiz for your Yuletide enjoyment and delectation.  We thank Margie Deck “Gwen,” our intrepid Quiz Maven from the SOBs in Seattle for her fine work in creating this unique and fun quiz. Submit your answers by Christmas Eve, 24 December.

Good Luck to All!  And to All, “The Compliments of the Season!”

2014_christmas_quiz_questions.doc

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Weekly Quiz 49

RESULTS:  No takers this week!  We will reserve the quiz for another attempt at a later date.

This week’s quiz is all about crime.  Please send solutions to Buttons by noon, Wednesday, December 10, 2014.  Good luck!

weekly_quiz_49_questions_crimes.docx

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A Brief Hiatus

Both this week’s Quiz and Weekly Forum will take a brief hiatus, so you can enjoy your holiday time with family and friends. We will return on Friday, December 5 with the Quiz, and Tuesday, December 9 with the Weekly Forum.

Weekly Quiz 47

RESULTS:  Paul Hartnett “Scout” was first in with all correct solutions.  Ariana Maher “Carla” was also “all correct” and second in.  Congratulations on a tough quiz.  Answers below.

Here is a little quiz that asks you to get inside Doctor Watson’s head and hear his inner thoughts.  The clues are paraphrased, but the actual thoughts of Watson can be deduced from the paraphrasing. Please identify the written text, the book or story and the page number in Doubleday, 1930, The Complete Sherlock Holmes.

Solutions to buttons@johnhwatsonsociety.com by noon Wednesday, November 26.

Happy Thanksgiving to all of our American colleagues in the Colonies.

weekly_quiz_47_questions_and_answers.docx

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Weekly Quiz 46: A Stumper

Weekly Quiz 46
Question

RESULTS:  First in with the correct answer is Patricia Villicrusis “Helena” with a correct answer for the Honours.  Second in was Team SOB, Margie Deck “Gwen” and Sheila Holtgrieve “Daisy” also with a correct solution.  Denny Dobry “Kirby” was third in with another corrrect solution.

The solution was found in VALL, Jean Babtiste Greuze, the French painter, one of whose paintings was owned by Moriarty according to Holmes.  He was buried with immortelles (daisies) on his coffin.  The alternative answer, also correct, was Napoleon who also was buried with immortelles on his coffin and who was referenced when Holmes called Moriarty “The Napoleon of Crime.”

Congratulations on a particularly obscure quiz question.

This week, we give you a stumper:

On this person’s coffin were laid immortelles. Culturally, references to this individual appear in the works of numerous mystery writers and, specifically, in the Canon, where Holmes makes this person’s connection to Moriarty.

Please submit solutions by noon, Wednesday, November 19, 2014 to
buttons@johnhwatsonsociety.com

Weekly Quiz 45: Random Questions

RESULTS: Denny Dobry “Kirby,” and Sheils Holtgrieve “Daisy” and Margie Deck “Gwen” were 9/10 this week. Latin in the Canon is pesky, although all came up with plausible, if slightly wide of the mark, alternatives. Answers below.

This week’s quiz returns to those pesky random questions. Please submit solutions by noon, November 14, 2014 to buttons@johnhwatsonsociety.com

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weekly_quiz_45_questions

Weekly Quiz 44

RESULTS:  Denny Dobry “Kirby” was first in for Individual Honors and Margie Deck “Gwen” and Sheila Holtgrieve “Daisy” took Team Honors.  They were the only three with the correct solution to “Lord George” Sanger of Sanger’s Circus. He was given the name His Lordship by his father because of his love of fine clothing. His brother, John Sanger, was known as Gentleman John and not Lord John as erroneously reported in Tracy’s Encyclopaedia. Sanger’s was the largest circus in England, and George Sanger greatly admired P.T. Barnum.  Referenced in VEIL.  Well Done to our three Invincibles!

Buttons is feeling a bit otherworldly given that it is Samhain. So, a single question quiz:

This gentleman, his Lordship George, was prominent in this circle. Please name who, what and the book or story in which he is referenced.

Please submit solutions to buttons@johnhwatsonsociety.com by noon Wednesday, November 5, 2014.

Weekly Quiz 42

RESULTS:  Margie Deck “Gwen” and Sheila Holtgrieve “Daisy” give us 11/10 with the most creative answer as an extra.  Denny Dobry “Kirby” was a close second.

The Team SOB answer to question #1 was a rich pun:

1. A toast of the British Navy.

Answer: Phelp’s missing Naval Treaty.  Holmes states that Mrs. Hudson has  “…a good idea of breakfast as a Scotchwoman.”; toast is part of a full Scottish Breakfast. The Naval Treaty was placed under the dome of the breakfast plate. NAVA, W., p. 465-466.

Pawky!

The original answer is in the answers below.

NOTE: A correction has been made to Question #9.

This week’s quiz is random. Please submit solutions by noon, October 22, 2014 to buttons@johnhwatsonsociety.com

 

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Weekly Quiz 41

Last week was Interiors; this week is Exteriors.  Please identify the exterior described and cite the book or story and page number in Doubleday’s one-volume edition of 1930.  Solutions by 12 noon, Wednesday, October 15th please.

This quiz reveals how much Doctor Watson tended to use the same details over again; sort of an exterior recycling.

file_download.pngDownload Week 41 Questions

Weekly Quiz: 40

RESULTS:  Denny Dobry “Kirby” was first in with 10/10 and alternative answers. Margie Deck “Gwen” and Sheila Holtgrieve “Daisy” took the Team honors with 10/10 and also alternative answers.  Great Job, All!

Answers below:

This week’s quiz is all about interiors.  Where are the interiors described found?  Story, book and page number, please.  Solutions to Buttons by noon Wednesday, 8 October 2014.

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Week 40 Questions and Answers

Weekly Quiz: 39

Numbers! Amazing Numbers! (REVISED BELOW)

RESULT:  We DO have a few mathematicians!

Denny Dobry “Kirby” was in first with the correct answer. Sheila Holtgrieve was just slightly later with a more expansive correct answer and we will publish her solution as the answer:

111 Baker Street is the actual address of 221b according to Dr. Gary Chandler Biggs.  111 is a palindrome (reads the same forwards as backwards).  111,111,111 squared is 12,345,678,987,654,321.  This is also a palindrome.  Written out it is:  Twelve quadrillion, three hundred forty-five trillion, six hundred seventy-eight billion, nine hundred eighty-seven million, six hundred fifty-four thousand, three hundred twenty-one.  Add a two to the last number and you get 221.

Pascal’s Triangle is also a form of palindrome.  The triangle can be used to work with the binomial theorem.  Professor Moriarty wrote a treatise on the binomial theorem “At the age of 21 he wrote a treatise upon the binomial theorem, which has had a European vogue.” FINA, W., p. 470.

Note that the last two numbers of 111,111,111 squared are 21, the age that Moriarty wrote the treatise.

Congratulations to Denny and Sheila!  You can’t make this stuff up!

Question:

This week’s quiz concerns numbers, specifically 221B Baker Street and the history of the numbers of that address.

Our favourite house in London with its seventeen steps that our good Dr Watson called “221B Baker Street” was actually “30 York Place,” but York Place was a very short street joining Baker Street and Upper Baker Street, and was renamed at a later date.  The number of the house written of by Dr Watson is known today as 111 Baker Street.

Mrs Hudson’s house was definitively identified by Dr Gray Chandler Briggs, from his discovery in 1930 of a building with the plaque “Camden House” affixed to its outside.  As we know from “The Adventure of the Empty House,” it is directly across from our beloved 221B.

The literary agent, Doyle, chalked it all up to coincidence. However, these coincidences (or realities) support an almost mystical numeric fact.

If we accept 111 as the original Holmesian/Watsonian address, this leads us to a very interesting numeric quiz:

111 is a palindromic number.  Now, multiply this by itself. Look at that number.  It is also a palindromic number.  Now, square the number 111,111,111 and what do you get? Notice that number backwards. Isn’t that astounding?

You CAN do this. It’s just multiplication!  Buttons figured it out on a piece of foolscap with a pencil.

Express the answer as a number and in words.  Solutions by Wednesday, October 1, 2014.  Do we have mathematically-inclined Quiz Masters? Who will be first?

Weekly Quiz: 38

RESULTS:  Beth Gallego “Selena” was first in with 10/10.  Denny Dobry “Kirby” was next with 10/10. Team SOB with Sheila Holtgrieve “Daisy” and Margie Deck “Gwen” were 10/10 in the team category. Congratulations to all.  Answers below.

This week’s quiz concerns real and fictional places mentioned in the Canon.  Please choose either “Real” or “Fictional” for each answer, name the place referred to, and cite the book or story where it appears.

Solutions to buttons@johnhwatsonsociety.com by Noon Wednesday, September 24th.  Enjoy!

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Download Week 38 Questions and Answers.

Weekly Quiz: 37

RESULTS:  Three Members found the solution to this incredibly difficult bit of arcane Canonical trivia:Michael Ellis “Lobo” was first-in, followed by Denny Dobry “Kirby” and Beth Gallego “Selena” who provided the most complete answer:

Yule is (was) Sir Henry Yule, co-author of Hobson-Jobson: The Definitive Glossary of British India. The other half of the writing team was Arthur Coke Burnell. The glossary contains, among other terms, “Penang lawyer”, the type of walking stick that appears at the beginning of HOUN.

The reference is found as the last entry of the Bibliography of Jack Tracy’s The Encyclopedia Sherlockiana.
Congratulations to the three people in the world who knew this answer!

Question:
Buttons is a bit squishy this week with work on the journal.  Have an easy week and see if you can solve this single question:

Half the team was Yule who understood Colonial Indian culture referred to in the Canon.  Who and what? Who was the other half of the team?

Submissions may be sent up to 12 Noon on Wednesday, 17 September 2014. Email to buttons@johnhwatsonsociety.com

Weekly Quiz: 36

RESULTS:  You DO like simple and fun!  So many more players this week!  Buttons was overwhelmed.

Michele Lopez “Reggie” from Italy’s Uno Studio in Holmes was first in with 100%.
He was followed in just minutes by Melissa Anderson “Faith” with 100%.  Denny Dobry “Kirby” was next with 100%.  Sheila Holtgrieve “Daisy” was next with 100%. Michael Ellis “Lobo” came next with 100%. Beth Gallego “Selena” finished with another 100%.  Everybody got Honours!  And nobody picked up on the reference in the set-up to “jeopardy.”  This quiz was modeled after Ken Jennings’ weekly quiz in Parade magazine where he has five things that are all the same. Answers below.

After the grueling and exhausting Treasure Hunt, we return to our Weekly Quiz with a fun and simple one this week having to do with similarities.  Please submit solutions by 7 PM EST, Wednesday, 10 September 2014. You’ll get these fast without any jeopardy.

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Download Week 36 Questions and Answers