Daily Quiz Daily

Our daily general knowledge quiz

Quiz Archive Archive

A complete history of our quiz challenges

By Subject Subjects

Choose from seven quiz categories

Personalised Personalised

Build a quiz by subject and difficulty

Daily Quiz #15

General Knowledge Quiz for Sunday, 1 February 2009

A new general knowledge quiz is available every day. Try today's quiz or work through our archive of daily and themed quizzes.

0 out of ?

Q1. In which city were the first meetings held of the General Assembly and the Security Council of the United Nations in January 1946?

A
San Francisco
B
London
C
New York
D
Geneva
Select from the options above.

Q2. Which Olympic Games were the first to be broadcast worldwide on television?

A
1972, Munich
B
1968, Mexico City
C
1964, Tokyo
D
1960, Rome
Select from the options above.

Q3. What is the name for two collections of lymphoid tissues, one on either side of the throat, level with the base of the tongue?

A
Nostrils
B
Tonsils
C
Tracheae
D
Thoraces
Select from the options above.

Q4. What is the name of the stadium in The Bronx in New York City which was the home baseball park of the New York Yankees from 1923 to 2008?

A
The Cake Tin
B
Yankee Stadium
C
Lords
D
The New York Met
Select from the options above.

Q5. Who, when Secretary-General of the U.N., was killed in a plane crash in Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) in 1961?

A
U Thant
B
Trygve Lie
C
Dag Hammarskjöld
D
Kurt Waldheim
Select from the options above.

Q6. What was the title of the film directed by and starring Clint Eastwood that was about a thinly disguised episode in John Huston's life?

A
Making of the African Queen
B
White Hunter, Black Heart
C
In The Line Of Fire
D
Heartbreak Ridge
Select from the options above.

Q7. What man-made waterway was constructed between 1859 and 1869?

A
Corinth Canal
B
Panama Canal
C
Kiel Canal
D
Suez Canal
Select from the options above.
0%
There are 0 questions in this quiz.
You've completed 0 questions.
You've answered 0 questions correctly.
You've answered 0 questions incorrectly.