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 #1483

General Knowledge Quiz for Friday, 8 February 2013

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. Where was the record for the longest professional tennis match broken in 2010 when John Isner & Nicolas Mahut took 11 hours and 5 minutes over a three day period?

A
Australian Open
B
US Open
C
Wimbledon
D
French Open
Select from the options above.

Q2. What word is used to mean the dead skin at the base of a fingernail?

A
Clavicle
B
Reticule
C
Cubicle
D
Cuticle
Select from the options above.

Q3. The newest distinct territory in Canada, Nunavut, is contiguous or very nearly with how many other Canadian provinces or territories?

A
4
B
2
C
3
D
5
Select from the options above.

Q4. Which of these is a type of knot?

A
Bowline
B
Curtsey square
C
Sterntriangle
D
Portrow
Select from the options above.

Q5. On 31 October 1941, the USS Reuben James, a post-World War I four-funnelled Clemson-class destroyer, became the first US Navy ship to do what?

A
Sink a German U Boat
B
Successfully cross the Atlantic during World War II
C
Be sunk by hostile action in World War II
D
Support a major deep-sea diving operation
Select from the options above.

Q6. In the film "Batman Forever", released in 1995, who played the villain called "Two Face"?

A
Jim Carrey
B
Arnold Schwarzenegger
C
Danny DeVito
D
Tommy Lee Jones
Select from the options above.

Q7. Where does the phrase "show me the money" come from?

A
"Jerry Maguire", a 1996 film
B
"Oliver!", a 1960 musical
C
"Dog Day Afternoon", a 1975 film
D
"Can't Buy Me Love", a 1964 song
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.