In fact it would be cheap at a trillion times the price, which you can’t say of most things. The Money Quiz is also in its humble way heroic. It dares to dive deep beneath the surface — to ask the tough questions that are all too often undeservedly ignored. How would Bill Gates rank as a national economy? Who was the joker that invented income tax? We don’t claim the quiz will make you wealthy, but then in our experience not much does.
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September 14, 2015
August 26, 2015
It’s time to face the Music Theory Quiz
Nick wrote this quiz a few years ago, releasing the questions in a series of blog posts, but it was always intended that it would eventually land at Trivia Park, and here it is at last.
For those whose musical nerdiness transcends conventional bounds, we trust that this quiz will prove a delightful playground of the mind. Other users are advised to sharpen their intuitions to a needle-point en route to the title page.
August 22, 2015
Instant log-in using a Facebook account
A few weeks ago we introduced a site membership system, so that Trivia Park users can now do things like review their past quiz results and resume unfinished quizzes from earlier sessions.
For the convenience of Facebook users, we have now added one-step log-in combined with automatic account creation on Trivia Park. When you use this log-in link or the one at the top of the page on the site, you’ll now see a Log in with Facebook button above the other controls. If you’re currently logged in with Facebook, clicking the button logs you in to Trivia Park immediately, and sets up your permanent site membership automatically. If you have a Facebook membership but aren’t logged in, Facebook will log you into their system first, then your Trivia Park log-in will proceed without interruption.
Go ahead — give it a try!
August 15, 2015
Thanks for joining Trivia Park
For the first time in our history, Trivia Park is now offering park memberships. If you have already joined, thanks for being one of the first to sign up. We look forward to offering an increasing range of services to our members in the weeks and months ahead.
July 21, 2015
A new quiz about a beloved character…
Our brand-new Anne Shirley, Part One quiz celebrates one of the most memorable literary characters ever created.
The quiz covers Anne’s first year at Green Gables, a year of dreadful scrapes, agonizing despairs, and glorious delights.
November 16, 2011
The Neapolitan
All good things must come to an end. So must all long and arduous ordeals, and it’s a good thing. Today’s question is the one that completes our new music theory quiz for TriviaPark.com and AheadWithMusic.com, and frankly it’s kind of a tough one. But if you don’t know the answer, what better way to hone your intuition than by forging blindly into:
Ice-cream is not the answer
To a classical musician, who or what is ‘The Neapolitan’?
- A celebrated composer, Domenico Scarlatti, born in Naples
- A concert hall in Vienna where Mozart’s greatest works were introduced
- A distinctive-sounding chord, the ‘Neapolitan sixth’
- An opera of Gioachino Rossini, his last, tragically incomplete
Answer
November 14, 2011
Broken Globe
There’s already a Shakespeare quiz at TriviaPark.com, so today’s question may have to fit in somewhere else. It concerns an event that to Will Shakespeare would have been both a drama and a tragedy. Find out more, as we play…
Guess the catastrophe
William Shakespeare’s professional home for most of his career was The Globe, a celebrated London theater that unfortunately did not outlast even him. It met its demise in 1613, three years before Shakespeare’s own death. How was The Globe destroyed?
- Collapsed: the upper stands gave way when a record crowd rioted during a dull show
- Demolished: to build a luxury villa, Rochester Hall, on the same site
- Incinerated: when cannon-fire used in Shakespeare’s Henry VIII ignited the straw roof
- Torn apart: by a Protestant mob outraged by supposed ‘code-words’ in certain plays
Answer
November 13, 2011
Rhythm fascination
Today we come to the second-last question in the music theory quiz we’re putting together for TriviaPark.com and AheadWithMusic.com. Looking at the meter — the rhythmic pulse — of some common musical forms, we ask:
Who’s got the time?
Which of the following musical forms typically uses six-eight rhythm?
- A Baroque minuet
- A Celtic jig
- A Scott Joplin piano rag
- A Sousa march
Answer
November 9, 2011
Guido
Today’s question is the eighth of the 10-question music theory quiz that’s currently under construction for TriviaPark.com and AheadWithMusic.com. We cast our minds back to the Italian city-state of Arezzo just about a millennium ago, and ask:
What did Guido do?
Guido d’Arezzo was an 11th-century Benedictine monk who is celebrated for an important contribution to the history of music. What did he do?
- Invented the clarinet
- Revolutionized musical notation
- Was the first to combine voice and instruments in the same work
- Wrote the melody that became the song Greensleeves
Answer
The microtone
Today’s question is the seventh in a 10-question music theory quiz for TriviaPark.com and AheadWithMusic.com. If you have a taste for slightly out-of-the-way musical jargon, you may already know the answer to:
What is a microtone?
Which of the following definitions most accurately captures the meaning of the word ‘microtone’?
- A separation of pitch smaller than a semitone
- A short musical work stating a single melodic idea
- A sound too brief or too quiet to register fully with an audience
- A special microphone for recording tones