Monday, December 01, 2008 | 3:43 p.m.

Trivia Bits by Paul Paquet

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Paul Paquet

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  • Trivia Bits, December 1
    Word of the week: "snow," specifically the Eskimo words for "snow." The idea that Eskimos have dozens of words for snow reflects the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis that language is shaped by our experience of the world. Actually, Eskimo …

  • Trivia Bits, November 29
    STAN'S WEEKLY TRIVIA CHALLENGE CONTEST NO. 113 What legendary figure from American history was once known as "Duck Bill" because of the shape of his nose and mouth? HOW TO WIN: Send your answer, with your full name and address, either by e-…

  • Trivia Bits, November 28
    The related words "denim" and "jeans" both have a geographical ancestry. "Denim" is derived from the French fabric "serge de Nimes," Nimes being the city where it was first made. "Jeans" comes from …

  • Trivia Bits, November 27
    Eponym of the week: Japanese engineer Tadao Kashio, who, with his father and three brothers, founded in 1946 what would become the Casio Computer Company. In 1954, Casio debuted its first calculator — the first with a 10-key number pad and a …

Trivia Bits, August 12

Our recent Bit about Phyllis Diller's onetime association with jazz great Dizzy Gillespie prompted Mark Morelli of San Ramon, Calif., to let us know about Ms. Diller's lesser-known, quite serious musical background. She studied piano at a Chicago music conservatory for three years, and after she became famous for her comedy, appeared as a piano soloist with over 100 symphony orchestras in the U.S. and Canada.

Good old quotable Ben Franklin, by his own admission, was the originator of less than 10 percent of the sayings attributed to him through their appearances in his "Poor Richard's Almanack." Franklin asked rhetorically in his 1747 Almanack, "Why then should I give my readers bad lines of my own, when good ones of other people's are so plenty?"

The total number of pages in the U.S.
hardcover editions of the seven Harry Potter novels of J.K. Rowling is approximately:
A) 2,100
B) 3,100
C) 4,100
D) 5,100

Previous answer: Marie Antoinette was born an archduchess of Austria, in Vienna.

TRIVIA FANS: Send the trivia questions you've always wanted answered, or original TriviaBits ideas of your own, with your full name and hometown, to Stan Newman at StanTrivia@aol.com or on a postcard to P.O. Box 69, Massapequa Park, NY 11762.

COPYRIGHT 2008 STANLEY NEWMAN
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Originally Published on Tuesday August 12, 2008

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