Pub Quiz thread

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You got there Yorkie !!! The club was initially formed in 1848, in the 'Buttlische Brauerei zum Bayerischen Lowen´a Munich pub, at a time of revolutionary upheaval and was banned by the Bavarian monarchy in 1849 for so called ''republican activities'. It was then reformed officially in 1860 - hence the name. If you take their initial birth as being 1848 then it would make them the oldest (still existing) football club in the World. It should be remembered that German clubs are not exclusively football clubs but are sports ones. The name TSV 1860 Munich stands for Turn und Sportsverein (ie. gymnastic and sports club). Even Bayern Munich are not strictly a football club for this reason. 1860 Munich were the top club in the city until the 1970s when Bayern turned everything upside down. Bayern had had a chequered history and had been heavily discriminated against during the Nazi period when they were labelled as a Jüdenklub (Jewish club) along with FK Austria Vienna, Eintracht Frankfurt and FSV Frankfurt - because of their ownership and coaching. Their chairman spent the war years in exile and they nearly folded completely. Over to you.
Phew! An interesting challenge!
 
As I feared - I have to dream up a question.
OK. What is the name of the oldest surviving steam locomotive. And where is it, in case the question is simple ?!
 
As I feared - I have to dream up a question.
OK. What is the name of the oldest surviving steam locomotive. And where is it, in case the question is simple ?!
By 'surviving' do you mean still in operation ? If not then it's Puffing Billy (used in a colliery in 1815) which is in the science museum in London.
 
Too good - too quick. Yes , it's Puffing Billy and yes it's in the Science museum.
Next time I win I'll have a devilish question on locomotive names - I promise !
Well done , if not very challenging. Anyway, over to you.
 
Cheers Bodbo. A fun one - guessing is allowed. Here are twelve cities, the only way we have of identifying them is by the 3 most common family names found there. In order of popularity.

A) Brown, Smith, Patel
B) Williams, Johnson, Rodriguez
C) Garcia, Smith, Lopez
D) Smith, Brown, Tremblay
E) Tremblay, Gagnon, Roy
F) Diallo, Bah, Barry
G) Smith, Campbell, Brown
H) Yilmaz, Kaya, Demir
I) Jones, Smith, Williams
J) Smith, Jones, Kaur
K) Lee, Wang, Chen
L) Müller, Schmitz, Schneider

and for a bonus M) Nagy, Kovacs, Toth

A couple of these are quite easy some are more difficult, and two of them I didn't believe at first. The closest to twelve wins. They are all large cities.
 
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A) London
B) somewhere in the US
c) somewhere in california or is it syndey
D) Toronto
E)Quebec
f) Brussels
g) Renfrew? Somewhere in Scotland Glasgow?
h) Istanbul
i) Chester
j) Birmingham
k)Melbourne
l) Koln .... Scmitz seems to originate from a broadish area??
M) budapest


all guesses after a lot of comparing etc
 
A) London
B) somewhere in the US
c) somewhere in california or is it syndey
D) Toronto
E)Quebec
f) Brussels
g) Renfrew? Somewhere in Scotland Glasgow?
h) Istanbul
i) Chester
j) Birmingham
k)Melbourne
l) Koln .... Scmitz seems to originate from a broadish area??
M) budapest


all guesses after a lot of comparing etc
I'll give you that Yorkie - only two are wrong. K) is San Francisco (hence the clue - close to C which is Los Angeles) B) suggested a less strong Spanish connection and is more likely to be in the north of the USA - in this case New York (Where was Boris Johnson born :angel:). Schmitz is the variation of Schmidt found in the Rhineland area - hence Cologne or Düsseldorf. So all you need is a big city (Chester is too small) with a Welsh family name at the top - in this case it's Liverpool. Lee, Wong and Chen are anglicized versions of Chinese names (in China they would be LI and Zheng) and San Francisco has the highest Chinese popoulation out side of Asia. The most surprising one for me was Brussels. So the full list was:
A) London
B) New York
C) Los Angeles
D) Toronto
E) Quebec
F) Brussels
G) Glasgow
H) Istanbul
I) Liverpool
J) Birmingham (Kaur is the female version of Singh)
K) San Francisco
L) Cologne
M) Budapest

Over to you <applause>
 
I'll give you that Yorkie - only two are wrong. K) is San Francisco (hence the clue - close to C which is Los Angeles) B) suggested a less strong Spanish connection and is more likely to be in the north of the USA - in this case New York (Where was Boris Johnson born :angel:). Schmitz is the variation of Schmidt found in the Rhineland area - hence Cologne or Düsseldorf. So all you need is a big city (Chester is too small) with a Welsh family name at the top - in this case it's Liverpool. Lee, Wong and Chen are anglicized versions of Chinese names (in China they would be LI and Zheng) and San Francisco has the highest Chinese popoulation out side of Asia. The most surprising one for me was Brussels. So the full list was:
A) London
B) New York
C) Los Angeles
D) Toronto
E) Quebec
F) Brussels
G) Glasgow
H) Istanbul
I) Liverpool
J) Birmingham (Kaur is the female version of Singh)
K) San Francisco
L) Cologne
M) Budapest

Over to you <applause>
Very interesting.. .I also am surprised there is such a big sikh population in Birmingham.


OK easy one.... who feels bad about what he did to a sea creature in the 70s