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20/12/12

52 weeks 52 questions, part two

BBC News - Quiz of the Year: 52 weeks 52 questions, part two BBC Accessibility links Skip to content Skip to local navigation Accessibility Help bbc.co.uk navigation News Sport Weather Travel Future TV Radio More… Search term: BBC News Magazine Home UK Africa Asia Europe Latin America Mid-East US & Canada Business Health Sci/Environment Tech Entertainment Video Magazine In Pictures Also in the News Editors' Blog Have Your Say World Radio and TV Special Reports 19 December 2012Last updated at 00:36 GMT Share this page Delicious Digg Facebook reddit StumbleUpon Twitter Email Print Quiz of the Year: 52 weeks 52 questions, part two /*div.story-body div#quiz_container{width:448px;border:1px solid;padding-left:16px;}*/

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'Tis the season to cast an eye back over the events of 2012. But how much do you remember? Test yourself with the Magazine's four-part compilation of the year's quizzes. Part two covers April to June.

Graphic

1.) Multiple Choice Question

Spaghetti Junction, one of the biggest motorway interchanges in Europe, turned 40 in May. But what is its real name?

Spaghetti JunctionCatthorpe Interchange
Gravelly Hill Interchange
Aston Expressway Interchange

2.) Multiple Choice Question

What did Starbucks do to offend its Irish customers in May?

StarbucksLaunched a Guinness-flavoured Frappuccino
Put Dublin in the wrong place on a map
Asked why they were proud to be British

3.) Multiple Choice Question

In May, a parliamentary committee hearing on long waits at British airport immigration heard from Immigration Minister Damian Green. Which unpredictable factor did he say was responsible for some of the delays?

PlaneWind
Dust
Migrating birds

4.) Multiple Choice Question

The tourist board in which nation reported a "surge" of interest from British holidaymakers after it was depicted in a particular film?

clapper boardYemen - Salmon Fishing in the Yemen
Jamaica - Marley
Palau - Journey 2: The Mysterious Island

5.) Missing Word Question

Iceman's * is world's oldest

painting
blood
language

6.) Multiple Choice Question

The average weight of an adult human is 137lb (62kg, 9.8 stones) according to a survey of the "fattest nations" in June. Micronesia and Tonga have taken the top two spots, but which European country was the highest ranked?

MeasuringEstonia
Greece
Malta

7.) Multiple Choice Question

English Education Secretary Michael Gove announced plans for children to learn and recite poetry from the age of five. In Parliament, he quoted these lines "Facts are chiels that winna ding" - penned by which poet?

GoveJames Joyce
Robert Burns
Pam Ayres

8.) Multiple Choice Question

The United Nations General Assembly was recreated in Australia in June - except instead of diplomats, each country was represented by a dog. To which breed did they all belong

DogsLabrador
West Highland terrier
Alsatian
Dachshund

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The canine conference, titled Dachshund UN, took place in Sydney, organised by performance artist Bennett Miller. It was billed as "a meditation on the utopian aspirations of the United Nations".

UN

9.) Multiple Choice Question

In June, this medal was awarded to children in the UK for the first time. Who by?

Medal The Scout Association
The British Olympic Association
The Ministry of Defence

10.) Multiple Choice Question

Scientists offered ?1,000 for a convincing explanation for the phenomenon dubbed the Mpemba Effect. What is it?

Generic science equationsWhy no two snowflakes have exactly the same shape
Why people get pins and needles
Why hot water can freeze more quickly than cold

11.) Multiple Choice Question

The Tour de France was won by Britain's Bradley Wiggins, who dominated a number of stages in the leader's yellow jersey. From which of the following is its colour derived?

Bradley WigginsThe first race sponsor
The national flag of the first winner
A public competition

12.) Multiple Choice Question

The Duchess of Cambridge and Pippa Middleton were included in New York-based Time magazine's list of the 100 most influential people in the world. But which Briton did not feature?

Pippa and KateFifty Shades of Grey writer EL James
Singer Adele
PM David Cameron

Answers

It's Gravelly Hill Interchange. The nickname, inspired by the sheer number of intersecting traffic lanes, was coined by local journalist Roy Smith in the 1970s.It's asked why they were proud to be British. The coffee chain mistakenly tweeted the question to its Irish rather than its UK followers as part of a Diamond Jubilee promotion.It was wind. The minister noted that the weather was a major factor in airport schedules.It's Yemen. A report in the Telegraph in May quoted tourism officials saying that they had had to warn people that the country did not have a salmon fishing industry.It's blood. Traces were discovered around the arrow wound of Otzi the Iceman, whose frozen body was found in the Italian Alps in 1991, some 5,300 years after he died. One scientist in May said that up until now, there had been uncertainty about how long blood could survive.It was Malta. Estonia was one of the lowest-ranked in the survey, while Greece weighed in at number 12. The UK was ranked 10th, while the US came third.It's a line from A Dream by Robert Burns. "But facts are fellows that will not be overturned /And cannot be disputed," is the translation.It was dachshund.It's the Ministry of Defence. The 200 Signals Squadron children's medal was awarded to those whose parents have served in Afghanistan. It was the brainchild of a soldier's wife.It's hot water freezing more quickly than cold. Although it has been known about for a long time, it is only in more recent years that it has been known by this name. Mpemba was a student in Tanzania, who observed the phenomenon during a cookery class in 1963. He later pursued it with a visiting academic.It's because the pages of the race sponsor's magazine, L'Auto, were yellow. It is unclear when it was first introduced, so the official date of 1919 is widely used.It's Prime Minister David Cameron. Time describes the list as the people who "inspire us, entertain us, challenge us and change our world".

Your Score

0 - 4 : Indie chart

5 - 9 : New entry

10 - 12 : Top of the pops

PLUS there's a special bonus question each day.

Pictures one and two

In addition to the 12 questions above, we also pose an extra puzzler for each of the four parts of this quiz. That's how we reached the magic total of 52 questions.

With each part of the quiz we publish photographs - the first and second of which are to the right. What is the link between the images over the four days?

You can find part one of the quiz of the year here.

For a complete archive of past quizzes and our weekly news quiz, 7 days 7 questions, visit the Magazine page and scroll down. You can follow the Magazine on Twitter and on Facebook.

Can you guess the link in our bonus question? Tell us using the form below

(Required) Name (Required) Your E-mail address (Required) Town & Country (Required) Your telephone number (Required) Comments If you are happy to be contacted by a BBC journalist please leave a telephone number that we can contact you on. In some cases a selection of your comments will be published, displaying your name as you provide it and location, unless you state otherwise. Your contact details will never be published. When sending us pictures, video or eyewitness accounts at no time should you endanger yourself or others, take any unnecessary risks or infringe any laws. Please ensure you have read the terms and conditions.

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