Mr. Know-it-all
This game is very simple. It’s for those boys and girls who know a
lot about English-speaking countries and want to earn the title “Mr. Know-it-all”. It
can be a contest among three groups of school students – the 9th, 10th and 11th forms
during the English subject week at school, or it can be a merry hour just in the 9th, 10th
or 11th forms at the lesson. Several English songs will be very good to begin with and a
large sweet cake to be awarded to the winner or winners.
Good luck!
School No. 5,
Vishney Volochok, Tver Region |
Form 9
10 points
1. How many countries does the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland consist of?
a) 3
b) 2
c) 4
d) 5
2. Which flower is the national emblem of Wales?
a) a rose
b) a daffodil
c) a clover
d) a lily
3. What is the capital of Scotland?
a) Glasgow
b) New Castle
c) Edinburgh
d) Cardiff
4. What is Ben Nevis?
a) a lake
b) a mountain
c) a river
d) a city
20 points
5. In what British city can you see a monument to Walter Scott?
a) London
b) Manchester
c) Edinburgh
d) Leeds
6. In what part of the UK is New Year’s Day a big holiday?
a) Wales
b) Northern Ireland
c) England
d) Scotland
7. What monument is located in Trafalgar Square?
a) Elizabeth II
b) William the Conquerer
c) Admiral Nelson
d) Benjamin Britten
8. Scotland is known to the world because of its traditional costume?
What is it?
a) a kilt
b) a wig
c) a pipe
d) a straw hat
30 points
9. In Scotland people like listening to the pipes. What do people in
Wales like to listen to?
a) a violin
b) a harp
c) a piano
d) a trombone
10. The contests of the National Eisteddfod in Wales organized by
a) the Druids
b) athletes
c) ascetics
d) singers
11. Which of these women is called the grandmother of English detective
stories?
a) Chareotte Bronte
b) Anna Sewell
c) Iris Merdock
d) Agatha Cristie
40 points
12. Which of these men was the author of the first English explanatory
dictionary?
a) Samuel Johnson
b) Charles Dickens
c) Cliff Richard
d) Geoffrey Chaucer
13. Whose name is connected with the name of Robin Hood?
a) Earl Hanthington
b) Baron Newston
c) Robert Bruce
d) William Wallace
14. One of these famous writers signed her first works with the
pen-name Mary Wistmakot. Who was it?
a) Emily Bronte
b) Agatha Cristie
c) Charlotte Bronte
d) Beatrix Potter
50 points
15. Which country in the UK was called Ulster not long ago?
a) Scotland
b) England
c) Northern Ireland
d) Wales
16. Who is the author of the book, whose main characters are Trulala
and Tralala?
a) Oscar Wilde
b) Luice Caral
c) Charles Dickens
d) Donald Bisset
17. Do you know this English proverb? Give its Russian equivalent,
please.
“To make a mountain out of a molehill.”
KEYS: 1. c; 2. b; 3. c; 4. b; 5. c; 6. d;
7. c; 8. a; 9. b; 10. a; 11. c; 12. a; 13. a;
14. b; 15. c; 16. b; 17. Делать из мухи слона.
Form 10
10 points
1. How many states are there in the United States today?
a) 49
b) 50
c) 52
d) 51
2. What is the national game of Canada?
a) boxing
b) base-ball
c) hockey
d) tennis
3. Which of these men is called the King of Rock-n-Roll?
a) Michael Jackson
b) Elvis Presley
c) Tom Jones
d) John Lennon
4. Why do we add the word “city” when speaking about New York City?
a) to point out that it’s a very big city
b) to make it sound more American
c) to distinguish it from the state
d) to emphasise its history
20 points
5. What do the stripes on the American flag mean?
a) the number of heroes in the war against England
b) the number of the original states which declared themselves free from England
c) the number of the first five cities after that war
d) the number of the most famous battles
6. What country presented the USA with the statue of Liberty?
a) Spain
b) England
c) Russia
d) France
7. When do people in the USA celebrate Independence Day?
a) May
b) June
c) July
d) August
8. In which English-speaking country was basketball invented?
a) the USA
b) Canada
c) Australia
d) New Zealand
30 points
9. Which state in the USA is the largest?
a) Texas
b) Colorado
c) Tennessee
d) Alaska
10. Which city in Canada is called the home of the French nation?
a) Toronto
b) Hamilton
c) Quebec
d) Montreal
11. Who is supposed to be the designer of the American flag?
a) James Madison
b) Betsy Ross
c) Harriet Beecher Stowe
d) Marquis de Lafayette
40 points
12. What is the biggest city in the USA today?
a) New York
b) Los Angeles
c) Chicago
d) Baltimore
13. What was the name of the English colonists who came to Northern
America in 1620?
a) Pilgrim Fathers
b) Protestant Brothers
c) Sons and Daughters of Old English
d) Loyal Friends
14. What was William Sidney Porter’s pen name?
a) Mark Twain
b) Eugene O’Neill
c) Jack London
d) O’Henry
50 points
15. Which English-speaking country is translated from Indian as
“little huts”?
a) the USA
b) Canada
c) New Zealand
d) Australia
16. New York City lies on islands. The biggest of them – Manhattan
– was bought from Indians by which group?
a) the Spaniards
b) the Dutch
c) the English
d) the Portuguese
17. Do you know this English proverb? Give its Russian equivalent,
please.
“To beat the air.”
KEYS: 1. b; 2. c; 3. b; 4. c; 5. b; 6. d;
7. c; 8. a; 9. d; 10. c; 11. b; 12. b; 13. a;
14. d; 15. b; 16. b; 17. Носить воду решетом или
воду в ступе толочь.
Form 11
10 points
1. What English-speaking country is referred to as “down under”.
a) Canada
b) the USA
c) Australia
d) England
2. Which of these men was the first to see New Zealand?
a) Christopher Columbus
b) Mickluhho-Maklai
c) Captain Cook
d) Captain Tasman
3. Which of these people are native New Zealanders?
a) the Maoris
b) the Eskimos
c) the Indians
d) the English
4. How many senators are there in the USA Congress?
a) 50
b) 100
c) 70
d) 150
20 points
5. At what age can young people drink alcoholic drinks in the USA?
a) 16
b) 18
c) 20
d) 21
6. Who discovered Canada more than 1,000 years ago?
a) the Russians
b) the Vikings
c) the French
d) the English
7. What famous actress played the lead in the film “Gone with the
Wind”?
a) Lisa Minelli
b) Vivien Leigh
c) Whoopi Goldberg
d) Julia Roberts
8. Which of these American cities is the capital of the national auto
industry?
a) Chicago
b) New York City
c) Boston
d) Detroit
30 points
9. Where is Hollywood situated?
a) Alabama
b) Iowa
c) California
d) New Jersey
10. What was the first name of New York City?
a) New Castle
b) New Moscow
c) New Rome
d) New Amsterdam
11. What does the name “Mississippi” mean?
a) big river
b) green water
c) dangerous place
d) blessed river
40 points
12. Which of these US states name means snow-capped?
a) Vermont
b) Montana
c) Nevada
d) Maine
13. Alaska was bought by the USA from Russia. What country did
California first belong to?
a) Brazil
b) Venezuela
c) Spain
d) Mexico
14. The name of what state is translated as “friends” from Indian?
a) Florida
b) Texas
c) Michigan
d) Indiana
50 points
15. Who was the second president of the USA?
a) Abraham Lincoln
b) James Madison
c) John Adams
d) Thomas Jefferson
16. When was the Constitution of the United States drafted?
a) 1787
b) 1790
c) 1805
d) 1810
17. Do you know this English proverb? Give its Russian equivalent,
please.
“To let the grass grow under one’s feet.”
KEYS: 1. c; 2. d; 3. a; 4. b; 5. d; 6. b; 7. b;
8. d; 9. c; 10. d; 11. a; 12. c; 13. d; 14. b;
15. c; 16. a; 17. Сидеть сложа руки. Ждать у моря
погоды.
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