१ नोव्हेंबर, २०१२
"Ancient Romans knew this animal featured in their circuses as a hippotigris."
Answer, without looking it up, in 30 seconds, with nerve-wracking music playing.
याची सदस्यत्व घ्या:
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To live freely in writing...
३६ टिप्पण्या:
Horse tiger.
Iranian sex tourist.
Horse tiger is right.
Zebra. Makes you wonder what the potamus part of hippopotamus means. Something related to water, I presume.
potamus = river. think mesopotamia
Yes. Hippopotamus means "river horse" Mesopotamia means "between the rivers" (the Tigris and Euphrates). Potomac River seems like it would mean "river river" but it is actually from an unrelated Indian word.
potamus = river. think mesopotamia
Think "potable water" instead. Then go to "river."
I knew it was zebra even though the answer wasn't in the free version I got to see.
What, then, would a hippopompatus be?
Maurice--horse's ass.
Hiphopopotamus vs. Rhymenoceros
Zebra?
I knew "hippo" mean horse, but I would have had a hard time seeing "tigris" as a unit and making what would then be an easy leap to zebra.
I saw the "ti" as a nonsense bit of connectivity between "hippo" and "gris." I know "gris" as the French word for "gray." I'm afraid I would have wasted my time thinking about a gray horse and scribbled "donkey" ... even though what kind of circus animal is a donkey.
Figgered it out in the time allowed.
Hippo=horse
tigris=(I thought tiger)maybe striped
Striped horse=Zebra
Da' nuns would be proud!
Tigris as in the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers.
I didn't get it in time, which is exactly why I could never compete in Jeopardy.
"I know which part of your mother's pot is amus, Trebek." - Sean Connery.
clint said...
Zebra?
I'm sorry, despite the interrogative inflection, you failed to put your response in the form of a question.
I went to horse-tiger, too.
Tip o' the hat to Doc Schettler, with whom I had one very fun year studying Latin. Wish I had started that earlier in high school.
I immediately thought horse-tiger, but I probably spent 15 seconds trying to think of horse-like cats instead of cat-like horses. When I reversed my thought process, I got it pretty quickly, I think within 30 seconds.
"Be that as it may, Alex, those people have never been in my kitchen."
-- Cliff Clavin
Got that one. Thanks to listening to Alan Moorehead's "White Nile" and "Blue Nile" on audio-book. The early English explorers referred to hippopotamus as 'water horse'. Hippotigris therefore conjurs image of striped horse, the zebra.
That one's easy if you have at least a dim memory of high school Latin. :)
That one's easy if you have at least a dim memory of high school Latin. :)
zebra?
"What, then, would a hippopompatus be?"
"Maurice--horse's ass."
If that's true, Maurice speaks of the ass of love?
I always thought that would be a great Jeapordy answer: Maurice speaks of this in the Joker. I wonder if that brilliant Mormon from ten years ago would have known.
Pogo, I just spent a number of minutes finding--and of course watching again--that video, only to find you already posted it.
From ancient Rome to modern--what are they? Australian, English, whatever.
I knew this mostly because it immediately brought to mind what Romans called giraffes--cameleopards (or something like that).
So, I asks myself, what kind of tiger would be found in a hippodrome?
"What, then, would a hippopompatus be?"
"Maurice--horse's ass."
If that's true, Maurice speaks of the ass of love?
I always thought that would be a great Jeapordy answer: Maurice speaks of this in the Joker. I wonder if that brilliant Mormon from ten years ago would have known.
Hippopotamus is 'river horse'.
You're all wrong. The correct response is "What is a zebra."
Don't any of you watch "Jeopardy"?
It took me 1 second flat, but I'm a college dropout.
Watching it "live", I came up with the real answer just after time ran out.
I initially got stuck on the fact that the Tigris is a river, and that "hippopotamus" means river horse, and thinking, "Well, maybe the Romans called the hippopotamus the Horse of the Tigris instead of rivers in general? It's geographically wrong, but such misattributions aren't unknown . . ."
I can't get the link to work. From the comments I'm getting the impression that the answer is supposed to be 'zebra'. My Liddell and Scott Greek-English Lexicon tells me it's a kind of large tiger. None of my Latin dictionaries mention the word at all.
I can't get the link to work. From the comments I'm getting the impression that the answer is supposed to be 'zebra'. My Liddell and Scott Greek-English Lexicon tells me it's a kind of large tiger. None of my Latin dictionaries mention the word at all.
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