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Quiz about A Numbers Game
Quiz about A Numbers Game

A Numbers Game Trivia Quiz


In this adopted quiz, the idea is still to answer each question with a number. The twist? This time some questions have multiple correct answers... but there's only one correct way to match 10 questions to 10 correct answers!
This is a renovated/adopted version of an old quiz by author YOMD39

A matching quiz by AdamM7. Estimated time: 3 mins.
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Author
AdamM7
Time
3 mins
Type
Match Quiz
Quiz #
6,398
Updated
Sep 06 23
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
7 / 10
Plays
408
Last 3 plays: Guest 37 (6/10), Guest 74 (2/10), Guest 77 (5/10).
(a) Drag-and-drop from the right to the left, or (b) click on a right side answer box and then on a left side box to move it.
QuestionsChoices
1. A single-digit number  
  5
2. An odd number  
  35
3. A prime number  
  2
4. One less than a square number  
  56
5. One more than a square number  
  18
6. A square number plus its square root  
  100
7. A cube number  
  50
8. The number of zeroes that follow the digit 1 to make a googol  
  8
9. The number of zeroes that follow the digit 1 to make a quintillion  
  6
10. The number of zeroes in a lakh  
  57





Select each answer

1. A single-digit number
2. An odd number
3. A prime number
4. One less than a square number
5. One more than a square number
6. A square number plus its square root
7. A cube number
8. The number of zeroes that follow the digit 1 to make a googol
9. The number of zeroes that follow the digit 1 to make a quintillion
10. The number of zeroes in a lakh

Most Recent Scores
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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. A single-digit number

Answer: 6

Used almost universally across the world, our base 10 numbering system is so named because there are 10 single-digit numbers: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. Three others are listed as decoy answers.
2. An odd number

Answer: 57

An odd number can be written in the form 2n+1, where n is some integer. For instance, 57 = 2*28+1. Two decoy answers are odd.
3. A prime number

Answer: 2

A prime number has exactly two distinct factors (one and itself). 5 is the only decoy answer. Even answers (except 2) can be ruled out immediately, while 57 = 3*19 and 35 = 5*7.
4. One less than a square number

Answer: 35

6*6 = 36, so 35 is one less than a square number. The name "square number" is chosen to indicate a geometric interpretation: for instance, a 6x6 square grid contains 36 small squares.

Some numbers that would fit, those of the form n^2 - 1, are 0, 3, 8, 15, 24, 48 and 63, of which only 8 is a possible answer.
5. One more than a square number

Answer: 50

7*7 = 49, so 50 is one more than a square number. Some numbers that would fit, those of the form n^2 + 1, are 2, 5, 10, 17, 26, 65, of which 2 and 5 were decoy answers.
6. A square number plus its square root

Answer: 56

7*7 = 49 and 49 + 7 = 56. The operations "squaring" and "square rooting" are inverses: when applied in either order to a positive number, they cancel each other out. Each number really has two square roots (for example, (-7)*(-7) = 49 and 7*7 = 49), but when uniqueness is implied (such as "the square root") only the non-negative number is meant.

Numbers that could fit, those of the form n^2+n, include 6, 12, 20, 30, 42 and 72, of which 6 is presented as a decoy.
7. A cube number

Answer: 8

2*2*2 = 8 is the only cube number given as an option. Like square numbers, there is a geometric interpretation: a cube with two rows, two columns and two layers of depth contains 8 small cubes.
8. The number of zeroes that follow the digit 1 to make a googol

Answer: 100

The American mathematician Edward Kasner was looking for a name for this large number while on a walk with his nine-year-old nephew, who suggested "googol". The name was later adopted (and spelling deliberately changed) by the search engine "Google", to indicate the vastness of the internet.
9. The number of zeroes that follow the digit 1 to make a quintillion

Answer: 18

From 1 million (6 zeroes) upwards, adding three zeroes (i.e. multiplying by a thousand) takes you to the next number: billion, trillion, quadrillion, quintillion, sextillion, septillion, octillion, nonillion and so forth. A quintillion is thus 10^18, a 1 followed by 18 zeroes.

Interestingly, this answer is not necessarily uniquely correct, though it is unique among the options given. There exists a long scale - sometimes called the "British system", despite being rare in Britain today - in which the naming system goes up by the millions rather than the thousands. There, a quintillion is a 1 followed by 30 zeroes.
10. The number of zeroes in a lakh

Answer: 5

Used in many parts of the world, the "Indian system" of numbering does not use "million", "billion" and so forth. It uses a lakh (one hundred thousand), written 1,00,000, and a crore (ten million), written 1,00,00,000.
Source: Author AdamM7

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor rossian before going online.
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