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Quiz about You Could Have Fueled Me Part 2
Quiz about You Could Have Fueled Me Part 2

You Could Have Fueled Me (Part 2) Quiz


Based on Author Challenge by paulmallon's suggestion You Could Have Fueled Me. In each question, the word "Me" has been fueled; I've added various fuels to "ME" and made anagrams: Me + Gas = Games. So you would choose the answer "things you play."

A multiple-choice quiz by Billkozy. Estimated time: 6 mins.
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Author
Billkozy
Time
6 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
402,341
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Difficult
Avg Score
5 / 10
Plays
88
Question 1 of 10
1. Me + Gasoline = (2 words) Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Me + Ethanol = (2 words) Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Me + Sterno = (2 words) Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Me + Coal = (2 words) Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Me + Peat = (2 words) Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. Me + Methane = (2 words) Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. Me + Anthracite = (2 words) Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Me + Hydrogen = (2 words) Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Me + Kerosene = (2 words) Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. Me + Biofuel = (2 words) Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Me + Gasoline = (2 words)

Answer: Terry Sawchuk, Martin Brodeur, Ken Dryden, Gump Worsley

The letters ME combined with the fuel GASOLINE, is rearranged to spell MEN GOALIES. So, the choice "Terry Sawchuk, Martin Brodeur, Ken Dryden, Gump Worsely" is the correct answer because they are all men amongst the most famous Hall of Fame goalies in National Hockey League history. Terry Sawchuk led the Detroit Red Wings to three Stanley Cup titles in just five years. Martin Brodeur has been the NHL leading goalie in all-time wins, playoff shutouts, most minutes played, regular season shutouts and games played. Ken Dryden had a .743 winning percentage, won the Conn Smythe trophy, the Calder, and won six Stanley Cups in just seven seasons. In 1968, Gump Worsley posted a career-low 1.98 goals-against and won 11 straight postseason games.

The three other groups are Hall of Fame quarterbacks, Hall of Fame basketball guards, and Hall of Fame centerfielders.
2. Me + Ethanol = (2 words)

Answer: Hilton, Hyatt, Ritz-Carlton

The letters ME combined with the fuel ETHANOL, is rearranged to spell HOTEL NAME. So, the choice Hilton, Hyatt, Ritz-Carlton is the correct one because each of those is the name of a hotel. The original Hilton company was founded by Conrad Hilton on May 31, 1919.

They have hotels on six continents. The Hyatt Hotels Corporation was founded on September 27, 1957, by Robert von Dehn and Jack Dyer Crouch. They started out by buying a motel near Los Angeles International Airport. And the Ritz-Carlton hotel chain was founded August 1983 by William B. Johnson; their parent company is Marriott International.
3. Me + Sterno = (2 words)

Answer: issued another

The letters ME combined with the fuel STERNO, is rearranged to spell "SENT MORE". So, the choice "issued another" is the correct one because it means "sent more." Sterno, by the way, is a gel form of ethanol that has had additives put into it to make it poisonous or bad-tasting to discourage consumption of it, because it is after all denatured alcohol. You've seen sterno at buffet tables wherever you, there it is that little can with a blue fame underneath the metal food trays, keeping the food warm. Sterno is actually a brand name, just like "Kleenex" is a company brand name for its bathroom tissue. Sterno is owned by owned by Sterno Products, located in Corona, California.
4. Me + Coal = (2 words)

Answer: 1 Samuel 4:13: "And when he ___, ___ Eli sat upon a seat by the wayside watching"

The letters ME combined with the fuel COAL, is rearranged to spell "CAME, LO" which are the two words that correctly fill in the Biblical quote "And when he came, lo Eli sat upon a seat by the wayside watching." Hot burning coal finds mention a lot in the Bible. Psalms 18:8 describes the great intensity of God's anger--"There went up a smoke out of his nostrils, and fire out of his mouth devoured: coals were kindled by it." There are 28 verses actually that mention coal including this from John 21:9--"As soon then as they were come to land, they saw a fire of coals there, and fish laid thereon, and bread." This scene describes how Peter and the other disciples arrived on shore and to their great surprise saw Christ's preparation of coals for cooking fishes that were laid out.
5. Me + Peat = (2 words)

Answer: What Fay Wray as Ann Darrow did

The letters ME combined with the fuel PEAT, is rearranged to spell "MET APE". So, the choice "What Fay Wray as Ann Darrow did" is the correct one because she met the most famous ape in the world, King Kong. Oil, coal, and natural gas are still popular around the world, but peat has become known as "the forgotten fossil fuel." Peat is dark, thick and muddy when harvested from the highly acidic wetland bogs in which it is formed from organic vegetation. Raw peat is formed into wet bricks and then the water is pressed out of them. Those bricks when dried out are used for heating homes and businesses.
6. Me + Methane = (2 words)

Answer: "Shine on Me" sung by Vanessa Bell Armstrong

The letters ME combined with the fuel METHANE, is rearranged to spell "'AMEN' THEME". So, the choice "'Shine on Me' sung by Vanessa Bell Armstrong" is the correct one because that song was indeed the theme song to the hit NBC-TV series "Amen" starring Sherman Hemsley.

It ran for five seasons from 1986 to 1991. The show's theme song was "Shine on Me" sung by the gospel singer Vanessa Bell Armstrong, a seven-time Grammy nominee who has appeared on Broadway in "Don't Get God Started." The TV show "Amen" was about a widower deacon (played by Mr.

Hemsley) in Philadelphia who doubles as a lawyer. His sometimes hare-brained schemes wind up causing him to clash with the younger pastor Reuben Gregory, played by Clifton Davis.
7. Me + Anthracite = (2 words)

Answer: Theatre's listing for afternoon shows

The letters ME combined with the fuel ANTHRACITE, is rearranged to spell "MATINEE CHART". So, the choice "Theatre's listing for afternoon shows" is the correct one because matinees are afternoon showings of the cinema's fare.
Anthracite is "hard coal" something my father's father dug out of mines for a living until an accident shifted his livelihood to the railroads. Anthracite coal is ranked the best among coals for its energy efficiency. It accounts for only about 1% of all coal reserves.
8. Me + Hydrogen = (2 words)

Answer: What Shakespeare did with the word "none" in "Midsummer Night's Dream", Act III, sc. 2

The letters ME combined with the fuel HYDROGEN, is rearranged to spell "RHYMED GONE". So, the choice "What Shakespeare did with the word "none" in "Midsummer Night's Dream", Act III, sc. 2" is the correct choice because in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" William Shakespeare rhymed the word "gone" with "none" in the following dialogue:
DEMETRIUS: Lysander keep thy Aermia? I will none
If e'er I loved her, all that love is gone.

There was apparently no fixed spelling of words in Middle English; spelling became fixed soon after Shakespeare's career. Shakespeare rhymed all these words in his plays and sonnets: alone, anon, bone, gone, groan, loan, moan, on, one, prone, stone. But one can't even find hard and fast consistency in rhyming schemes even after spelling was "fixed."

In his 1593 narrative poem the Bard rhymes "gone" with "bone":
"Even as an empty eagle, sharp and fast,
Tires with her beak on feathers, flesh, and bone,
Shaking her wings, devouring all in haste,
Till either gorge be stuffed or prey be gone."
9. Me + Kerosene = (2 words)

Answer: The King of Babylon in the Bible's Ezekiel 21:21

The letters ME combined with the fuel KEROSENE, is rearranged to spell "OMEN SEEKER". So, the choice "The King of Babylon in Ezekiel 21:21" is the correct one because that Biblical passage describes the king seeking an omen.
In the Biblical passage Ezekiel 21:21 the king of Babylon seeks an omen: "For the king of Babylon will stop at the fork in the road, at the junction of the two roads, to seek an omen: He will cast lots with arrows, he will consult his idols, he will examine the liver."
Ancient Near Eastern kings often sought advice from their gods before entering into war, and after having entered war. They sought further signs pointing the way to tactical decisions. In this passage from Ezekiel, King Nebuchadnezzar consults the gods by various forms of omen seeking divination. The drawing of the arrows from a quiver and casting them as mentioned is known as belomancy.
10. Me + Biofuel = (2 words)

Answer: French beef cooked with Florida Keys citrus?

The letters ME combined with the fuel BIOFUEL, is rearranged to spell "LIME BOEUF". So, the choice "French beef cooked with Florida Keys citrus" is the meal to order. "Boeuf" is French for "beef" and Key Limes are a famous type of lime linked to the Florida Keys, because of its being the key flavor in Key lime pie.
Biofuels are liquid fuels that have been derived from biomass. Ethanol and biodiesel are the two most common biofuels helping to meet transportation fuel needs. Ethanol (CH3CH2OH) is made from various plant materials, and is a renewable fuel. Biodiesel is also made from renewable sources of used vegetable oils and animal fats and it burns cleaner than petroleum-based diesel fuel.
Source: Author Billkozy

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