Crosswords1 min ago
The Chase
33 Answers
Question. What letter added to unstable gives a town in Bedfordshire.
Contestant Umm Umm Milton Keynes.
Contestant Umm Umm Milton Keynes.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by malagabob. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think the grading is more subtle than just "know it" or "don't". Certain facts are in principle easier to recall than others -- length, or pronunciation, or some other complicating feature can mean that you might have heard of the "Banach-Tarski" Theorem and know what it is, but can only remember the sort of "duDUM DURRda" rhythm to how it sounds. Or maybe two people who both worked in a field have similar-sounding names so you mix the two up, or a question is phrased in such a way that the key piece of information is obscured or not emphasised.
There's yet another set of questions where it might be possible to reason your way to the answer without ever having come across the fact before, which can be easy or difficult to do. Any mental maths questions can rely on three separate processes: recalling the correct formula, interpreting it correctly, and then plugging in the numbers and doing the calculation, and these are clearly "harder" than simply being asked to state the formula.
And finally there is the whole category of questions where the piece of information is so obscure that if you don't know it there is nothing you can do but put out an almost entirely random guess. Such questions are called "killer questions", I think, by the Eggheads.
At any rate, the formula "you know it or you don't" is surely too simple.
There's yet another set of questions where it might be possible to reason your way to the answer without ever having come across the fact before, which can be easy or difficult to do. Any mental maths questions can rely on three separate processes: recalling the correct formula, interpreting it correctly, and then plugging in the numbers and doing the calculation, and these are clearly "harder" than simply being asked to state the formula.
And finally there is the whole category of questions where the piece of information is so obscure that if you don't know it there is nothing you can do but put out an almost entirely random guess. Such questions are called "killer questions", I think, by the Eggheads.
At any rate, the formula "you know it or you don't" is surely too simple.