Most Read This Week In Trivia

The trivia (singular trivium) are three lower
Artes Liberales, i.e. grammar, logic and
rhetoric . These were the topics of basic
education , foundational to the quadrivia of
higher education, and hence the material of
basic education and an important building
block for all undergraduates. The word
trivia was also used to describe a place
where three roads met in Ancient Rome.

The Latin neuter noun trivium (plural trivia)
is from tri- "triple" and via "way", meaning
"a place where three ways meet".

In the 1960s, nostalgic college students and
others began to informally trade questions
and answers about th
...more

Most Read This Week Tagged "Trivia"

The Rest is History: The Official Book from the Makers of the Hit Podcast
Stuff You Should Know: An Incomplete Compendium of Mostly Interesting Things
Cabinet of Curiosities: A Historical Tour of the Unbelievable, the Unsettling, and the Bizarre
Answers in the Form of Questions: A Definitive History and Insider's Guide to Jeopardy!
Bright
Flying Snakes and Griffin Claws: And Other Classical Myths, Historical Oddities, and Scientific Curiosities
A Walk Around the Block: Stoplight Secrets, Mischievous Squirrels, Manhole Mysteries & Other Stuff You See Every Day (And Know Nothing About)
Got Your Number: The Greatest Sports Legends and the Numbers They Own
How to Win Friends and Influence Fungi: Collected Quirks of Science, Tech, Engineering, and Math from Nerd Nite
Funny You Should Ask . . .: Your Questions Answered by the QI Elves
Uncle John's Greatest Know on Earth Bathroom Reader: Curiosities, Rarities & Amazing Oddities (Uncle John's Bathroom Reader Annual Book 33)
The Curious Reader: Facts About Famous Authors and Novels
True Crime Trivia: 350 Fascinating Questions & Answers to Test Your Knowledge of Serial Killers, Mysteries, Cold Cases, Heists & More
We Did That? Human Bloopers, Secret Histories, Medical Mysteries, Strange Superstitions. and Other Curiositites from Our Past
The Rabbit Hole Book

In 1935, a British engineer named Robert Watson Watt was asked whether it was possible that the Germans were developing a death ray using radio waves. No such weapon was being made, but in studying the possibility, Watt ended up creating a radar detector, one of the biggest technological advances of WWII.
Bill O'Neill, The World War 2 Trivia Book: Interesting Stories and Random Facts from the Second World War

Ken Jennings
So maybe we never would have realized we were so compatible if we hadn't been trading song lyrics and movie dialogue. That's textbook trivia right there." Mindy looks unconvinced. "But that's how *everybody* gets together. They find some dumb thing they both know a little about that they can talk about until the waiter brings dinner. According to you, there probably isn't a marriage or a relationship or a friendship anywhere today that wasn't jump-started by trivia." "I think that's exactly righ ...more
Ken Jennings, Brainiac: Adventures in the Curious, Competitive, Compulsive World of Trivia Buffs

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Rich's Trivia Shack Just what it says. Feel free to do whatcha want to.
3 members, last active 12 years ago
Good Job, Brain! Hello brilliantly brainy, bodacious bookworms! Love trivia and the Good Job, Brain! podcast? The…more
122 members, last active 10 years ago
Hunger Games Roleplay 2013 Welcome to the first Annual Hunger Games of Panem! We will be doing this every year, and the mem…more
15 members, last active 12 years ago
#indieclue #indieclue is a trivia game for readers who are not familiar with indie books and their authors.…more
178 members, last active 8 years ago