Well Old Trafford sounded British to me so I answered Shakespeare....he might have played there! So I'm guessing it's not a theater, then? Who knew?? Why don't you tell me who plays at Gillette Stadium!
I was about to type something similar. Soccer/football didnt even occur to me. Or any sport btw. Was indeed thinking of plays/theater maybe music or even opera
I couldn't remember the year so I just started with 2000 and started quickly typing numbers until I got it. I remembered A.A. Milne from my old Children's Authors card game - it was my least favorite card game when I was young, (coming far behind Old Maid and War) but at least it helped me on this one.
I did the same thing. Only I started at 2018 and went backwards because I remembered not to long ago they said it was the year where Marty McFly travelled to.
I always just remember it's 30 years either way for the first two movies. In the first movie they went back from 1985 to 1955, then in the second, they went forward from 1985 to 2015. The third movie goes back 100 years to 1885 and is obviously the worst in the trilogy
Please also accept Lancashire for Old Trafford - it is the Lancashire team's home ground in the County Championship, England's premier cricket competition.
There are 2 Old Trafford Grounds in Manchester, about 1km apart. One is where Manchester United Football (Soccer) team play their home games and one where Lancashire Cricket Club play. So the question should read "Which English Soccer Team Play their home games at Old Trafford"
If you don't know the answer, the clue isn't going to help you. If you know that Lancashire County Cricket Club plays at Old Trafford Cricket Ground, you probably know that Manchester United also plays at a ground called Old Trafford.
You could just wing it. Or whinge it. I wish the English had the internet during World War 2. We would've saved a lot of money when we couldn't stand all their whingeing about nothing.
Dan' starring of football and cricket quizzes is running 53-to-1 in favour of the former, so his defence of blocking correct answers from his unfavorite sport is unsurprising.
Just checked it; Wikipedia says that in English-speaking countries, hands and inches are "often" used as units to measure the height of a horse. It seems the rest of the world does not do that.
I'm pretty sure that in most of the world, it is indeed measured in meters and centimeters. Americans will measure with anything to avoid learning the metric system. I'm just suurprised that they don't measure the height of horses in cheeseburgers or something.