Statistics for Lists of 3 #2

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General Stats

  • This quiz has been taken 29 times
  • The average score is 23 of 75

Answer Stats

Meaning or ExplanationList of 3% Correct
{look},
93%
For safety’s sake, do this at street corners and railroad crossings.{Stop},
93%
and {listen}
85%
As a real estate agent will tell you, these are the three most important factors in determining the desirability of a property. Also, the title of a British TV reality show (2000-present).{Location},
81%
and {large}
74%
{location},
74%
location
74%
{medium},
74%
Standard tee shirt sizes.{small},
74%
English translation of words attributed to Julius Caesar, describing the brief Battle of Zela (47 BCE). (“Veni, Vidi, Vici”)I {came},
70%
I {saw},
70%
I {conquered}
63%
& {Irene}
59%
The title of a 2000 American slapstick black comedy film directed by the Farrelly brothers and starring Jim Carrey and Renée Zellweger, about a Rhode Island state trooper who suffers a psychotic break.{Me},
59%
Myself
59%
{Action}!
52%
and/or {Harry}
48%
{Dick},
48%
A list of three names used as a placeholder for unspecified people. Preceded by “every,” it means “everyone.” Preceded by “any,” it means “anyone.”{Tom},
48%
{Camera}!
44%
If you were completely fooled by a deception, you fell for it …{hook},
44%
The traditional series of cues the director gives to the members of a silent film crew at the beginning of a take.{Lights}!
44%
line
44%
and {Automobiles}
41%
and {Roll}
41%
and {sinker}
41%
The title of a 1987 film directed by John Hughes and starring Steve Martin and John Candy, about an ad executive and a shower curtain ring salesman struggling to get home to Chicago in time for Thanksgiving.{Planes},
41%
Trains
41%
{Rattle},
37%
The title of a Jesse Stone song, recorded in 1954 by blues shouter Big Joe Turner and covered in the same year by Bill Haley & His Comets, that sounds like what you might do with dice.{Shake},
37%
and {Steel}
30%
{Germs},
30%
Part of the title of Jared Diamond’s 1997 Pulitzer Prize-winning transdisciplinary book. The title’s “list of three” references the means by which European imperialism was enabled.{Guns},
30%
and {everywhere}
26%
Idiomatic expression meaning in or to many different places; all over the place.{here},
26%
These types of accidents cause nearly 700 workplace fatalities per year in the U.S., and many more injuries.{slips},
26%
there
26%
{trips},
26%
and/& {Ours}
22%
and {falls}
22%
Mine
22%
The title of a 1968 American family comedy-drama film directed by Melville Shavelson and starring Lucille Ball, Henry Fonda, and Van Johnson; and of its 2005 remake, directed by Raja Gosnell and starring Dennis Quaid and Rene Russo. The 1968 version is about the blended family formed by the marriage of a widow with 8 children to a widower with 10. In the 2005 version, the widower has 8 children and the widow has 4 biological and 6 adopted children.{Yours},
22%
and {be merry}
15%
and {Mouth}
15%
drink
15%
What we should do today, “… for tomorrow we die.”{Eat},
15%
Foot
15%
A common viral childhood disease.{Hand},
15%
The title of a 1973 American TV film directed by Norman Panama and starring Karen Valentine and John Davidson; and of the 1967 book by Donald Bain, on which the film was based. The book, about the adventures of two lusty young airline stewardesses (now known as flight attendants), was originally published as an anecdotal autobiography, with the two main characters (Trudy Baker and Rachel Jones) given as its authors.{Coffee},
11%
or {Me}?
11%
The three S’s on offer from shelters run by social services organizations that are also religious groups.{soup},
11%
Tea
11%
and {Chain}
7%
and {sweet}
7%
and {the other}
7%
and {to the point}
7%
and {wherefores}
7%
{Ball},
7%
A jocular variant rephrasing of the Eagle, Globe, and Anchor emblem and insignia of the United States Marine Corps.{Bird},
7%
Cogent; concise; succinct.short
7%
{that},
7%
A wide range of actions, circumstances, characteristics, topics, or other items.{this},
7%
Three W’s that mean “all the underlying reasons.”{whats},
7%
{whys},
7%
and {salvation}
4%
and {sideways}
4%
An idiomatic expression usually used dismissively in response to someone making repeated excuses; or used in regret over not having conducted oneself differently. In a different sequence, the title of a 2022 Taylor Swift song.{Could’ve},
4%
{down},
4%
{lose},
4%
or {draw}
4%
should’ve
4%
{soap},
4%
A leadership style in which an individual not only manages their subordinates, but extends their influence with higher levels of management and with peers across functional and business unit boundaries.{up},
4%
Idiomatic expression meaning “whatever the outcome.”{win},
4%
{would’ve},
4%

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