World Capitols
Pop Culture
Animal Superlatives
Math
Stuff you do on your BREAK
100

This east-coast city is the capitol of the country we live in. 

Washington D.C. 

100

Based on Archie comics, this popular TV show follows the story of a group of friends trying to solve the mystery of their classmate's death. 

Riverdale

100

This fastest land mammal can run up to 80 miles per hour. 

Cheetah

100

The mathematical operation that involves combining numbers or objects. 

Addition

100
Consuming sustenance as means of gaining energy and nourishment. 

Eating

200

It's the capitol of Russia, comrade. 

Moscow

200

This Netflix drama tells the story of a prodigious (and fictitious) chess player. 

The Queen's Gambit

200

This type of whale, the biggest on Earth, grows up to 85 feet long and weighs 210 tons. 

Blue Whale

200

The name of an object with eight sides. 

Octagon

200

Allowing your body to enter a dormant state of semi-consciousness. 

Sleeping

300

This Japanese capitol has a population of 9.273 million. 

Tokyo

300

This rebellious teen rapper became famous on a particularly confrontational episode of Dr. Phil. Catch her outside, how bout dat?

Bhad Bhabie

300

The oldest living creature on Earth is a 187-year-old one of these

Tortoise
300

The total length of all the combined sides of an object. 

Perimeter

300

A mini-dormancy that generally happens midday. 

Napping

400

It's the North-African capitol of Egypt.

Cairo

400

This Mortal Kombat character is the God of Thunder and the protector of Earthrealm.

Raiden

400

This creature is the deadliest on Earth (maybe not for the reasons you might think). 

Mosquito

400

The number of months in a year multiplied by the number of legs an ant has. 

72

500

G'day! It's the capitol of Australia. 

Canberra

500

This androgynous alternative rock artist got his start on the Disney Channel. 

Yungblud

500

This creature has the longest gestation period of any land mammal at 22 months. 

Elephant

500

An angle that has a measurement of more than 90 degrees and less than 180 degrees. 

Obtuse

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