The organelle responsible for ATP production in eukaryotic cells.
Mitochondria
The only continent located in all four hemispheres.
Africa
The term for gradually getting louder in music notation.
Crescendo
The only country to have played in every FIFA World Cup tournament.
Brazil
The film movement associated with directors like Truffaut and Godard.
French New Wave
This law states that pressure and volume of a gas are inversely proportional at constant temperature.
Boyle’s Law
The capital of Kazakhstan.
Astana (Nur-Sultan)
The composer of The Four Seasons.
Antonio Vivaldi
The distance of a marathon in miles.
26.2 miles
The cinematography technique meaning “light-dark” contrast, heavily used in film noir.
Chiaroscuro
The SI unit of electric current.
Ampere
The mountain range that separates Europe and Asia in Russia.
Ural Mountains
The key signature with no sharps or flats.
C major (or A minor)
The tennis tournament played on grass courts in London.
Wimbledon
The first non-English-language film to win Best Picture at the Oscars.
Parasite
The particle that mediates the electromagnetic force.
Photon
The highest capital city in the world by elevation.
La Paz
The Beatles album featuring a zebra crossing on its cover.
Abbey Road
The NBA team with the most championships in history (tied or leading depending on era).
Boston Celtics
The fictional newspaper in Citizen Kane.
The Inquirer
This principle explains why no two electrons in an atom can have the same set of quantum numbers.
Pauli Exclusion Principle
This African country has the most pyramids in the world.
Sudan
The technique of combining multiple independent melodies simultaneously.
Counterpoint
The Olympic sport in which the Fosbury Flop technique revolutionized performance.
High jump
The editing theory developed by Eisenstein emphasizing collision of shots to create meaning.
Montage theory