This sticky breakfast food was mixed into the Great Wall's mortar to keep it from falling down.
Rice
This yellow fruit is actually a "berry"
Banana
This metal tool is used to drive nails into wood.
Hammer
What is the popular sport called played at Hogwarts?
Quidditch
What percent of the Earth is covered in water?
70%
Even though the country is huge, every single person sets their watch to this one city's time.
Beijing
These small, red fruits are the only ones that have their seeds on the outside.
Strawberry
To make wood smooth, carpenters use this rough paper that comes in different "grits."
Sandpaper
Who is Harry's best friend?
Ron Weasley / Hermione Granger
This giant blue mammal is the largest animal to ever live on Earth.
Blue whale
Instead of using guard dogs, some police stations in China use these loud, honking birds.
Geese
Apples are part of the same plant family as this thorny garden flower.
Rose
This type of "wood" used in construction is actually a giant grass that grows very fast.
Bamboo
What is the headmasters name at Hogwarts?
Dumbledore
______'s are older than trees and have been on Earth for 400 million years.
Sharks
While Americans wear this color to weddings, people in China traditionally wear it to funerals.
White
If you eat too many of these orange fruits, your skin can actually turn orange.
Carrots
This common wood glue was originally made using milk and lime.
Casein glue
What train platform do the characters take to Hogwarts?
Nine and three quarters
A ______'s heart is located inside of its own head.
Shrimp's
To stop the internet from being hacked, the army trains 10,000 of this bird to carry secret notes.
Messenger Pigeons
This fruit can be tested for ripeness by seeing if they bounce like a ball.
Cranberries
Ancient Egyptian carpenters used mummy linen and animal skins to make "sandpaper" before actual paper was invented. What is this called?
Egyptian Sandpaper
Who kills Dumbledore?
Professor Snape
This male sea creature is the one that gets pregnant and carries the babies in a pouch.
Seahorse