A punctuation mark indicating a question
Question mark
average of a range of values or quantities, computed by dividing the total of all values by the number of values
Mean
A way of transferring energy through wires.
Electricity
Hyper Text Transfer Protocol. Standard application-level protocol used for
exchanging files on the World Wide Web
HTTP
When did WW2 begin?
September 1st 1939
A punctuation mark ( ’ ) used to indicate either possession (e.g., Harry's book ; boys' coats ) or the omission of letters or numbers (e.g., can't ; he's ; class of ’99)
Apostrophe
The middle value when numbers are arranged in order
Median
A substance that can be split up into simpler substances, since it contains the atoms of two or more elements joined together.
Compound
highly excited, extremely active
Hyper
Who was the Prime Minister of England from 1940-1945?
Winston Churchill
A set of punctuation marks, single (‘ ’) or double (“ ”), used either to mark the beginning and end of a title or quoted passage or dialogue in a story
Quotation marks
The most common number in a set of data (occurs the most often)
Mode
Not easily bent, not flexible, breaks under force.
Brittle
Protocol
record of a document or transaction, set or system of rules and acceptable behaviour
Name the 3 Axis Powers
Germany, Japan & Italy
A category of artistic style in music, literature or film, characterised by certain similarities
Genre
the spread of a set of data. Find by taking the biggest number minus the smallest number
Range
A force that holds some atoms tightly together.
Bond
Uniform Resource Locator - the address of a given unique resource on the Web
URL
Name the 4 main Allies
France, The UK, The US & The Soviet Union
A children's story about magical and imaginary beings and lands
Fairytales
a type of graph in which a circle is divided into sectors that each represent a proportion of the whole
Pie chart
A change in which one or more new substances are formed.
Chemical reaction
one of it’s type, being the only one
Unique
When did WW2 (In Europe end?)
May 8th 1945