This animal has the highest blood pressure.
Giraffe
These are the two most popular spices in the world
Mustard and Pepper. Salt is not a spice! It's a mineral
This person founded Amazon in 1994
Jeff Bezos
This is Thomas Edison's most famous invention.
The lightbulb
This famous Greek mathematician, and author of The Elements, is known as the “Father of Geometry.”
Euclid
This is the closest living relative to a T-rex.
A Chicken
This food will never spoil!
Honey
This person is known as the "Wizard of Omaha"?
Warren Buffett
This popular social media app used to restrict posts to 140 characters.
Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi is the most prominent and most important of the arabic mathematicians and is is known as the father of which branch of Mathematics.
Algebra
This creature has a tongue that can measure the length of its body.
A Chameleon
This is where French Fries where invented
Belgium
The industrial revolution began in this country during the late 18th century.
England
This was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize.
Marie Curie
After 358 years of agony, Andrew Wiles gained world wide recognition for having offered the first successful proof for this theorem.
Fermat's Last Theorem
This is the collective term for a group of parrots.
A pandemonium
This is WHERE Doritos were invented.
Disneyland.
This was the year where stock market crashed, leading to the Great Depression.
1929
Dulcinea del Toboso is a fictional character in this classic Miguel de Cervantes' novel.
Don Quixote
This branch of topology is known for the study of mathematical knots.
Knot Theory
This animal has no teeth, lacks a functional stomach, and glows under UV light. It can be poisonous too!
A Platypus
This is where all potatoes come from.
The Peruvian-Bolivian Andes. It's ok if you say: Peru, Bolivia, or Inca Empire.
This company began in 1939 in a one-car garage in Palo Alto, California
Hewlett-Packard (HP)
The word 'robot' originates from 'robota' which means 'forced labor' in this language.
Czech
This Australian citizen is the youngest IMO gold medalist. He is also a professor of Mathematics at UCLA.
Terence Tao