**DOUBLE JEOPARDY**
Factual stories based on actual facts, events or people.
What is nonfiction?
Books with characters, plots and settings.
What is fiction?
Name 3 objects that will sink.
Answers will vary.
The basic building blocks of rocks.
What are minerals.
A push or a pull.
What is a force?
People who design and build things to solve problems.
What is an engineer?
The term Ancient Egyptians used to measure the width of four fingers.
What is a palm?
Invented by a cook when he was trying to make french fries.
What are potato chips?
This determines whether something will sink or float?
What is density?
True or False. Green plants are the only living things that can make its own food.
True.
This makes it more difficult to lift a bowling ball than a feather.
What is gravity (weight)?
A technology that converts wind power into mechanical energy.
What is a windmill (turbine)?
This can be measured, but has no length, width or height.
What is temperature?
"You bug me," is an example of this type of figurative language.
What is an idiom?
Bubbles are this shape.
What is a circle?
The part of a tree that holds soil in place.
What are roots?
True or False. It takes a bigger force to move things faster.
True
What a story or paragraph is mostly about.
What is the main idea?
It was built to rescue Iggy's class on their field trip.
What is a bridge?
Researchers in Japan used this to connect a device to control cockroaches movements; students also use it in school everyday.
What is a backpack?
"The trees danced," is an example of...
What is personification?
Trees provide this gas for all living things.
What is oxygen?
When two surfaces rub together.
What is friction?
Blocks electricity from running through them.
What is an insulator?
Someone who designs buildings.
What is an architect?
Someone who designs & builds bridges.
What is a civil engineer?
The process of separating parts of a mixture.
What is chromotography?
This part of a tree is used to make latex, gum and syrup.
What is sap?
A force that pulls objects toward the Earth.
What is gravity?
Light Emitting Diodes.
What is an LED?
Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics.
What is STEM?
To reuse.
What is recycle?
Red, blue and yellow.
What are primary colors?
The hardest rock.
What is a diamond?
Due to this, toy cars move slower on carpet than tile.
What is friction?
He invented the woodburning stove, the lightening rod, a glass instrument, & bifocals.
Who is Benjamin Franklin?
A person, place or thing.
What is a noun.
America's birthday.
What is the Fourth of July?
The amount of space taken up by an object.
What is volume?
A process in which plants make their own food.
What is photosynthesis?
At the center of gravity is...
What is the letter V?
To keep going in spite of difficulties.
What is perseverance?
According to ancient Egyptians, this is the length from the elbow to the tip of long finger.
What is a cubit?
This bad atmosphere caused us to have indoor recess.
What is an air quality alert?
The more it dries, the wetter it gets.
What is a towel?
Wood that is cut into pieces and cooked.
What is pulp?
A force that moves something toward you.
What is a pull?
Electricity that flows in a loop.
What is a circuit?
Made to stand up to wear, pressure and damage.
What is durability?
Possibility of danger.
What is risk?
The weight of something compared to its size.
What is density?
Plants and animals that have turned into rock.
What are fossils?
True or False. If there were no air, gravity would pull everything at the same speed.
True.
Name 3 technologies that help with communication.
Answers may vary (smartphone, internet, computer, etc.0
"Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers," is an example of...
What is alliteration?
Things that follow in a particular order.
What is a sequence?
The upward force of a liquid on an object.
What is buoyancy?
These rocks are formed when sand & other natural things are squeezed together until they get hard.
What are sedimentary rocks?
He discovered the laws of gravity and motion.
Who is Sir Isaac Newton?
"Chirp, meow, boom, zap, pow" are examples of this type of figurative language.
What is an onomatopoeia?