Countries
Cuisines
Etymology
Weird Laws
Miscellaneous
100

The world's smallest independent nation

Vatican City

100

European country globally renowned for chocolate

Belgium

100

This popular fruit gets its name from the Aztec word ahuacatl, meaning testicles

Avocado

100

These four European neighbors all oppose the operation of cattle while intoxicated

The United Kingdom (Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, and England)

100

Similar to Nathan Drake of the Uncharted series, this woman is the titular Tomb Raider of the popular game series

Lara Croft

200

Buddhist state formerly ruled by the Khmer Rouge

Cambodia

200

The world's most expensive spice native to Southeast Asia, made of the dried stigmas of Crocus sativus

Saffron

200

This liquor derives its name from the Gaelic word "uisge beatha" which means "water of life"

Whiskey

200

Since 1986, this European country has restricted the handling of salmon under suspicious circumstances

England

200

Leading to the worst financial disaster in the 20th century, the Black Tuesday stock market crash happened this year

1929

300

European country with government divided into departments

France

300

Takoyaki is a popular street food made of a cooked ball of dough filled with a variety of seafood and vegetables in this East Asian country

Japan

300

This flower earns its name from a combination of the Persian word "dulband" and the Turkish word "tülbent"

Tulip

300

This U.S. state prohibits importing and possession of live skunks

Tennessee

300

This king is the only one in a deck of cards that does not wear a moustache

King of Hearts

400

This European country hosts an annual festival called "La Tomatina" in a small town by the name of Buñol

Spain

400

Injera bread is a vital part of every meal in this East African country

Ethiopia

400

This self-defining word combines two Greek words, the first meaning sharp, and the second meaning dull

Oxymoron

400

Chewing gum was banned in this country in an attempt to prevent the cities looking dirty

Singapore

400

Originally equivalent to the value of one budle of arrows, this ancient Greek coin gets its name from the Greek verb "to grasp"

Drachma

500

The largest landlocked country in the world

Kazakhstan

500

Bannock, an unleavened bread made with oatmeal or barley flour is a common accompaniment to dinners in this European country

Scotland

500

This word warns of evil, but its roots are surpisingly tame, coming from the Latin word for left 

Sinister

500

Winnie the Pooh was banned from playgrounds in this European country because he is "an inappropriate hermaphrodite" due to his lack of clothing and gender-specific genitalia

Poland

500

Ricin, a very potent poison capable of killing an adult with a dose as small as a few grains of salt, is derived from this plant

Castor Beans