Believe it or not difficult questions. The game "believe-not-believe"

Career and finance 17.09.2019
Career and finance

210 questions

Questions 1 to 50.

Quiz. Do you believe that...

210 questions

Questions 1 to 50.

1. ... the cloud around the nucleus of a comet, observed in 1811, had a diameter of two million kilometers? (Yes)

2. ... on Venus, a day is shorter than a year? (Yes. A Venusian day is equal to 343.16 Earth days - during this time it makes a revolution around its axis; and around the Sun it makes a revolution in 224.7 Earth days)

3 ... is the interplanetary medium a void? (No. It contains gas molecules, rays, radio waves)

4. ... The moon is a dark luminary, does not have its own light? (Yes. It reflects the sun's rays)

5. ... scientists found iron, cobalt, sodium, calcium in the body of the comet? (Yes)

6. ... did the tail of the comet of 1811 exceed the distance from the Earth to the Sun? (Yes)

7. ... Does Lee Redmond (a resident of the USA), who has nails with a total length of 7 meters 51 centimeters, dress herself? (Yes. Only she puts on all the clothes through her legs)

8. ... the height of the tallest modern man is three meters? (No. The height of the tallest man - Radhun Harbib from Tunisia - two meters thirty-five centimeters)

9. ... the highest modern woman taller than the tallest modern man? (No. The height of Sandy Ellen from the USA is two meters thirty-one centimeters)

10. ... a doctor at Charing Cross (Great Britain) in 1952 removed a stone weighing six kilograms two hundred and ninety grams from the gallbladder of an eighty-year-old patient? (Yes)

11. ... Michel Lotito (France) has been eating glass and iron since 1959, and can digest nine hundred grams of metal daily? (Yes)

12. ... the heart of the fisherman Jan Egil Refsdal (Norway), who fell overboard into the sea, stopped for four hours, after which he survived? (Yes)

13. ... Roy Sullivan (USA) survived after being hit by twenty lightning bolts at different intervals? (No. But he survived seven lightning strikes and this despite the fact that the average power of a lightning strike is one hundred million volts)

14. ... the oldest woman who lived on Earth lived longer than the oldest man who lived on Earth? (Yes. Jeanne-Louise Kalman from France lived one hundred and twenty-two years, and Singishio Itsumi from Japan lived one hundred and twenty years, two hundred and thirty-seven days)

15. ... in 1997, Justin Miller (USA), at the age of seven, published a cookbook "Cooking with Justin"? (Yes)

16. ... Jackie Barbie (USA) held twenty rattlesnakes in his mouth for twelve and a half seconds? (No. There were “only” eight snakes)

17. ... donor Maurice Creswick (South Africa) donated 188.9 liters of blood for fifty-nine years since the age of eighteen? (Yes)

18. ... Mary Mohan at ninety-one years old went down on a rope from a thirty-eight-meter cliff? (Yes)

19.... Eduardo Armallo Lagas (Spain), lying down, held on to himself concrete blocks weighing five tons? (No. The weight of the blocks was one ton three hundred ninety-nine kilograms and eight hundred grams)

20. ... Prakash Singhg (India) stood motionless, allowing himself only to blink, for three days? (No. He dedicated his record - twenty hours, ten minutes and six seconds - to the freedom fighters of India)

21. ... two-year-old Michelle Frank (USA) survived sixty-six minutes of being underwater in a stream? (Yes)

22. ... April 3-4, 1974, in just a day, one hundred and forty-eight tornadoes swept across the south and midwest of the United States? (Yes)

23. ... Mary Magdalene was included by the Church among the Equal-to-the-Apostles saints? (Yes)

24. ... the total population of India and China exceeds a third of the population of our planet? (Yes)

25. ... Sieto Izumi (Japan) worked for ninety-eight years. (Yes. In 1872, he started working as a draft cattle driver in a sugar mill. In 1970, he retired at the age of one hundred and five.)

26. ... the most visited amusement park is Disneyland in Paris? (No. This is Tokyo Disneyland)

27. ... is the largest Imperial Palace in Japan? (No. In China. It covers an area of ​​seventy-two hectares)

28. ... the largest pyramid - the pyramid of Cheops in Egypt? (Yes. Her height is one hundred and forty-six meters and sixty centimeters)

29. ... the highest clock above the ground is located on the tower of Westmine Abbey in London? (No. They are installed on the Morton International building in Chicago (USA), located at a height of one hundred and seventy-seven meters above the ground)

30. ... the tallest buildings in the modern world were, destroyed on September 11, 2001, the twin towers shopping complex in Manhattan in New York? (No. The tallest building is the Taipei 101 building (Taiwan). Its height is five hundred and eight meters. And the tallest of the twin towers, the North Tower, was four hundred and seventeen meters)

31. ... most Internet users are in Japan? (No. In USA)

32. ... twelve people have been on the moon? (Yes)

33. ... the largest number of space flights (seven) were made by two Russian cosmonauts? (No, these are American astronauts Jerry Ross and Franklin Chang-Diaz)

34. ... was Svetlana Savitskaya the longest woman in space? (No. This is an American Shannon Lucid. She spent one hundred and eighty-eight days in space)

35. ... American astronaut John Glenn Jr. went into space at the age of seventy-seven? (Yes. In 1998, he went into space as part of the Discovery crew)

36. ... the fastest humanoid robot made in the USA? (No. In Japan. It was created in 2003 by Sony)

37. ... the first computer virus was demonstrated by Bill Gates? (No. This was done by MIT student Fred Cohen in 1983)

38. ... the largest armor for animals was made for knightly horses? (No. For Indian elephants)

39. ... Cathy Jung (USA), with a height of one hundred and seventy-two centimeters, has a waist of thirty-eight centimeters and one millimeter? (Yes)

40. ... the growth of the British stuntman Kiran Shah is one meter twenty-six centimeters and four millimeters? (Yes)

41. ... Greg M. Cox (USA) can read and write in sixty-four languages? (Yes)

42. ... will the plane take off faster if it accelerates with the wind? (No. It will take off faster, accelerating into the wind)

43. ... do chickens swallow pebbles because that's how they get minerals? (No. Pebbles serve as a millstone that helps grind food in the stomach)

44. ... do ultraviolet rays pass through window glass well? (No. Window glass does not transmit ultraviolet rays. Such rays pass through quartz glass)

45. ... by sticking a sewing needle, can one develop a pressure of one thousand atmospheres? (Yes)

46. ​​... every vibrating body sounds? (No. Vibrations of the body may not reach the frequency of sound vibrations)

47. ... do birds of prey have females larger and stronger than males? (Yes)

48. ... do woodpeckers die of concussions? (Yes)

49. ... are there birds that stock up for the winter? (Yes. Owls collect dead mice in their hollows, and jays - acorns, nuts)

50. ... in a tadpole, the front legs grow earlier than the hind legs? (No. On the contrary)

Quiz "Do you believe that?.." Questions 51 to 100.

51. ... heavier drops fall from a samovar faucet when the water is hot? (No. The size of the drop, and hence its weight, depends on the surface tension force. Hot water has less surface tension than cold water)

52. ... the speed and acceleration of a vertically thrown ball at its top point of ascent are zero? (No. Velocity is zero and acceleration is 9.8 meters per second)

53. ... the pregnancy of an elephant lasts almost a year? (No. Twenty to twenty-two months)

54. ... in southern countries Do cockroaches reach the size of a mouse? (Yes)

55. ... butterflies with a wingspan of fifty centimeters live on Earth? (No. The largest Atlas butterfly living in India has a wingspan of twenty-five centimeters, almost like a blackbird)

56. ... are there worms on Earth reaching a length of thirty meters? (Yes)

57. ... in equestrian dressage competitions, men and women compete on equal terms? (Yes)

58. ... the height of the Eiffel Tower is more than three hundred and fifty meters? (Not)

59. ... the Egyptian Sphinx - one of the Wonders of the World? (Not)

60. ... homeland of the secretary bird - Australia? (No. Africa)

61. ... Pleiades and Stozhary are the same astronomical object? (Yes)

62. ... are there poisonous boas? (Not)

63. ... does the doha have fur inside and out? (Yes)

64. ... the highest recorded wave - a tsunami - was more than five hundred meters high? (Yes)

65. ... do some birds have teeth? (Not)

66. ... "angina pectoris" - the same disease as asthma? (No. Angina pectoris is angina)

67. ... the Spanish artist El Greco was really a Greek? (Yes)

68. ... are the eggs that iguanas lay edible? (Yes)

69. ... some types of bamboo can grow ninety centimeters a day? (Yes)

70. ... the ancient Romans used mouse brain powder instead of toothpaste? (Yes)

71. ... in the Tower of London prison did the prisoners have to pay for food, accommodation and chains? (Yes)

72. ... in 1970, a hailstone the size of a watermelon fell on Kansas? (Yes)

73. ... in Waterloo, Nebraska, barbers are not allowed to eat onions while working? (Yes)

74. ... potato chips Invented by US President George Washington? (No. They were invented by an Indian named George Krum)

75. ... a termite mound consists of earth, saliva and manure? (Yes)

76. ... eucalyptus - the tallest and fastest growing tree in the world? (Yes. The tree reaches a height of up to one hundred meters)

77. ... kangaroos at the moment of danger develop a speed of sixty-five kilometers per hour? (Yes)

78. ... koalas eat nothing but eucalyptus leaves. Their name in the language of the indigenous inhabitants of Australia means "without water"? (Yes)

79. ... in Australia there are three times more sheep than people? (Yes)

80. ... the last emperor of China, Pu Yi, worked as a gardener at the end of his life and died alone in 1967? (Yes)

81. ... silk was valued so dearly in China that they used it instead of money? (Yes)

82. ... each silkworm cocoon consists of a silk thread one kilometer long? (Yes)

83. ... the Chinese believe that dragons bring rain. Do they even place dragon statues on their rooftops to protect them from fire? (Yes)

84. ... Is the Great Wall of China visible from space? (Yes. Its length is six thousand kilometers. It was built by the first Chinese emperor Qin Shi Huang two thousand years ago)

85. ... the clay army of Emperor Qin has seven thousand warriors, six hundred horses, one hundred and twenty-five chariots. They all have different facial features, no one smiles. Does every warrior have a real weapon? (Yes)

86. ... in the cities of Madras and Bombay (India) more films are shot than in Hollywood? (Yes)

87. ... do Indians chew spices after dinner to freshen their breath? (Yes)

88. ... do female elephants stay in herds with their calves, do male elephants stay apart? (Yes)

89. ... are African elephants smaller than their Asian counterparts? (No. On the contrary)

90. ... elephants can draw about seven liters of water into their trunks? (Yes)

91. ... baby elephants first grow milk tusks, and in a year real ones grow instead of them? (Yes)

92. ... despite the fact that the skin of an elephant is two centimeters thick, they feel the bite of even the smallest insect? (Yes)

93. ... Hanuman - Indian god of monkeys? (Yes)

94. ... the black rhinoceros is listed in the Red Book as the rarest animal on Earth? (Yes)

95. ... the female seahorse lays her eggs in a pocket on the belly of the male, who then raises the babies until they grow up? (Yes)

96. ... octopus, squid and cuttlefish are molluscs? (Yes)

97. ... when bitten, an octopus paralyzes its prey with poisonous saliva, which is almost harmless to humans? (Yes)

98. ... cheetah cubs have a fluffy white mane up to ten weeks from birth, and then lose it? (Yes)

99. ... a sixty-kilogram leopard can drag a ninety-kilogram young giraffe up a tree? (Yes)

100. ... with the help of cute, furry horns, male giraffes fight their rivals? (Yes)

Quiz "Do you believe that?.." Questions 101 to 150

101.... can a giraffe extend its tongue up to forty-five centimeters to pluck young succulent leaves from a tree? (Yes)

102. ... can a giraffe's neck be two meters long? (Yes)

103. ... the length of the spiral horns of male kudu antelopes can reach one meter? (Yes)

104. ... an adult python can swallow a small deer? (Yes)

105. ... is the black mamba the world's fastest land-dwelling snake? (Yes. She can crawl at a speed of sixteen to nineteen kilometers per hour)

106. ... in Florida (USA) there are more amusement parks and amusement parks than in any other part of the world the globe? (Yes)

107. ... on the Gatorama alligator farm, there is a small gift shop where they sell you packs of these animals' droppings for ninety-nine cents? (Yes)

108. ... in Florida (USA) every year there are international competitions to lure worms out of the ground? (Yes. Each participant digs a stake into the ground and makes it vibrate, which forces the worms to crawl to the surface)

109. ... Disneyland in Florida covers an area of ​​ten square kilometers? (No. Its area is one hundred and eleven square kilometers. It is equal in size to the English city of Manchester)

110. ... in the heart of Disneyland's Magic Kingdom is Uncle Scrooge's castle? (No. Cinderella's castle. It reaches a height of fifty-five meters)

111. ... Typhoon Andrew, which swept over Florida in August 1992, reached a speed of five hundred kilometers per hour? (No. This typhoon set the speed record. It traveled two hundred and thirty-five kilometers per hour.)

112. ... the energy inside the tornado is such that it could light all the electric light bulbs in America? (Yes)

113. ... manatees feed their young under water, holding them carefully on their flippers, as mothers hold their children? (Yes. Very often sailors mistook them for mermaids)

114. ... at sea ​​turtles they have absolutely no teeth, and therefore they have to tear food with their jaws? (Yes)

115 .... manatees are called "sea cows". However, their closest relatives today are elephants? (Yes. Manatees lived on Earth sixteen million years ago)

116. ... in a huge bag under the beak of a pelican more food is placed than in its stomach? (Yes)

117. ... not yet hatched baby alligators "talk" to each other by tapping on the shell inside the egg? (Yes)

118. ... raccoons belong to the panda family? (Yes)

119. ... the panther has many other names: leopard, leopard, puma and cougar? (Yes)

120. ... the age of a bear can be determined by the growth rings on his teeth? (Yes)

121. ... a brown bear can run at a speed of forty kilometers per hour? (Yes)

122. ... the air in the Arctic is so cold and dry that you can hear someone talking even from five kilometers away? (Yes)

123. ... there are no fleas in the Arctic, but in summer there are more mosquitoes than anywhere else? (Yes)

124. ... if the ice of Greenland melted one day, would the level of the Atlantic rise by seven meters? (Yes)

125. ... the word "tundra" in Russian means "lifeless"? (No. This word is translated as "treeless plain")

126. ... blubber is a thick layer of fat under the skin of whales, seals, walruses and polar bears, which protects them from the cold? (Yes)

127. ... the inhabitants of the Arctic are called Eskimos, which in their own language means "a person who eats raw meat"? (Yes)

128. ... today the Eskimos are also called "Inuet", what does "inhabitant of the north" mean? (No. This word translates as "real men")

129. ... in 1972, two graves were discovered in Greenland, where eight Eskimo mummies were buried? (Yes. The dry, freezing wind of the Arctic turned people into mummy bodies)

130. ... the porridge that the Eskimos usually boil for breakfast is called "snow flakes"? (No. There is no such porridge)

131. ... for centuries, the Eskimos traveled in sledges, which were harnessed to sheepdogs? (No. Laek. Now these dogs are better known as huskies)

132. ... the Eskimo's hunting boat is called a kayak? (Yes. Only fits one person)

133. ... On April 6, 1909, the expedition of the American Robert Peary was the first to reach North Pole? (Yes)

134. ... do polar bears dive from icebergs from a height sometimes reaching fifteen meters? (Yes)

135. ... icebergs sometimes explode? (Yes. Water seeps through cracks in the ice, freezes and expands, splitting the iceberg with a deafening crack)

136. ... the size of the largest iceberg known to scientists reaches thirty-one thousand square kilometers, that is, as much as Belgium occupies in area? (Yes)

137. ... are polar bears the biggest bears in the world? (Yes. Their length can reach three and a half meters, and their weight is a thousand kilograms. They are twice as tall as a person and fifteen times heavier)

138. ... by being careful, a seal can live to be forty-three years old? (Yes)

139. ... polar bear can smell a seal sixty-four kilometers away? (Yes)

140 .... walrus tusks can reach a length of up to three meters? (No. Up to one meter)

141. ... hares living in the tundra - the smallest in the world? (No. These are the largest hares in the world. Their weight can reach six and a half kilograms)

142. ... an arctic hare can develop a speed of seventy kilometers per hour? (Yes)

143. ... in the nineteenth century, the bandages in which mummies were wrapped were used to make parchment? (Yes)

144. ... recently a mummy was found wrapped in five kilometers of bandages? (Yes)

145. ... the highest and most famous pyramids are in Egypt in the Valley of the Kings near Luxor? (No. In Giza near Cairo)

146. ... the sphinx guarding the pyramids of Giza reaches a height of fifty meters? (No. Its height is twenty meters. This is about the same as if eleven people were standing on each other's heads)

147. ... the Sahara desert annually increases by six thousand seventy square kilometers? (Yes)

148. ... the ancient Egyptians trained monkeys, teaching them to pick dates from palm trees? (Yes)

149. ... the largest pyramid in Egypt - is this the tomb of Pharaoh Tutankhamun? (No. This is the pyramid of Cheops. Its height is one hundred and forty-seven meters. It was built four and a half thousand years ago)

150. ... the word "mummy" comes from the Arabic term for "bitumen", a special kind of resin? (Yes)

Quiz "Do you believe that?.." Questions 151 to 200

151. ... in 1922, two English archaeologists Howard Carter and Lord Carnarvon began excavations in the still unexplored territory in the Valley of the Kings (Luxor) and found the almost unlooted tomb of Tutankhamun? (Yes)

152. ... Sahara is not only the most big desert world, but also the hottest place on earth? (Yes. When the hottest day was recorded in the Sahara, the thermometer showed plus fifty-eight degrees Celsius in the shade)

153. ... when the wind blows, the sand in the Sahara can move, forming dunes up to a kilometer and a half high? (No. The height of the dunes can reach one hundred and fifty meters)

154. ... Egyptian dromedary camels have two humps? (No. One. Two humps of Asian camels - Bactrians)

155. ... camels store water in their humps? (No, they have fat reserves in their humps)

156. ... camels can live without drinking for about eight weeks, but when they get to the oasis, do they drink more than a hundred liters of water at a time? (Yes)

157. ... the Egyptians fought on the backs of camels. Did the animals emit such a terrible smell that the enemy horses often ran for their lives? (Yes)

158. ... Nile crocodiles attack people and small boats? (Yes)

159. ... the jaw of a two-meter crocodile can be kept closed with a simple elastic band? (Yes. Crocodiles close their jaws with great force, however, the muscles that open them are rather weak)

160. ... snakes are deaf creatures? (Yes)

161. ... in a normal state, the cobra's teeth are "stacked" along the upper jaw, but when it attacks its prey, its teeth pop out and fill with poison? (Yes)

162. ... Is it very hot in the Sahara at night? (Not)

163. ... beetles are the most numerous among insects? (Yes. Now there are two hundred and eighty thousand species of beetles. For comparison: all together fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals - forty-four thousand species)

164. ... the sting of a scorpion's sting is fatal to a person? (No. Painful but not fatal)

165. ... do the eyes of a horsefly consist of thousands of tiny individual eyes? (Yes)

166. ... do insects sleep with their eyes open? (Yes. They can't close their eyes - they don't have eyelids)

167. ... insects have the most diverse voices? (No. Not a single insect has a voice. They make sounds with wings or by rubbing one part of the body against another)

168. ... only adult males of crickets, grasshoppers and cicadas "sing" loud songs, juveniles and females are silent? (Yes. This was noted already about two thousand four hundred years ago by the ancient Greek playwright Xenarchus, who wrote: “Happy cicadas, they have dumb wives and children”)

169. ... in some species of bees, the "queen" can grow up to five centimeters? (Yes)

170. ... Does an owl have one ear larger than the other? (Yes)

171. ... is it possible to drown not only in water, but also on land? (Yes. This happens when not merciless waves close overhead, but rough quicksand)

172. ... half a million years ago Europe looked like Antarctica? (Yes)

173. ... the fin of a male killer whale can reach three meters? (No. It reaches one meter eighty centimeters)

174. ... Ivan the Terrible composed poems and texts of hymns, music for them, and he himself sang in the choir during church services? (Yes)

175. ... can a rhinoceros turn over a car with its horn? (Yes)

176. ... the birthplace of the baobab tree - Australia? (Yes. How and when the plant got into the African savannas, and spread there more abundantly than on its native continent, is unknown)

177. ... is it colder on the planet Mercury than on the planet Pluto? (Yes. On the cold side of Mercury, the temperature is minus two hundred and seventy-three degrees Celsius, and on Pluto, minus two hundred and thirty degrees)

178. ... near platinum deposits, the density of plants on the soil is much higher than usual? (No. They do not happen near platinum deposits - salts of this element are detrimental to flora)

179. ... does a centipede have forty legs? (No. In nature, there are eleven thousand species of these terrestrial arthropods. And the number of legs they have ranges from thirty to over a hundred. It would be more correct to call "centipedes")

180. ... the birthplace of the tulip - Holland? (No. Turkey. It was not until the sixteenth century that Dutch merchants brought tulips to The Hague)

181. ... the current Patriarch of All Russia - Alexy II - the thirteenth in a row in the history of Russian Orthodoxy? (No. Fourteenth)

182. ... only bees give honey? (No. Bumblebees, wasps, hornets have honey. But bees have the most delicious)

183. ... the eyes of a frog can serve as a periscope? (Yes. They move with the help of powerful muscles. The frog itself is under water, but sees what is happening on the surface)

184. ... a cat needs much less light to see than other animals? (Yes)

185. ... the sail of a sailfish is a braking device? (Yes. This predator develops speeds up to ninety kilometers per hour, trying to grab prey. With such acceleration, it is difficult to maneuver - that's the fish and dissolves its fin when it is necessary to brake sharply)

186. ... Pushkin's "Song of the Prophetic Oleg" has no real facts and is completely invented by the poet? (No. The poet followed exactly historical fact recorded in chronicles)

187. ... the minor planet Hector is shaped like a dumbbell? (Yes)

188. ... absolutely pure water does not conduct electricity? (Yes. The current in water is conducted by mineral salts, various impurities)

189. ... was there a time when you went to the opera with your own chair? (Yes)

190. ... chickens are endowed with color vision? (Yes)

191. ... average smokers European country together with cigarette smoke absorb a hundred tons of tar in a year? (Yes)

192. ... every smoker burns a book of three hundred pages a year? (Yes)

193. ... for each person there are three hundred million of the most diverse insects? (Yes)

194.... bulls are irritated by the color red? (No. Bulls do not distinguish colors at all. The fury of the animal does not cause color at all, but the sharp movements that a person makes in front of his nose)

195. ... do polar bears sleep in winter? (No. Unlike the brown bear, white in winter and leads the same lifestyle in the summer)

197. ... do flowers stay fresh longer in water with ice cubes? (Yes)

198. ... the oldest trees of our planet, whose age is over two hundred million years, stretched out in growth in the center of the city of Karl-Marx-Stadt (Germany)? (Yes. These are several dozen petrified trunks of various heights and colors. They were found in coal seams near this city in such excellent condition that they decided to put them in the city in front of the Museum of Natural History)

199. ... diamonds can be burned? (Yes. At eight to one hundred and fifty degrees Celsius, they burn without releasing carbon dioxide)

200. ... The Most Holy Gate is the papal residence in the Vatican? (No. The papal residence is called the Holy Throne. The Holy Gate is the Turkish residence of the Sultanate. Until the end of the First World War and the liquidation of the institution of the Sultanate)

Quiz "Do you believe that?.." Questions 201 to 210

201. ... Is the headquarters of the United Nations (UN) located in Geneva (Switzerland)? (No. She is located in New York, USA)

202. ... the Egyptian pyramids were built by prisoners of war? (No. They were built by fellahs - Egyptian peasants)

203. ... can a pear tree bear apples? (Yes. If you graft a branch of an apple tree on him)

204. ... claustrophobia is the fear of exams? (No. This is the fear of closed space)

205. ... a yurt is an Indian's house? (No. The house of an Indian is called a wigwam. A yurt is the dwelling of the Kirghiz, Kalmyks and other nomadic Central Asian peoples)

206. ... the most bright Star in the constellation Ursa Major - the North Star? (No. The North Star is in the constellation Ursa Minor)

207. ... French engineer Alexander Gustave Eiffel designed the American Statue of Liberty? (Yes)

208 Austrian police officers are called gendarmes? (Yes. This word is French and means "armed")

209. ... is karate an old Japanese wrestling? (No. This type of wrestling originated on the island of Okinawa, which only became Japanese in the nineteenth century. The indigenous people of Okinawa fought against the Japanese invaders for centuries. Due to the lack of weapons, they fought mainly hand-to-hand, using karate. Later winners The Japanese adopted this type of wrestling)

210. ... the word "alibi" is Greek and means "it was not me"? (No. It's a Latin word. It means "elsewhere")

Board and card games are great way fun and interesting to spend time with friends and family. One of these games is "I believe I do not believe." She has very simple rules, which even children can understand by strength. In this article, we will take a closer look at the rules of the card and board games for children and adults "I believe I do not believe", we will present the options for questions and answers that can be used in this game.

To begin with, let's deal with the rules that apply in all variations of this card game:

  1. The first thing to do is to distribute the cards to all participants so that everyone has an equal number of cards.
  2. The one who dealt the cards must go first. In the next game, the one who lost in the previous game should deal cards and make the first move.
  3. The main goal of the game is to get rid of all the cards. Whoever has them in their hands will be considered the loser.
  4. The participant who makes the first move puts several cards on the table (their number can be any). All cards must be placed with their backs facing up. At the same time, the participant must name several main advantages of the cards that he laid out on the table. For example, he can say that before the eyes of the participants are all the cards of ten.
  5. The next clockwise participant can do this:
  • He can also lay out several cards on the table and say that all of them are also, for example, dozens (the number of cards is not exactly determined, the participant himself decides how many cards to place on the table). If the participant decides to do so, then automatically his turn is transferred to the one who sits next in a clockwise direction.
  • Say the word "I believe." If he guessed right (the cards really turned out to be dozens), then all the cards, no matter how many of them are on the table, go to the end. If the participant did not guess correctly, then he takes all the cards that are on the table into his deck.
  • Say the word "I do not believe." If he guesses (that is, the cards are really not dozens), then all the cards that are on the table are taken by the participant who wanted to cheat. So he is punished for cheating. If the participant did not guess, did not believe, and the cards really turned out to be dozens, then he takes everything that lies on the table into his deck. So the participant is punished for being overly suspicious.
  1. If the cards are discarded, then the next move is made by the participant who chose the correct solution.
  2. If the cards were taken by one of the participants in their deck, then the move is made by the one who sits next in a clockwise direction.
  3. If a player has only a few cards left and decides to put them all on the table, then he will be considered out of the game only if his cards are covered or checked.

Additional game rules

There are several rules that are observed only in certain variations of the card game "I believe it or not."

In principle, they can be introduced into any kind of game, if all participants agree to this:

  • Participants can agree that, in addition to the three options for answering the move, which we named above, they can still pass. In other words, the participant will not say anything, add cards, he will simply pass the move to the next participant. If all the participants in a circle decide to fold, then all the cards that were laid out on the table go unopened to the end.
  • Participants may decide that if during the game they have cards of the same value in the deck (for example, all aces), then he can show them to the participants and discard them.
  • When all participants have several cards left in their hands, it is possible to complicate the course of their ejection in this way: one participant puts several cards on the table, the rest of the participants also put several cards on top without the words “I believe”, “I do not believe”, “Pass”. The turn must reach the player who made the move first. He says "I believe" or "I don't believe". If he guesses correctly, then all the cards go to waste, if not, then he takes all the cards into his deck.

Board game I believe I do not believe the rules of the board game

No difference rules board game"I believe I do not believe" from the card do not have. Just not used in the board game regular cards but thematic. For example, these can be cards with drawings, images of animals, some objects, plants, flags. It can be anything.

If you wish, you can come up with some special rules of the game that will be suitable specifically for your case.

There is a variant of the board game "I believe I do not believe", which is aimed purely at the development of intelligence. For example, you can make special cards with questions and answer options. The game will look like this:

  1. The facilitator reads out the question written on one of the cards and immediately offers several possible answers. At the same time, each participant must have plates with the numbers of answer options.
  2. The participant must decide within a few minutes which answer option he chooses and raise the number that corresponds to his decision.
  3. If the participant does right choice, then he remains in the game, if not, he leaves.

The game I believe I do not believe - the essence of the game

The main goal of the game "I believe it or not" is to quickly discard all the cards that are in hand. However, this entertainment also has a psychological idea - to teach, for example, a child to understand when another person is telling the truth, and when he is lying.

In addition, this game contributes to the development of human attention and memory. If you keep a close eye on the course of the game, you will see how many of which cards come out of the game. For example, you will see that all the cards with the image of elephants left the game at the very beginning, and suddenly one of the participants, making a move, says that he has put all the elephants on the table. Here you can immediately make a winning move by declaring that you do not believe.

Game believe do not believe questions answers:

  1. Question: Do I need to get a special permit in Italy to grow tomatoes?

Answer: Not.

  1. Question: The very first soup that was cooked by cooks was made from hippopotamus meat.

Answer: No.

  1. Question: Carrots were originally not orange, but purple.

Answer: Scientists have found that carrots were originally purple.

  1. Question: Walnuts can cause hallucinations in humans.

Answer: Truth.

  1. Question: Ketchup can be used as a remedy that can cure diarrhea.

Answer: Truth.

  1. Question: Mosquitoes are very attracted to the aroma that comes from the smell of bananas.

Answer: This is true, because bananas contain a lot of potassium, and it is this substance that attracts mosquitoes.

  1. Question: People eat bread more often than any other food for breakfast.

Answer: Not.

  1. Question: In Japan, they began to produce ice cream that tastes like horse meat, which has not undergone heat treatment.

Answer: Yes. This sweet is even very popular among the Japanese.

  1. Question: Napoleon has a cocked hat on his head.

Answer: This is right.

  1. Question: If you tie a frying pan to the tail of a cat, then it will not hear the sound of the roar of dishes on the ground if it runs at a speed of 60 km / h.

Answer: It is not true. The only time she won't hear a sound is if she doesn't move at all.

  1. Question: The most poisonous animal in the world is the Japanese leech.

Answer: Not. The most poisonous Australian box jellyfish.

  1. Question: Andrey Bely's real name is Mikhail Sergeevich.

Answer: Not. His name is Boris Nikolaevich.

  1. Question: The Chinese call red eye disease envy.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Griboyedov is the author of the work "Onion Woe".

Answer: Not. The poem is called "Woe from Wit".

  1. Question: Julius Caesar wore a wreath on his head to hide the fact that he had a bald head.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: A person's hair can be used to determine their age, race and gender.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Hair of people who are naturally blond grows faster.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: On one hair, you can withstand any object that weighs 3 kg.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Blue-eyed people have the lowest pain threshold.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: A person can sneeze without closing their eyes.

Answer: Not.

  1. Question: The eye contains air.

Answer: There is fluid inside the eye.

  1. Question: Rainbow can be seen even after midnight.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: The Madagascar queen executed all subjects if they appeared to her in a dream, but she did not know about it in advance.

Answer: This is true.

  1. Question: When the moon is at its zenith, a person's weight becomes less.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Einstein's parents thought their child was retarded when he was 9 years old.

Answer: Yes, because he could not speak quickly, like all people.

  1. Question: Women can blink several times more often and faster than men.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Women can learn much faster foreign languages, in comparison with men.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Men are much better versed in mathematics and any exact sciences than women.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: The human brain is 80% water.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: The average human head weighs 5 kg.

Answer: Not. To be precise, the human head weighs 3.6 kg.

  1. Question: Men's brains begin to shrivel after they turn 30.

Answer: Yes. After 60 years, as a rule, the brain of men dries up by 30%.

  1. Question: The writer Hans Christian Andersen could not write a single word correctly on his own.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Married women live 8 years less than single women, and vice versa for men.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: When a person turns 60, 50% of their sense of taste disappears.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: A person completely disappears the feeling of hunger if he eats a piece of bread, exactly after 21 minutes.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: If you eat a few leaves of a plant that grows in India and is called Kalir-Kanda, then you can eat for the whole week in advance.

Answer: This is true despite the fact that this plant does not contain any nutrients.

  1. Question: When a person blushes, the color of his stomach also becomes red.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: People in the 15th century deliberately dressed in red because they believed it had healing properties.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: A caterpillar has a lot more muscles than a human.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: 70% of the dust that appears in the house is discharged from human skin.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Warriors of Sparta sprayed their hair with perfume before going into battle.

Answer: Yes, because this is the only luxury allowed for the bottom.

  1. Question: On Mondays, people have a lot more heart attacks.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Of the 7 thefts that occur every day in the world, investigators can only solve 1.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Some people still wash not with water, but with olive oil.

Answer A: Yes, it happens because there is simply not much water in their country.

  1. Question: You can end your life because of coffee if you drink 100 cups in a row at once.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: High heels are considered the most common cause of female death in Japan.

Answer: Yes. In 1995, 200 Japanese women died for this very reason.

  1. Question: The Egyptians thought that apricots were sun eggs.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Question: Korean crocodiles can waltz. They were trained by professional trainers.

Answer: Not.

  1. Question: Elephants meet strangers by placing their trunks in their mouths.

Answer: Yes.

  1. Questions: Eskimos eat dry capelin instead of bread.

Answer: Yes.

second option (50 + 50)

      1. Question: To make mayonnaise, you need to use egg whites for this.

Answer: No, you need to use yolks.

      1. Question: In Russia, in order to keep milk longer, they put a frog in it.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: In some countries, firefly beetles are used as lighting fixtures.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Polar bears actually have black skin.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Silk is a fabric of vegetable origin.

Answer: Natural silk is not made from plants, but from animals.

      1. Question: A titmouse in one day can eat as many insects by weight as it weighs itself.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: An elephant will feel when it is bitten by the smallest insect.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The Great Wall of China can be seen from space.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Cockroaches have been living on Earth for more than 300 years. Their appearance has never undergone any changes.

Answer: Yes

      1. Question: If you give a person a new pen, the first thing he writes with it is his name.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: No peanuts are used in the production of dynamite.

Answer: False, it applies.

      1. Question: In Mexico in 1941, soap was as valuable as money. You could buy a lot for it.

Answer: Yes, because people experienced a shortage of this household product.

      1. Question: Hot water can put out a fire much faster than using cold water.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Kuklachev trains cats with a gun.

Answer: Yes, only he uses a water gun.

      1. Question: Japanese students use chalk to write on the blackboard.

Answer: Not. They use special inks.

      1. Question: Was the death penalty for corruption introduced in Russia by Ivan the Terrible?

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: We drink water that contains a water molecule that has been in the body of a dinosaur.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: U earthworm no heart.

Answer: This is not true, since the earthworm has 5 hearts.

      1. Question: Honey is a product that never spoils, no matter how many years it is stored.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: There are diamond rains on Saturn and Jupiter.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: If you climb to the top of Everest, then from there you can call a mobile phone.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: 14 years before the tragedy that happened to the Titanic, a novel was written in which the ship actually sank.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: 600 years in a row, the British at one time spoke French.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: A butterfly has 12,000 eyes.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Dalmatian dogs are born without spots.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: A person, if he swears, he can get rid of the pain that torments him.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Laziness is inherited.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: White bread is much more nutritious than black bread.

Answer: No, the number of calories in both breads is the same.

      1. Question: From potatoes you can get better.

Answer: No, if you eat it with green vegetables and do not fill it with plenty of butter.

      1. Question: The chicken, after being decapitated, can still live for 2 minutes.

Answer: Truth.

      1. Question: If you drop a coin from a skyscraper, then it will kill a person in this way.

Answer: This is fiction.

      1. Question: Chicken broth can cure colds.

Answer: Yes, because it contains anti-inflammatory substances.

      1. Question: After a person dies, his nails and hair continue to grow.

Answer: This is a lie, because with the onset of death, all processes in the body cease to function in a person.

      1. Question: If you run during the rain, and not walk at a calm pace, then you can get wet much less.

Answer: This is true.

      1. Question A: Is to swallow chewing gum, then it will be digested in the human stomach 7 years.

Answer: This is not true, which was invented by adults to scare their children in this way.

      1. Question: The chameleon can rotate its eyes in different ways.

Answer: Yes. At the same time, he may not turn his head at all, but see everything that is happening around him.

      1. Question: After the praying mantis mates, the female eats the male's head.

Answer: Not. This is just a myth.

      1. Question: A crocodile, eating a caught victim, cries in the process.

Answer: This is true. Crocodiles, of course, do not feel sorry for the prey, they just have lacrimal glands near their throats.

      1. Question: If you take one worm and cut it into two parts, you get 2 worms.

Answer: It is not true.

      1. Question: Bulls are very annoyed by the color red, so they rush at him.

Answer: This is not true, because these animals cannot distinguish colors. They rush not at the red color, but at the rag they are waving.

      1. Question: Dolphins close only one eye during sleep.

Answer: This is true, because during sleep in dolphins one hemisphere of the brain continues to work.

      1. Question: The bee will die anyway after losing its stinger.

Answer: This only applies to one species of bee, so it cannot be argued that this is the correct idea.

      1. Question: Tigers not only have a beautiful striped coat, they have the same skin.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The base color of the zebra is black, not white.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Ostriches really hide their heads in the sand at the sight of something dangerous to themselves.

Answer: It is a myth. Ostriches would suffocate if they hid their heads in the sand. They just hide their eggs in the sand, which they sometimes turn over with their beak, as if diving into the sand.

      1. Question: Bra clasp was patented by Mark Twain.

Answer: Truth.

      1. Question: The Eiffel Tower is 15 cm taller during the summer season.

Answer: This is true, because the structure is made of steel with temperature compensators.

      1. Question: Rasket is the space between the eyebrows.

Answer: Not. A fold on the wrist is called a fold.

      1. Question: The acceleration speed of a flea is faster than that of a space shuttle.

Answer: This is true.

      1. Question A: Banana and human DNA are 90% similar.

Answer: It's a lie.

third option (50+50)

      1. Question: A person cannot inhale and sip at the same time.

Answer: This is true.

      1. Question: The octopus has several hearts.

Answer: This is true. The octopus has 3 hearts.

      1. Question: If a person, being in open space, cries, then tears will stick to his face.

Answer: This is true.

      1. Question: Lightning cannot strike the same place multiple times.

Answer: It is not true. Lightning can strike the same place multiple times.

      1. Question: Ketchup was invented by the British in the 19th century.

Answer: This is not true, its creators are the Chinese who lived in the 17th century.

      1. Question: IN THE USA more libraries than fast food restaurants.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Hundreds of bridges have been built across the Amazon River.

Answer: This is a lie, because there is not a single bridge that has been built across this river.

      1. Question: The human brain is 60% fat cells.

Answer: This is true. If you do not eat fatty foods, then your brain starts to work much worse.

      1. Question A: Between Russia and the United States, the distance is only 4 km.

Answer: This is true.

      1. Question: Koalas have the same fingerprints as humans.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Lipstick contains fish scales.

Answer: Truth.

      1. Question: Strawberry is a berry.

Answer: Not. The real fruits of strawberries are small nuts on its surface.

      1. Question: The Canary Islands were named after the canary birds that lived here.

Answer: Not. Canary Islands, if translated this phrase, means "dog islands".

      1. Question: Caesar salad is named after the famous Roman emperor.

Answer: Not. The name "Caesar" was given to the salad in honor of its author, Caesar Cardini.

      1. Question: The year on the bottle of wine indicates the date the grapes were harvested for the wine.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The first selfie photo was taken in the 19th century.

Answer: Yes. This photo was taken by photographer Robert Cornelius.

      1. Question: Most lakes in the world are located in Russia.

Answer: This is not true, because most of the lakes are located in Canada.

      1. Question: There is land at the North Pole.

Answer: No, the entire surface is made of ice.

      1. Question: The Dutch police have a teddy bear in every car.

Answer: Yes. This is provided for those cases if you have to save a child from an unpleasant situation.

      1. Question: The lighter was invented before there were matches.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The milk given by the hippopotamus is pink in color.

Answer: Yes. Because in the process of its development, the hippopotamus produces hipposudoric acid.

      1. Question: Pure gold is very hard in structure.

Answer: This is a lie, because real gold, which does not contain impurities, is so soft that it can be crushed by hand.

      1. Question: Hair that has been curly for a long time can become straight.

Answer: Yes. This can occur due to hormonal imbalance.

      1. Question: It is impossible to extract energy from the cold.

Answer: That's not true, because cold is also energy, it just doesn't have much power.

      1. Question: Grapes never have worms.

Answer: This is true, because grapes contain a lot of juice, which would not allow insect larvae to breathe.

      1. Question: Adult cats love milk as much as kittens.

Answer: This is true, because they have the corresponding mutations in the body.

      1. Question: Missiles are called ballistic because most of the flight is driven by inertia.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The paws of birds can freeze.

Answer: Not.

      1. Question: Mosquitoes can infect humans with HIV infection.

Answer: This is a lie, because the virus, getting into a mosquito, immediately dies in it.

      1. Question: Hare and rabbit can interbreed.

Answer: No, because they have completely different chromosome sets.

      1. Question: A broken mercury thermometer is very great danger for human life.

Answer: Not.

      1. Question: Dogs and cats sweat with their tongues.

Answer: No, because they only have sweat glands on the pads of their paws.

      1. Question: It is impossible to breathe in a vacuum.

Answer: This is true.

      1. Question: Plants can be grown on Mars.

Answer: Yes, but only those that do not need organic feeding.

      1. Question: The candle starts to crackle during burning, because the paraffin contains a lot of water.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Spiders weave their webs because instinct dictates.

Answer: Yes, because they can spin webs even where there are no flies.

      1. Question: Yeast dough will never rise if it is exposed to noise.

Answer: Not. The dough can only be affected by a long and very loud sound.

      1. Question: A man needs a Adam's apple for protection thyroid gland from external influence.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Dolphins are capable of attacking humans.

Answer: Yes. There are many known cases.

      1. Question: Insects do not shatter when dropped from a height.

Answer A: Yes, because they are light in weight and the low air resistance minimizes the chance of them breaking.

      1. Question: When a person yawns, he begins to hear much worse.

Answer: Yes, because the tone of the tympanic membrane decreases.

      1. Question: Children have more bones than adults.

Answer: Yes. It's just that newborns have a lot of small bones. This is provided by nature to make it easier for them to pass through the birth canal. Then these small bones grow together.

      1. Question: Venus is a planet that rotates clockwise. No other planet can do this anymore.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Birds are not poisonous.

Answer: Not. Pitohu and kovaldi are poisonous birds.

      1. Question: Sugar is the most dry place that exists on planet earth.

Answer: Not. Antarctica is such a place because it almost never rains.

      1. Question: Turtles can cry.

Answer: Yes, but they do it so that extra grains of sand flow out of their eyes.

      1. Question: Crabs can rise to the surface of the water, perched on dolphins.

Answer: Not. They can't even climb a dolphin.

      1. Question: The swordfish kills when bitten by the arsenic contained in its sword.

Answer: It is not true. This fish cannot harm a person.

      1. Question: If a child eats green potatoes, he may die.

Answer: Yes. Green potatoes contain a lot of corned beef, which is dangerous for children.

      1. Question: Roses blue color grow only in China.

Answer: No, because there are such roses in pure form doesn't exist at all.

The game I believe I do not believe for children the rules of the game

It is very interesting to play such a game with children who are just starting to learn numbers, letters, foreign words, colors or geometric figures. You can make such a game yourself, you can buy it in a store specifically for children.

The rules for children in this game are quite simple, they are the same as in the game intended for an adult audience. Depending on the goal of the game, the rules may differ. In this case, you just need to carefully read the instructions.

Questions and answers for children game I believe I do not believe:

first option (50 questions 50 answers)

      1. Question: 2+2=5

Answer: No, 4.

      1. Question: The word "BABY" is spelled correctly.

Answer: Not. The correct spelling is "YOUNG".

      1. Question: The capital of Russia is St. Petersburg.

Answer: No, Moscow.

      1. Question: Little Red Riding Hood has forgotten the safety rule associated with communicating with strangers.

Answer: Yes. She shouldn't have talked to the wolf.

      1. Question: If on the street one of the adults asked for your help, you need help.

Answer: Not. It is necessary to tell the person asking that it is better for him to turn to one of the adults.

      1. Question: To stop the bleeding of their small wound, you need to attach plantain.

Answer: No, you need to use peroxide.

      1. Question: Any fire must be extinguished with water.

Answer: Not. If the fire occurred due to a short circuit in the wiring, then water cannot be used to extinguish.

      1. Question: If the water is taken from a spring, then it can be drunk in its pure form.

Answer: No, it should still be boiled.

      1. Question: If a friend's nose tip turns white in winter, this is a sign of frostbite.

Answer A: Yes, you need to provide first aid.

      1. Question: Tsar Saltan married a third girl, because she promised to give birth to his son.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: There are trees that do not change the color of the leaves even in autumn.

Answer: Yes. For example, alder.

      1. Question: Cheburashka lived on the street before he met the crocodile Gena.

Answer: No, he lived in a telephone booth.

      1. Question: All residents of the Emerald City were required to wear green glasses.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The king from the tale of A.S. Pushkin's "Golden Cockerel" was called Dadon.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Grandmother from Kolobok scraped flour in the barn and barrels.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Carlson liked to eat honey more than anything else.

Answer: No, raspberry jam.

      1. Question: The Fox freed Bunny's Bast Hut when the Bear came.

Answer: No, when the Cockerel came.

      1. Question: The owl from the cartoon about Winnie the Pooh gave Eeyore a pot of honey for his birthday.

Answer: No, she gave him a tail.

      1. Question: Aibolit treated animals that lived in Africa.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The witch took away the beauty of the Little Mermaid in exchange for her legs.

Answer: No, the witch took away her voice.

      1. Question: Doctor Pilyulkin treated Dunno with castor oil and iodine.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Shapoklyak had a rat that liked to sit on her shoulder.

Answer A: No, she was sitting in her bag.

      1. Question: Turtle Tortilla gave Pinocchio a golden key.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: In winter, Thumbelina lived in a nutshell.

Answer: No, there are mice in the hole.

      1. Question: Grandmother Bee gave Honey to Fly-Tsokotukha.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Ivanushka the Fool caught a pike in a well.

Answer: No, in the hole.

      1. Question: The witch gave Snow White a poisonous apple, after which she died.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The Snow Queen lived in Lapland.

Answer: No, she lived at the North Pole.

      1. Question: The old man at the goldfish asked for boots for the second time.

Answer: No, he asked for a hut.

      1. Question: The goats opened the door for the wolf after he ate their goat mother.

Answer: No, after he sang in the voice of a mother goat.

      1. Question: Cinderella lost glass slipper when she fled from the ball in the palace.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Most big ocean on the planet - Indian.

Answer: No, Quiet.

      1. Question: The science that studies plants is called botany.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Prometheus stole fire from the gods of Olympus.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: A speedometer is a device that measures distance.

Answer: No, this device measures the speed.

      1. Question: The Leaning Tower is located in Paris.

Answer: No, it is located in the city of Pisa.

      1. Question: Snow is promised if a flock of swans flies by.

Answer: No, geese.

      1. Question: Raisins are made from grapes.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Duremar worked in the market.

Answer: No, he was a pharmacist.

      1. Question: The words ice cream and frost are the same root.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: 02 is the phone number that calls the gas service.

Answer: No, the police are called on this phone.

      1. Question: Chocolate is made from the seeds of the cocoa tree.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: A microscope is an electrical instrument.

Answer: Not.

      1. Question: A numismatist is a person who collects coins.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: A crab has 10 legs.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: A mallet is a hammer made of wood.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The dove is a symbol of peace.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: A polyglot is a person who is good at mathematics.

Answer: No, that's what they call a person who knows many foreign languages.

      1. Question: Elephants are most afraid of mice.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: June 1 is Children's Day.

Answer: Yes.

second option (50+50)

      1. Question: We write in Arabic numerals.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Damn dozen is 15.

Answer: No, 13.

      1. Question: Everest is the highest mountain in the world.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Antarctica is the only continent on which there are no rivers.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Geneva is the capital of Sweden.

Answer: No, Switzerland.

      1. Question: The deepest lake in the world is Lake Baikal.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The Limpopo River really exists.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Debut is the very first performance of an artist.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Silver is more valuable than gold.

Answer A: No, gold is more expensive than silver.

      1. Question: Leonov is the first cosmonaut who walked in outer space.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Petersburg was founded by Catherine the Great.

Answer: No, Peter the Great.

      1. Question: If a person is drowning, he needs to wave his arms.

Answer: No, he needs to throw a lifeline.

      1. Question: March is the first month of the year.

Answer: No, January.

      1. Question: The creator of the periodic system of chemical elements is Mendeleev.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: There are 10 wonders of the world in the world.

Answer A: No, there are 7 of them.

      1. Question: The equator is a line that horizontally divides the Earth in half.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The wolves raised a boy in their pack, whose name was Mowgli.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: In America, children call Santa Claus Santa Claus.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: There is a special book that lists animal species that may disappear from the face of the Earth.

Answer: Yes, it is called the Red Book.

      1. Question: A human has 64 teeth.

Answer: No, only 32 teeth in humans.

      1. Question: There are 48 hours in a day.

Answer A: No, there are 24 hours in a day.

      1. Question: April is followed by the month of August.

Answer: No, April is followed by May.

      1. Question: If there is a fire, then you need to call the number "01".

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Carlson lived on a tree.

Answer: No, Carlson is a character who lived on the roof.

      1. Question: On the green color of the traffic light you need to cross the road.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The only country on the planet that does not border anyone is the United States.

Answer A: No, this is Australia.

      1. Question: The fairy tale "Flower-Semitsvetik" was written by A. Pushkin.
      1. Question: Crocodiles, escaping from enemies, pretend that they are logs.

Answer: Not.

      1. Question A: Australia is the largest continent on the planet.

Answer: No, the most big mainland on Earth it is Eurasia.

      1. Question: Pancakes can only be baked on rye flour.

Answer: No, you can use any flour, but wheat is most often used.

      1. Question: 97% of the water on Earth is salt water.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Clay is used to make glass.

Answer A: No, you need to apply sand.

      1. Question: Archaeologists are people who build buildings.

Answer: No, these are the people who are excavating.

      1. Question: The inventors of paper are the Japanese.

Answer: No, the Chinese invented paper.

      1. Question: If chickens bathe in mud, then you need to wait for good weather.

Answer: No, this is a sign that indicates that you need to wait for rain.

      1. Question: If you mix red with green, you can get brown color.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: There are only 6 vowels in Russian.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Karabas-Barabas was the director of the market.

Answer: No, he was the director of the puppet theater.

      1. Question: The stepdaughter from the fairy tale "12 months" collected lilies of the valley.

Answer: No, she collected snowdrops.

      1. Question: Little Red Riding Hood was given to the girl by her mother.

Answer A: No, grandma.

      1. Question: Uncle Fyodor bought a tractor with the money he found when he dug up the treasure.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The girl was named Cinderella by her mother at birth.

Answer: No, that's the name of the girl youngest daughter stepmothers.

      1. Question: Gulliver is a giant who visited the country of the Lilliputians.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Dunno lived in the Green City.

Answer: No, in Flower.

      1. Question: The bear cub, who knew how to compose poetry, was called Umka.

Answer: No, his name was Winnie the Pooh.

      1. Question: Perch fulfilled the desires of Emelya in the fairy tale "By the command of the pike."

Answer: No, it was a pike.

      1. Question: Kashchei the Immortal turned Elena the Beautiful into the Frog Princess.

Answer: No, the girl's name was Vasilisa the Wise.

      1. Question: Grandfather Frost gave the daughter of the Snow Maiden to the elderly.

Answer: No, the old people themselves blinded it from the snow.

      1. Question: Buckingham Palace located in Italy.

Answer A: No, it's in the UK.

      1. Question: Sakura grows in Turkey.

Answer A: No, she grows up in Japan.

third option (50+50)

      1. Question: A pack is a pack of dogs that hunt.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Plasticine is made on the basis of clay.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The director directs the orchestra.

Answer: No, the conductor leads the orchestra.

      1. Question: The celebration of the New Year was laid by the Italians.

Answer: No, this holiday was invented by the Chinese.

      1. Question: Sugar is made from candy.

Answer: No, this product is extracted from sugar beets.

      1. Question: A painting that depicts fruits is called a landscape.

Answer: No, that's what they call a still life.

      1. Question: Hedgehogs sleep at night.

Answer A: No, they hunt.

      1. Question: The third planet away from the Sun is Venus.

Answer: No, such a planet is the Earth.

      1. Question: The deepest ocean on Earth is the Atlantic.

Answer: No, Quiet.

      1. Question: The Sargasso Sea has no shores.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: With a thermometer, you can measure the humidity of the air.

Answer: No, this instrument can measure air temperature.

      1. Question: Geography is a science that studies flora.

Answer: No, flora is studied by a botanist.

      1. Question: Most salty sea is considered to be Okhotsk.

Answer: No, Dead.

      1. Question: The picture "Black Square" was painted by Aivazosovsky.

Answer: No, Malevich.

      1. Question: Balda from Pushkin's fairy tale received a salary in coins.

Answer: No, clicks on the forehead.

      1. Question: A dune is a moving sand hill.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The dance of ancient people with tambourines in their hands caused snow.

Answer: No, it's raining.

      1. Question: The Chinese in ancient times made silk from plants.

Answer: No, from silkworms.

      1. Question: Cobra venom is contained in its teeth.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Eskimos kiss each other when they meet.

Answer: No, they rub their noses.

      1. Question: Papyrus was placed in the pharaoh's tomb.

Answer: No, jewelry, so that he also lived richly in the afterlife.

      1. Question: Kubrick is the place on the ship where the sailors live.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Corals form in oyster shells.

Answer: No, pearls.

      1. Question: The Japanese in ancient times paid not with money, but with rice.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Water appears blue due to algae.

Answer: No, because it reflects the sky.

      1. Question: Palm tree tolerates drought better than all plants.

Answer: No, only a cactus can endure the greatest drought.

      1. Question: On the night of Ivan Kupala, you need to look for a fern.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The Indians clapped their hands in reconciliation.

Answer: No, they were burying the hatchet.

      1. Question: The only place in the desert where there is water and vegetation is the Oasis.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The bat has the sharpest hearing.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Columbus named the Indians that because he thought he had sailed to India.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The turtle lays its eggs at the bottom of the ocean.

Answer: No, in the sand on the shore.

      1. Question: Piranhas can eat a large animal in minutes.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Gold is formed at the depth of the lake.

Answer: No, peat.

      1. Question: The first airplanes were made of rubber.

Answer: No, made of wood.

      1. Question: A cook on a ship is called a cook.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The Marquise de Pampadour invented stilts to appear taller.

Answer: No, heels.

      1. Question: Sailors impregnated their clothes with resin so that they would not tear.

Answer: No, so that it does not let water through.

      1. Question: The highest mountains in the world are in America.

Answer A: No, in Asia.

      1. Question: Mozart started composing music when he was 7 years old.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: In China, brides wear a white dress to a wedding.

Answer: No, red.

      1. Question: A spinning top and a spinning top are one and the same.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Winter starts in January.

Answer A: No, in December.

      1. Question: The cuckoo never builds nests.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Papa Carlo gave Pinocchio the ABC with money from the sale of the jacket.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The ugly duckling has turned into a swan.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Ivanushka the Fool rode on the stove.

Answer: No, Emelya.

      1. Question: Alice lived in the Looking Glass.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: The postman from the village of Prostokvashino was called Pechkin.

Answer: Yes.

      1. Question: Most short month the year is February.

Answer: Yes.

Questions can be any, they can be invented from literature, educational programs. If you want to have fun in the company of adults, then add a sense of humor and you will have a great time.

Video: "Game I believe not believe"

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Municipal state educational institution

"Secondary boarding school general education" With. Samburg, Purovsky district

SPORTS QUIZ "DO YOU BELIEVE?"

The event was designed and hosted by:

Ismailova Roza Iskandarovna, teacher

Samburg, 2015

Check the erudition and knowledge of pupils in the field of sports;

Fun to spend free time and chatting with friends.

Leading: I offer you twenty questions about sports. For each question, you can give only one answer: "Yes, I believe" or "No, I do not believe."

So, do you believe...

Questions:

    … that the first Olympic Games lasted five days?

    …that basketball is an Australian game?

    …that there are 100-cell chess?

    ... that skates got their name because in Russia they were decorated with the image of a horse (horse) head?

    ...that the date of birth of modern boxing is considered to be 1867?

    ... that bowling is called a game with a ball and sticks?

    …that in Australian football a team consists of 18 players?

    …that are popular all over the world martial arts judo, karate and aikido were created in China?

    … that the lightest weight of a boxer is over 70 kg?

    … that the first performances of water skiers were considered not sports, but an attraction?

    …that cricket (a sport played with a small leather ball) was born in this century?

    ... that the javelin throwers of the ancient Olympic Games competed not for the distance of the javelin, but for the accuracy of the throw?

    …that roller hockey doesn't exist?

    …What's on Olympic Games in ancient times, each athlete competed (as it happens now) only in certain form competition?

    … that many of modern games with the ball originated as religious or magical ceremonies?

    … that the most popular national event in France is the annual cycling race on the country's roads?

    ... that the word "acrobatics" is translated from Greek how "faster, higher, stronger"?

    ...that at the ancient Olympics, long jump athletes held dumbbells in their hands?

    ... that the city of Badminton in the UK is named after the same name sports game?

    ... that the word "chess" comes from the Persian phrase "shah mat", which means "the ruler is dead"?

Answers:

    No, American.

    No, with skittles and balls.

    No, in Japan.

    No, up to 50.8 kg.

    No, the English played it back in the 14th century.

    No, there is.

    No, each athlete was required to perform in all types of competitions.

    No, the literal translation is "I walk on tiptoe, I climb up."

    Yes. Since it was believed that this helps to overcome a greater distance in the jump.

    No, the game is named after the city.

Well done boys!

Reference literature:

Questions are compiled from various sources on the history of sports and physical culture.

4. Was the ballpoint pen used only by military pilots at first? (Yes.)

5. In Africa, fortified pencils are produced for children who have a habit of chewing on anything? (Yes.)

6. Do some types of colored pencils have carrot extract added to make the lead stronger? (Not.)

7. Did the Romans wear pants? (Not, they wore tunics and togas.)

8. If a bee stings someone, will it die? (Yes.)

9. Is it true that spiders feed on their own webs? (Yes.)

10. In a Korean circus, two crocodiles were taught to waltz. (Not.)

11. Do penguins fly north for the winter? (Not, Penguins can't fly.)

12. If you put a flounder on a chessboard, it will also become a checkered one. (Yes.)

13. Spartan warriors sprayed their hair with perfume before the battle. (Yes, this is the only luxury they allowed themselves.)

14. Do mice grow up to become rats? (Not, These are two different orders of rodents.

15. Can some frogs fly? (Yes, in tropical forests Asia and Africa.)

16. Can children hear higher sounds than adults? (Yes.)

17. Is the eye filled with air? (Not, the eye is filled with fluid.)

18. Are you taller in the morning than in the evening? (Yes.)

19. In some places, people still wash with olive oil?(Yes, in some hot countries where water is scarce.)

20. The bats can receive radio signals? (Not.)

21. Owls can't roll their eyes? (Yes.)

22. Is the elk a type of deer? (Yes.)

23. Do giraffes use their echoes to find the leaves they feed on at night? (Not.)

24. Dolphins are small whales? (Yes.)

25. Does rhinoceros horn have magical powers? (Not.)

26. In some countries, firefly beetles are used as lighting fixtures? (Yes.)

27. Is a monkey usually the size of a kitten? (Yes.)

28. Was Scrooge's lucky coin in denominations of 10 cents? (Yes.)

29. Did Duremar sell frogs? (Not, leeches. )

Z0. Do Eskimos dry capelin and eat it instead of bread? (Yes.)

31. Can you see a rainbow at midnight? (Yes.)

32. Most turnips are grown in Russia? (Not, in America. )

33. An elephant, meeting with an unfamiliar relative, greets him in the following way - does he put his trunk in his mouth? (Yes.)

34. Was Hans Christian Andersen's real name Swensen? (Not, Hans.)

35. In medicine, the diagnosis of "Munchausen's syndrome" is made to a patient who lies a lot? (Not, such a diagnosis is made to a patient who has a constant desire to be treated.)

36. The growth of the Horse - the Hunchback is two inches? (Not, three. )

37. First place among the causes of death from accidents in Japan in 1995. occupied high-heeled shoes? (Yes, Nearly 200 Japanese women have died from falling from high heels.)

Second option. Game "Truth and myths about animals"

1. The most numerous living creatures on the planet are mosquitoes. (Myth. Ants: There are more of them than plants and animals combined.)
2. In Russia, about 10 million frogs and toads die on the highway every year. (Truth.)
3. The howler monkey is the noisiest creature on the planet. (Truth. Her screams can be heard at a distance of 16 km.)
4. The cow is the first tamed animal. (Myth. Dog. )
5. Bison and moose hate salt. (Myth. They just love her.)
6. By the chirping of a house cricket, you can determine the air temperature. (Truth. Fahrenheit temperature is 50+(r-40):4, where r is the number of chirps per minute.)
7. A heron with a height of more than one meter and with a wingspan of up to two meters weighs only 2 kg. (Truth.)
8. Favorite treat hedgehogs - apples. (Myth. Hedgehogs do not eat apples.)
9. To provide all Russians with three pairs of natural leather shoes a year, about 7 million animals need to be slaughtered. (Truth.)
10. A chameleon can go without food for a long time, almost a whole year. (Truth.)
11. There are no fish with three eyes. (Myth. Lamprey fish have 3 eyes.)
12. It is known that it takes 35-40 lambs to sew an astrakhan fur coat. Is it true that a few hundred grams of viscose fiber, which is obtained from wood, is enough for a fur coat made of artificial astrakhan fur? (Truth.)
13. During hibernation, a bear sucks its paw. (Myth. The bear does not suck its paw.)
(Author Chitikov V.)

Third option. The game "I believe - I do not believe" on various topics

1. In Greece, on the island of Kefalonia, there is a river that flows up. (Yes.)

2. Ghanu ostrich (the only one of all ostriches that can fly) builds its nests on the branches of eucalyptus trees at a height of 20 meters. (There is no such ostrich.)

3. The word "loaf" came from a cow cake, which was called that. (Yes.)

4. On the Mekong River, gold is mined using mercury. (Yes.)

5. Mendeleev got tomato juice by dissolving tomatoes in hydrochloric acid. (Not.)

6. The Madagascar dragon frog, so named because of its ugly appearance and huge size, eats from 200 g to 1 kg of food per day. (Not such a frog.)

7. Gypsies taught bears to dance on red-hot iron. (Yes.)

8. Is it true that Lenin said: "I studied a lot, studied and studied again in order to know at least a little, to know and to know again"? (Not.)

9. They say a rat is smarter than a cat. Is it so? (Yes.)

10. The pollen of the tropical flower archidearius has an exciting property. (Not such a flower.

11. In the Stone Age, "valentines" were beaten out on stone tiles. (Not.)

12. During the mating season, male frogs blush. (Not.)

13. In the African tribe of Tageri, it is forbidden to eat for 18 days before the wedding. That is how much you need to completely cleanse the body of a single life. (Not such a tribe.

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