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60 Good Trivia Questions That Actually Make People Put Their Drinks Down

By
Elise Schneider
Students in a classroom setting with a teacher proctoring. Educational environment.

The question I’ve seen cause the most arguments at a trivia night isn’t hard. It’s “What color is a school bus?” The answer is National School Bus Glossy Yellow, which the federal government mandated in 1939, but that’s not why it starts fights. It starts fights because half the table says yellow and the other half says orange, and suddenly everyone’s questioning their own eyes. That’s the thing about good trivia questions. They don’t test knowledge so much as they test the gap between what you think you know and what’s actually true.

I’ve been writing and hosting trivia for years. I’ve watched rooms go silent. I’ve watched tables erupt. I’ve watched a grown man stand up and shout “I KNEW IT” about a question regarding the number of dimples on a golf ball. What follows are 60 questions that have earned their place. Not because they’re obscure, but because they do something to the room.

The Ones That Feel Easy Until They Don’t

These are the questions that make confident people nervous. They sound simple. They are not.

1. How many hearts does an octopus have?

I love opening with this because it’s genuinely fun to watch people negotiate. Two sounds reasonable. Four sounds safe. The real number always gets a reaction.

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Three. Two pump blood to the gills, one pumps it to the rest of the body. Most people guess two or eight, because the number eight is just baked into everything we think about octopuses.

 

2. What’s the most common letter in the English language?

Everyone has an instinct here. And almost everyone’s instinct is the same. And that instinct is correct, which is rare for trivia, so enjoy it.

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E. The common wrong answer is S or T, but most people do get this one. It’s a confidence builder, and every good set needs one early.

 

3. What country has the most natural lakes?

This is the kind of question where the answer makes you rethink the map in your head. People go straight to a place that feels wet. They’re not wrong about the wetness, exactly. They’re just wrong about which wet place.

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Canada, with over 800,000 lakes. Finland gets called the “Land of a Thousand Lakes” and has about 188,000, which leads people there. But Canada has more lakes than the rest of the world combined.

 

4. What’s the only letter that doesn’t appear in any U.S. state name?

I’ve watched entire tables go through the alphabet out loud for this one. It’s beautiful. Someone always shouts X, then someone else says “Texas,” and the whole thing resets.

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Q. The most common wrong answer is Z, but Arizona handles that. Q genuinely doesn’t show up anywhere.

 

5. How many bones does a human adult have?

The interesting part of this question isn’t whether people know the number. It’s whether they know that babies have more bones than adults, which always comes up in the discussion after.

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206. Babies are born with roughly 270, and many fuse together as they grow. People who say 206 confidently almost never know the baby fact, and people who know the baby fact almost never remember 206.

 

6. What planet in our solar system spins the fastest?

Size and speed don’t always correlate the way your brain wants them to. But in this case, they do.

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Jupiter. Despite being the largest planet, it completes a full rotation in just under 10 hours. Saturn is second fastest. The gas giants spin like they’re late for something.

 

7. What’s the smallest country in the world by area?

This one’s a freebie for most trivia crowds, but it earns its spot because of what comes next in conversation: people trying to name the second and third smallest.

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Vatican City, at about 44 hectares. Monaco is second. People sometimes say Liechtenstein, which isn’t even in the top five.

 

8. What animal can’t jump?

There are several correct answers to this, but one specific one has become the canonical trivia answer, and it’s the one that makes people picture the animal trying.

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Elephants. Hippos and rhinos can’t really jump either, but the elephant is the standard answer. The image of an elephant attempting a hop does something to a room.

 

The Ones Where Your First Answer Is Wrong

These are the questions I write specifically to exploit overconfidence. The wrong answer feels so right that people will argue for it after the reveal.

9. What’s the longest river in the world?

I’ve seen this question nearly end friendships. The debate between two specific rivers has been going on among geographers for decades, and it shows up at every trivia night like clockwork.

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The Nile, at approximately 6,650 km, though the Amazon gives it a serious run depending on where you measure from. Most trivia sources still go with the Nile. The Amazon crowd will tell you about it. Loudly.

 

10. What was the first toy advertised on television?

People always guess something from their own childhood, which tells you a lot about how nostalgia warps our sense of timelines.

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Mr. Potato Head, in 1952. The original version required a real potato. That detail alone is worth the question.

 

11. What percentage of the Earth’s water is fresh water?

The number is so small it makes people uncomfortable. Everyone knows most of the planet is water. Almost nobody knows how little of it we can actually drink.

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About 3%. And most of that is locked in ice caps and glaciers. The amount of accessible fresh water is closer to 1%. People typically guess between 10% and 25%.

 

12. What’s the hardest natural substance on Earth?

This is one of those questions where the answer is so well-known it loops back around to making people doubt themselves. “It can’t be that obvious,” they think. And then they change their answer.

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Diamond. It really is that obvious. But I’ve watched people talk themselves into quartz or titanium because the question felt too easy.

 

13. What was the first feature-length animated film?

Everyone says Snow White. And I get it. Disney owns that narrative. But the actual history is wilder than the fairy tale.

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El Apóstol, an Argentine political satire from 1917, is generally considered the first. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) was the first full-length cel-animated feature in motion picture history to use the full technicolor process. The distinction matters, and it’s where the arguments start.

 

14. How many time zones does Russia have?

People know Russia is big. They don’t know it’s this big.

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11 time zones. When it’s midnight in Kaliningrad, it’s 10 a.m. in Kamchatka. People usually guess six or seven, which would be reasonable for any other country on Earth.

 

15. What color are airplane black boxes?

This is a trick question that doesn’t feel like a trick question, which is the best kind.

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Bright orange or red-orange. They’re called black boxes for reasons that are debated, but they’ve never actually been black. The look on someone’s face when they realize they’ve been picturing this wrong their entire life is priceless.

 

16. What’s the most stolen food in the world?

This question gets the best guesses. People say bread, or chocolate, or meat. The real answer is so specific it sounds made up.

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Cheese. About 4% of all cheese produced globally is stolen, according to a widely cited study. There’s an entire black market for high-end cheese. That sentence has never failed to get a laugh.

 

The Ones That Start Arguments at the Table

Good trivia questions don’t just test what people know. The best ones test what people think they agree on.

17. How many continents are there?

I include this one specifically because there is no universally agreed-upon answer, and watching a room discover that in real time is one of my favorite things in the world.

Show Answer
It depends on who you ask. The most common answer in the U.S. is 7. But some models count 6 (combining Europe and Asia into Eurasia), some count 5 (also merging the Americas), and some count 4. I accept 7 because I have to pick something, but the conversation is the real prize.

 

18. Is a tomato a fruit or a vegetable?

Botanically, it’s a fruit. Legally, in the United States, it’s a vegetable. The Supreme Court ruled on this in 1893. I’m not joking.

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Botanically, a fruit. The case was Nix v. Hedden, and it was about tariffs. The court acknowledged the botanical classification but ruled that in common language and commerce, tomatoes are vegetables. Both answers are defensible. I accept fruit because I like watching the vegetable people get indignant.

 

19. What’s the national animal of Scotland?

Nobody believes this answer. I’ve had people accuse me of making it up. I have not made it up.

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The unicorn. Scotland adopted it in the 12th century. In Celtic mythology, the unicorn symbolized purity and power. It’s been on the royal coat of arms for centuries. The disbelief this answer generates is almost physically tangible.

 

20. What was the first message sent over the internet?

People guess “Hello” or “Hello, World.” The real answer is funnier and more human than that.

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“Lo.” The intended message was “Login,” sent from UCLA to Stanford in 1969, but the system crashed after the first two letters. The internet’s first word was an accident. I’ve never found a better metaphor for the whole project.

 

21. What’s the loudest animal on Earth?

People go big. They think elephants, or lions, or howler monkeys. The actual answer lives in the ocean and doesn’t even have vocal cords in the traditional sense.

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The sperm whale. Their clicks can reach 230 decibels, which is louder than a jet engine. The blue whale gets guessed most often, and their calls are impressively loud too, but the sperm whale wins on raw volume.

 

22. What U.S. state was the last to join the union?

Alaska and Hawaii were admitted in the same year, and people always mix up the order.

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Hawaii, on August 21, 1959. Alaska was admitted on January 3 of the same year. The fact that they were only seven months apart is what trips people up. Everyone remembers they were close but can’t remember which was which.

 

23. How long is a day on Venus?

This answer breaks people’s brains in the best way. Everything about Venus’s rotation is wrong by Earth standards.

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About 243 Earth days. Which means a day on Venus is actually longer than a year on Venus (225 Earth days). And it rotates backward. Venus is the planet that didn’t read the instructions.

 

24. What language has the most native speakers?

English feels like the right answer because it’s everywhere. But “everywhere” and “native” are doing very different work in this question.

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Mandarin Chinese, with roughly 920 million native speakers. English is third, behind Spanish. People conflate “most widely spoken” with “most native speakers” almost every time.

 

The Ones That Scratch a Specific Itch

Some questions exist because the answer is beautiful, or strange, or so perfectly specific that it sticks in your memory for years.

25. What does the “D” in D-Day stand for?

I’ve heard everything from “Deliverance” to “Doom” to “Decision.” The real answer is almost anticlimactic, which is exactly what makes it interesting.

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Day. D-Day means “Day-Day.” It’s a military designation for the day any operation is set to launch. H-Hour works the same way. The drama we’ve attached to the phrase is entirely our own invention.

 

26. How many dimples are on a regulation golf ball?

This is the question that made a man stand up and shout. The number is oddly satisfying.

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Most have between 300 and 500, with 336 being the most common. There’s no official regulation on the exact number, which surprises people who assume everything about golf is rigidly standardized. They’re right about golf being rigid. Just not about this.

 

27. What’s the dot over a lowercase “i” or “j” called?

One of those facts that makes people immediately look down at their own handwriting.

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A tittle. The word “tittle” itself comes from a Latin word meaning “small stroke.” It’s also the origin of the phrase “jot and tittle,” meaning every small detail.

 

28. What’s the only food that never spoils?

Archaeologists have found this stuff in Egyptian tombs, thousands of years old, still perfectly edible. That fact alone earns the question its place.

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Honey. Its low moisture content, high acidity, and natural hydrogen peroxide production make it essentially eternal. Edible honey has been found in tombs that are over 3,000 years old.

 

29. What company was originally called “Blue Ribbon Sports”?

The original name sounds like a county fair award. The current name sounds like a philosophy.

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Nike. Phil Knight and Bill Bowerman founded it as Blue Ribbon Sports in 1964. They rebranded in 1971. The swoosh logo cost $35 to design.

 

30. How many muscles does a cat have in each ear?

People guess low. They’re always wrong.

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32. Humans have 6. This is why a cat can rotate its ears 180 degrees independently, like tiny furry satellite dishes scanning for threats or the sound of a can opener.

 

31. What’s the fear of long words called?

Whoever named this phobia had a deeply cruel sense of humor.

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Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia. Yes, really. The irony is intentional, or at least feels intentional. It’s derived from a combination of Latin and Greek roots, plus “hippopotamus” thrown in just to make it worse.

 

32. What’s the rarest blood type?

People know their own blood type or they don’t. Either way, they guess based on which letter sounds the most exotic.

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AB negative, found in less than 1% of the population. O negative, which people often guess because it’s the universal donor, is actually more common at about 7%.

 

The Ones Where Pop Culture Meets Real Knowledge

The sweet spot. Questions where what you’ve watched, listened to, or absorbed by accident actually counts for something.

33. What was the first music video played on MTV?

A perfect trivia question because the answer is both obvious in retrospect and nearly impossible to guess cold.

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“Video Killed the Radio Star” by The Buggles, on August 1, 1981. The title was almost too on the nose. MTV knew exactly what they were doing.

 

34. What movie has won the most Academy Awards?

There’s a three-way tie, which is the kind of detail that makes a good trivia question great.

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Three films share the record at 11 Oscars: Ben-Hur (1959), Titanic (1997), and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003). People almost always name one but not all three.

 

35. What’s the best-selling video game of all time?

The answer changes depending on whether you count bundled copies, which is a sentence that will make a gamer at your table vibrate with the need to explain the distinction.

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Minecraft, with over 300 million copies sold. If you count bundled games, Tetris arguably wins with its various versions. But standalone sales? Minecraft, and it’s not close. People often guess GTA V or Wii Sports.

 

36. What TV show holds the record for the most Emmy nominations?

The answer shifted recently, and the show that holds the record now might surprise people who think of it as a comedy.

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Saturday Night Live, with over 300 nominations across its run. Game of Thrones held the record for a scripted series for a while, which is what most people guess.

 

37. What was the first Disney animated feature film?

After the El Apóstol question earlier, people are suspicious now. Good. But this time the obvious answer is the right one.

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Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, released in 1937. Walt Disney mortgaged his house to finance it. The film industry called it “Disney’s Folly” during production. It made $8 million in its initial release, during the Depression.

 

38. What actor has appeared in the most films?

Depends on how you count, but the standard answer isn’t who you’d think. It’s not Samuel L. Jackson, though he’s up there.

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The most commonly cited answer is Eric Roberts, with over 700 film credits. But if you’re looking at leading roles in wide-release films, the conversation changes entirely. The question works because everyone has a different definition of “appeared in.”

 

39. What’s the longest-running animated TV show in the United States?

The Simpsons feels right. And it is right. But the margin over second place is what shocks people.

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The Simpsons, which premiered in 1989 and has over 760 episodes. South Park, which started in 1997, is a distant second. People sometimes guess Scooby-Doo, which has been on and off the air in various forms since 1969 but isn’t a continuous series.

 

40. What band has sold the most albums worldwide?

Two answers compete for this, and which one you pick reveals your generation.

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The Beatles, with estimated sales of around 600 million. Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd are up there. Elvis is the best-selling solo artist. People under 30 sometimes guess Taylor Swift, which isn’t wrong about cultural impact but is wrong about cumulative numbers.

 

The Ones That Make You Feel Something

Not every good trivia question is about outsmarting the room. Some are about remembering something you forgot you knew.

41. What was the first product to have a barcode scanned at a checkout?

The answer is so mundane it’s perfect. History often happens in grocery stores.

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A 10-pack of Wrigley’s Juicy Fruit gum, at a Marsh supermarket in Troy, Ohio, on June 26, 1974. It’s now in the Smithsonian. A pack of gum changed how the entire world shops.

 

42. What was the average life expectancy in the United States in 1900?

The number is so low it recalibrates your sense of time. People guess too high because they can’t imagine their grandparents’ world being that different.

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About 47 years. It wasn’t that everyone died at 47. Infant mortality dragged the average way down. But the number still lands hard when you say it out loud.

 

43. What color were carrots before the 17th century?

This is one of those facts that makes you wonder what else has been quietly changed about the world without anyone telling you.

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Purple, white, and yellow were the most common colors. Orange carrots were cultivated in the Netherlands in the 17th century, possibly as a tribute to William of Orange. We eat propaganda and don’t even know it.

 

44. How old was the youngest person to win a Nobel Prize?

People know the name. The age is what gets them.

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Malala Yousafzai was 17 when she won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014. The oldest winner was John B. Goodenough, who won in Chemistry at 97 in 2019. That range tells you everything about what a life can hold.

 

45. What was the last letter added to the English alphabet?

It wasn’t Z. Everyone thinks it was Z.

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J. It was originally a variation of I and wasn’t considered a separate letter until the 16th century. The alphabet song has trained us to think of Z as the newcomer, but J snuck in much later than people realize.

 

46. What’s the most visited country in the world?

The answer hasn’t changed in decades, and it still surprises Americans every time.

Show Answer
France, with roughly 90 million international visitors per year. The United States is usually second or third. People often guess the U.S. or China. France’s dominance in tourism is one of those facts that makes you reconsider everything you think about soft power.

 

47. What year did the last woolly mammoth die?

This answer makes people sit up. It’s far more recent than anyone thinks, and it overlaps with something they definitely know about.

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Around 1700 BCE, on Wrangel Island off the coast of Siberia. The Egyptian pyramids were already over a thousand years old by then. Woolly mammoths and pyramids coexisted on this planet. That fact never stops being strange.

 

48. What’s the most common surname in the world?

English speakers default to Smith. But the world is bigger than English.

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Wang, with over 100 million people bearing the name. Li and Zhang are close behind. Smith doesn’t crack the global top 50.

 

The Ones That Separate Tables

These are the questions where you find out who’s been paying attention to the world and who’s been coasting on vibes.

49. How many countries are in Africa?

I ask this because the number is almost always underestimated, and the margin of error reveals something about how people picture the continent.

Show Answer
54. The most common guesses are in the 30s. Africa has more countries than any other continent except Asia, and it’s not a conversation most people have ever had with themselves.

 

50. What element makes up most of the human body by mass?

People think carbon. They think this because “carbon-based life form” is a phrase they’ve heard a thousand times. But carbon isn’t even second.

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Oxygen, at about 65% of body mass. Carbon is around 18%. We’re mostly oxygen and water, which makes us sound a lot less special than “carbon-based life form” implies.

 

51. What country consumes the most coffee per capita?

Americans think it’s them. Italians think it’s them. Everyone’s wrong and the real answer is somewhere much colder.

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Finland, where the average person drinks about 12 kilograms of coffee per year. That’s roughly four cups a day, per person, including children and non-drinkers. The Nordics dominate this list. Cold and dark will do that.

 

52. What’s the deepest point in the ocean?

Most people know the name. Fewer know where it is. Almost nobody knows how deep it actually goes.

Show Answer
The Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench, at roughly 36,000 feet (about 11,000 meters). That’s deeper than Mount Everest is tall. More people have been to the moon than to the bottom of the Challenger Deep.

 

53. How fast does a sneeze travel?

People either lowball this dramatically or wildly overshoot. There’s almost no middle ground.

Show Answer
About 100 miles per hour, or roughly 160 km/h. Some studies say up to 200 mph depending on the person. Either way, it’s faster than most people’s first guess and slower than their second.

 

54. What’s the only continent with no active volcanoes?

People go to Antarctica, because it seems too frozen for anything volcanic. That instinct is dead wrong.

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Australia. Antarctica actually has Mount Erebus, one of the most active volcanoes on Earth. Australia is the flattest, driest, and most geologically stable continent, which makes it feel safe and a little boring in the best way.

 

55. What year were women first allowed to compete in the Olympic Games?

The gap between the first modern Olympics and this answer tells you everything about progress and the pace at which it doesn’t happen.

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1900, at the Paris Games. The modern Olympics began in 1896 in Athens with zero female competitors. In 1900, 22 women competed out of 997 total athletes, in tennis, sailing, croquet, equestrianism, and golf.

 

56. What percentage of the Earth’s species live in the ocean?

We’ve explored more of the moon’s surface than the ocean floor. This number reflects that.

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An estimated 80% or more, with the majority still undiscovered. We’ve identified about 240,000 marine species, but scientists estimate there could be over 2 million. The ocean is less a habitat and more an entire undocumented civilization.

 

57. What city has the most billionaires?

The answer shifts year to year, but the current leader always surprises people who assume it’s somewhere in the United States.

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As of recent years, New York City and Mumbai have traded the top spot. Beijing is consistently in the top three. The answer changes annually, but the fact that it’s a genuine race between three continents tells you something about where wealth is moving.

 

58. What’s the most spoken language in the world by total number of speakers?

This is different from the native speakers question earlier. Total speakers changes the game entirely.

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English, with roughly 1.5 billion total speakers worldwide. Mandarin has more native speakers, but English’s reach as a second language puts it on top for total speakers. The distinction between these two questions is where the real learning happens.

 

The One You Save for Last

59. What’s the oldest known joke in recorded history?

It’s from ancient Sumeria, around 1900 BCE. And it’s a fart joke. Four thousand years of civilization, and the first thing we wrote down to make each other laugh was about flatulence. The specifics are a little lost in translation, but the gist survives.

Show Answer
“Something which has never occurred since time immemorial; a young woman did not fart in her husband’s lap.” That’s the oldest known joke, from a Sumerian tablet dating to about 1900 BCE. It’s crude, it’s domestic, and it’s proof that human humor hasn’t changed in four millennia.

 

60. What common object did Albert Einstein keep on his desk that he called his “friend” and said helped him think?

This is the question I close with because the answer is so human it changes how you picture genius. We build monuments to Einstein’s mind, but the man himself needed something small and tactile to get his thoughts moving. The answer isn’t a calculator or a chalkboard or a model of the universe.

Show Answer
A compass. Einstein was given a compass at age five, and the invisible force moving the needle fascinated him for the rest of his life. He kept one on his desk well into adulthood. Every revolutionary idea he ever had started with the same question a five-year-old asked: why does it point that way? Good trivia questions work the same way. They point somewhere you didn’t expect, and you can’t stop wondering why.

 

Elise Schneider

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