5/8/2023 0 Comments Quaqua marsupialI understand, just for now, Tina.ĮISENBERG: You'll be moving on to our Ask Me One More final round at the end of the show, so stick around. And that makes Stephen our winner.ĮISENBERG: The rivalry is settled for now. Tina, do you know what it is?ĬOULTON: There is no reason you should know this.ĬOULTON: In Danish, this animal goes "rap-rap." In French, it goes "qua-qua." In Greek, it goes "pi-pi-pi-pi-pi-pi."ĬOULTON: I got to say, it seems like the Greeks got it wrong in this case.ĬOULTON: Before he lost it all to Flintheart Glomgold in 2012, what duck did Forbes magazine rank as the world's richest fictional character?ĬOULTON: That's right. The symmetry of that is quite beautiful.ĬOULTON: But that is not right. What is a turkey called in India?ĬOULTON: I wish that were true. But in India, the bird is actually named for yet another country. They actually call them Hindi, meaning from India. In Spanish, this animal goes "goro-goro." In Turkish, it goes "gloo-gloo." And in Russian, it goes "guli-guli."ĬOULTON: Or probably more like "guli-guli-guli-guli-guli."ĬOULTON: So in Turkey, they don't call turkeys turkey. She was trying to give you a false sense of security.ĬOULTON: Yeah. KENDALL: I knew it was a turkey waddle, but I wasn't sure about a rooster.ĬOULTON: Right. The result of breeding European honeybees with their more aggressive southern neighbors, Africanized bees are commonly known by what fearsome term?ĬOULTON: In Italian, this animal goes "chicchirichi." In Swedish, it goes "kuckeliku." And in Greek, it goes "kikiriku."ĬOULTON: No, I'm sorry, it's not a chicken.ĬOULTON: What is the name of that hanging flap of skin under a rooster's beak?ĮISENBERG: You had no faith that was the right answer. Are you ready?ĬOULTON: In Japanese, this animal goes "boon-boon." In German, it goes "summ-summ." And in Russian, it goes "zh-zh."ĬOULTON: What if I said the last one again? "zh-zh."ĬOULTON: Here is your bonus question. After you name the animal, we will follow-up with a bonus question that either person may answer. So, while in English we say the sound that dogs make is bow-wow, in Danish they say that a dog makes a sound more like "vov-vov."ĬOULTON: And in French, it would be more like "ouah-ouah." So we're going to give you.ĬOULTON: Just for the record, it's the English ones that are correct, the rest of the world is wrong.ĬOULTON: So we're going to give you some sounds that common animals supposedly make in other languages, and all you have to do is name the animal. JONATHAN COULTON: Well, this game is called It's All Squeak To Me, and it's about animal sounds. Jonathan, what do we have in store for these two? Well, this is very exciting, and I guess on ASK ME ANOTHER, we're going to settle the score. KENDALL: Oh, I found him in a hospital many years ago.ĮISENBERG: This is a mother/son competition.ĮISENBERG: Are you guys competitive with each other?ĮISENBERG: And is trivia the way you usually compete?ĮISENBERG: One of many. Wait a second.ĮISENBERG: So you both have the same last name, huh? Let's welcome our next two contestants, in front of me right now, Tina Kendall and Stephen Kendall.
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