Difference between revisions of "Tossup"

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{{Intro}}
 
{{Intro}}
  
A '''tossup''' is a question, usually containing several sentences, that is read out loud for both teams to attempt to answer. During a game, any player who believes they know the answer to a tossup can use their [[buzzer]] to [[interruption|interrupt]] the question and deliver an answer to score points for their team. Tossup questions are the staple of game play for virtually all contemporary quizbowl.  
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A '''tossup''' (or '''toss-up''') is a question, usually containing several sentences, that is read out loud for both teams to attempt to answer. During a game, any player who believes they know the answer to a tossup can use their [[buzzer]] to [[interruption|interrupt]] the question and deliver an answer to score points for their team. Tossup questions are the staple of game play for virtually all contemporary quizbowl.  
  
 
[[Good quizbowl]] advocates write tossups in [[pyramidality|pyramidal]] style, in which a question begins with more in-depth knowledge about the answer and progresses towards easier clues, the intent being that more knowledgeable teams should answer before less knowledgeable teams.
 
[[Good quizbowl]] advocates write tossups in [[pyramidality|pyramidal]] style, in which a question begins with more in-depth knowledge about the answer and progresses towards easier clues, the intent being that more knowledgeable teams should answer before less knowledgeable teams.

Revision as of 00:17, 8 March 2021

A tossup (or toss-up) is a question, usually containing several sentences, that is read out loud for both teams to attempt to answer. During a game, any player who believes they know the answer to a tossup can use their buzzer to interrupt the question and deliver an answer to score points for their team. Tossup questions are the staple of game play for virtually all contemporary quizbowl.

Good quizbowl advocates write tossups in pyramidal style, in which a question begins with more in-depth knowledge about the answer and progresses towards easier clues, the intent being that more knowledgeable teams should answer before less knowledgeable teams.

Correctly-answered tossups are usually worth 10 points, though some tournaments allow for powers, in which an increased number of points, usually 15, is rewarded for a correct answer being given early in a tossup. When a player negs, or gives an incorrect answer before the tossup's end, his team cannot attempt to answer the question again and, under some rules, loses points.

Players have a finite amount of time after buzzing to provide an answer. In ACF, PACE, and NHBB gameplay, players have five seconds to begin their answer, while under NAQT rules, players have only two seconds. Additionally, if nobody buzzes in within five seconds (under ACF and PACE rules) or three seconds (under NAQT rules) of the end of a tossup, it is considered "dead", and the next tossup is read instead of proceeding to a bonus.

Sample tossup

From the Buffalo packet of ACF Fall 2012:

Nicolas Poussin painted this figure being helped by a faun onto a goat while looking at a putto attacking a young satyr. Four paintings also by Poussin depict this figure presenting weapons forged by Vulcan to her son. Jacques-Louis David's last painting shows this figure disarming Mars. Two paintings by Rubens depict this figure gazing into a mirror held by another son who has wings. Titian made a depiction of this goddess reclining on a couch in a painting commissioned by the Duke of Urbino. Botticelli painted the birth and arrival on a seashell of, for 10 points, what figure, the Roman goddess of love?
ANSWER: Venus [do not accept “Aphrodite”]