Difference between revisions of "Description acceptable"

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<onlyinclude>'''"Description acceptable"''' is a warning occasionally appended to the beginning of [[tossup]]s or the end of [[bonus]] parts, to indicate that the desired answer may not have a proper name and/or that the answer line allows some leniency with giving a more common generic answer rather than the proper name of the thing being asked about. This represents an exception to the general principle that [[things have names]].
 
<onlyinclude>'''"Description acceptable"''' is a warning occasionally appended to the beginning of [[tossup]]s or the end of [[bonus]] parts, to indicate that the desired answer may not have a proper name and/or that the answer line allows some leniency with giving a more common generic answer rather than the proper name of the thing being asked about. This represents an exception to the general principle that [[things have names]].
  
Questions that can ''only'' be answered with a description are sometimes given the warning '''"description required"''' instead.</onlyinclude>
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Questions that can ''only'' be answered with a description are sometimes given the warning '''"Description required"''' instead.</onlyinclude>
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
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==Theory==
 
==Theory==
  
In the strictest reading, the only acceptable answers for a question are those which explicitly satisfy all clues. However, convention allow for writers and editors to provide leniency by including additional acceptable answers - the most common example is accepting answers that are discussed in particular clues but are too specific for others. A "description acceptable" warning is an example of this practice, which is sometimes codified in rule sets.
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Strictly speaking, an answer must explicitly satisfy all clues in a question. However, convention allows for leniency in certain cases, such as accepting answers that are referenced in specific clues but may be too specific elsewhere.  
  
It is possible to write a question which accepts descriptions but does not inform the players with a warning - however, this creates a situation where players may not be aware that they have the knowledge necessary to answer a question. The desire to avoid this outcome drove the adoption of "description acceptable" warnings and has allowed questions to have broader answerlines while avoiding this negative outcome.
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The "Description acceptable" warning is one way to formalize this leniency. For answers that have a well-known proper name, no warning is necessary, as players are expected to provide the correct name. For answers with a proper name but a more commonly known description (e.g. "the boat from the beginning of ''Heart of Darkness''" instead of "the ''Nellie''") or for answers with no proper name, a warning is often expected. Without this warning, players may not realize they have sufficient knowledge to answer a question if they only remember a description rather than a proper name. The adoption of "Description acceptable" has helped broaden answerlines while reducing unnecessary confusion.
  
There is some ambiguity regarding precisely what is implied by "description acceptable", as well as the proper course of action for answers with no proper name. Some have advocated for variations of "description or specific answer acceptable" to convey the full set of acceptable answers.
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The exact meaning of "Description acceptable" has been disputed. In particular, when an answer has no proper name at all, questions may utilize either "Description acceptable" or "Description required", as the question must be answered with the description, so it is technically "acceptable", though "Description required" is more explicit.<ref>[https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=404897 You're probably not using "Description acceptable" enough"] by [[Dan Ni|dni]] » Thu Jul 10, 2014 2:55 pm</ref> Rarely, questions will not include any instruction for such an answer, with the reasoning that the only correct answer is a description, so no warning is appropriate.  
{|class="wikitable
 
!Scenario
 
!Looser reading
 
!Stricter reading
 
|-
 
|An answer with a well-known proper name
 
|colspan=2|No warning
 
The question must be answered with the proper name.
 
|-
 
|An answer with a proper name but a more commonly known description
 
e.g. "the boat from the beginning of ''Heart of Darkness''" instead of "the ''Nellie''"
 
|colspan=2 bgcolor="eeeeee"|"Description acceptable" warning
 
The question can be answered with either the proper name or the description.
 
|-
 
|An answer with no proper name
 
|style="background: linear-gradient(100deg, #eeeeee 50%, #dddddd 50%)"|Either "Description acceptable" or "Description required" warning
 
The question must be answered with the description, so it is technically "description acceptable" - "description required" is more explicit though.
 
|style="background: linear-gradient(100deg, #dddddd 50%, #f8f9fa 50%)"|"Description required" or no warning
 
In the absence of a proper name, the only correct answer is a description; as such no warning is appropriate. "Description required" is also acceptable.
 
|}
 
  
 
{{Refs}}
 
{{Refs}}
 
{{c|Quizbowl lingo}}
 
{{c|Quizbowl lingo}}

Latest revision as of 20:20, 25 March 2025

The Rules of the Game

"Description acceptable" is a warning occasionally appended to the beginning of tossups or the end of bonus parts, to indicate that the desired answer may not have a proper name and/or that the answer line allows some leniency with giving a more common generic answer rather than the proper name of the thing being asked about. This represents an exception to the general principle that things have names.

Questions that can only be answered with a description are sometimes given the warning "Description required" instead.

History

The use of "Description acceptable" became more standard in collegiate circuit sets in the early 2010s.[1]

Though some tossups at 2014 ICT had the label, NAQT has banned the use of "Description acceptable" in its question sets since 2014.[2]

Theory

Strictly speaking, an answer must explicitly satisfy all clues in a question. However, convention allows for leniency in certain cases, such as accepting answers that are referenced in specific clues but may be too specific elsewhere.

The "Description acceptable" warning is one way to formalize this leniency. For answers that have a well-known proper name, no warning is necessary, as players are expected to provide the correct name. For answers with a proper name but a more commonly known description (e.g. "the boat from the beginning of Heart of Darkness" instead of "the Nellie") or for answers with no proper name, a warning is often expected. Without this warning, players may not realize they have sufficient knowledge to answer a question if they only remember a description rather than a proper name. The adoption of "Description acceptable" has helped broaden answerlines while reducing unnecessary confusion.

The exact meaning of "Description acceptable" has been disputed. In particular, when an answer has no proper name at all, questions may utilize either "Description acceptable" or "Description required", as the question must be answered with the description, so it is technically "acceptable", though "Description required" is more explicit.[3] Rarely, questions will not include any instruction for such an answer, with the reasoning that the only correct answer is a description, so no warning is appropriate.

References

  1. Re: ACF Nationals 2013 Discussion by theMoMA » Tue Apr 30, 2013 10:32 pm
  2. NAQT policy on "Description acceptable" by setht » Thu Jul 10, 2014 2:55 pm
  3. You're probably not using "Description acceptable" enough" by dni » Thu Jul 10, 2014 2:55 pm