Question

In the frame story of a cycle narrated by two of these animals, one of them cons the Lion King into killing the Ox, his favorite member of his court. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name these animals, two of whom named Kalilah and Dimnah narrate a namesake cycle of Arabic cautionary animal fables. The Egyptian “Opener of the Ways,” Wepwawet, took the aspect of one of these animals.
ANSWER: jackals [accept wolves]
[10e] Many fables in the Kalilah wa-Dimnah were drawn from the Panchatantra, which may have inspired this Greek author’s fables The Fox and the Grapes and The Deer Without a Heart.
ANSWER: Aesop
[10m] In “The Ring-Dove” chapter of Kalilah wa-Dimnah, one of these animals narrates its life growing up in a monk’s house. In Aesop’s fables, two of these creatures contrast living luxuriously in danger and living simply in safety.
ANSWER: mouse [or mice; accept The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse]
<VD, Beliefs>

Back to bonuses

Summary

Data

DukeJames Madison B10101030
NC StateJames Madison A010010
South Carolina ANorth Carolina A0101020
South Carolina BNorth Carolina B010010
Georgia BEmory A010010
Georgia Tech DGeorgia Tech A10101030
Georgia Tech CGeorgia Tech B0101020
Georgia ATennessee A0101020
Imperial ABirmingham10101030
BristolEdinburgh010010
DurhamCambridge A1010020
OxfordImperial B1010020
Cambridge BWarwick0101020
George Washington BGeorgetown010010
George Washington AJohns Hopkins010010
Maryland AMaryland B010010
OSU AKenyon B010010
Michigan A Kenyon A 010010
Ohio State BMichigan B 010010
MSU A and FriendBoston College010010
TAG Magnet: Taylor's VersionTexas C010010
TAMUHCC010010
Texas BTexas A010010
FarrellmagnetismArizona State010010
Zen and the Art of BuzzingGanon Evans Fan Club010010