Question

This language was used for a poem that anatomically breaks down the parts of an animal from her “supple” backbone to her “well-knit” joints. A poem in this language notes, “Where in these ruins is a place I can cry,” after describing how traces of a loved one are “woven (15[1])by the north wind and the south wind.” An author in this language wrote “wine poems,” such as one that notes, “Don't cry for” the title woman. The speaker says (*) “Stop Remember Weep” in one of seven poems in this language called the “Suspended (-5[1])Odes,” as they were hung in a building. (10[1])Odes originally in this language called qasida (“kah-SEE-dah”) often include descriptions of horses. Before spreading to the Indian subcontinent, ghazals were written in this language. For 10 points, name this language of Imru' al-Qais (“ahl-KYE-is”), a pre-Islamic poet. ■END■

ANSWER: Arabic [or al-ʿarabiyyah]
<Noah Sheidlower, World Literature>
= Average correct buzz position

Buzzes

PlayerTeamOpponentBuzz PositionValue
Will AlstonWe joppingOh you like geography? Name every Forrest.4915
Aseem KeyalbruhKhalil v Carbolic Shisha Ball Co93-5
Jeremy TsaiKhalil v Carbolic Shisha Ball Cobruh10110

Summary

2024 Penn Bowl Playtest10/12/2024Y2100%50%50%75.00
2024 Penn Bowl UNC10/26/2024N3100%0%33%119.67
2024 Penn Bowl Florida10/26/2024N250%0%50%137.00
2024 Penn Bowl Harvard10/26/2024N475%0%50%124.00
2024 Penn Bowl UK10/26/2024N5100%20%0%102.40
2024 Penn Bowl Berkeley11/02/2024N2100%50%0%70.00
2024 Penn Bowl Mainsite11/02/2024N3100%0%33%119.67
2024 Penn Bowl CWRU11/02/2024N475%0%25%122.00
2024 Penn Bowl Chicago11/02/2024N888%0%63%112.00
2024 Penn Bowl Texas11/02/2024N2100%50%0%75.50