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Exploring Argentina: A Quiz on Culture, History, and Geography

Test your knowledge of Argentina's culture, history, and geography with this engaging quiz that covers various topics from its national anthem to significant historical events.

1 The name is derived from the Latin argentum (silver), which comes from the ________ ἀργήντος (argēntos), gen.

2 What time offset in UTC is Argentina in during daylight savings?

3 It is the eighth-largest country in the world by land area and the largest among Spanish-speaking nations, though Mexico, ________ and Spain are more populous.

4 The Argentine beach football team was one of four competitors in the first international championship for the sport, in ________, in 1993.

5 Which of the following lead to the establishment of Argentina?

6 Following an attempt to purge the Peronist influence and the banning of Peronists from political life, elections in 1958 brought ________ to office.

7 When I think of what I've lost, I ask "who know themselves better than the blind?" – for every thought becomes a tool.[110] ________

8 What is the national anthem of Argentina?

9 The population density of Argentina: How many people are there per square kilometre?

10 Which is the largest city in Argentina?

💡 Interesting Facts

  • the short story "The Congress" by Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges was published in a deluxe edition with the letters made of gold.
  • the Center Region of Argentina produces 90% of the country's vegetable oil.
  • the Río Pilcomayo National Park in Argentina is included in the Ramsar Convention's list of wetlands of international importance.
  • the Rufous Hornero (pictured), a common species in the ovenbird family, is the national bird of Argentina.
  • the Italian socialist leader Dino Rondani represented Argentina in the Executive of the Labour and Socialist International.
  • the Argentinian Labour Party, which played a major role in ensuring Juan Perón's 1946 election victory, was modelled after the British Labour Party.
  • in the late 1980s, as many as 50 percent of Argentina's thermal power plants had to be shut down due to lack of maintenance, causing a supply crisis.
  • more than 95 percent of the electricity generated in Paraguay is produced by two hydroelectric plants in Itaipu and Yacyretá, most of which is exported to Brazil and Argentina.
  • more than a million tourists visit the wine-producing regions in Argentina annually.
  • the Southern Right Whales off the coast of Argentina 'sail' by raising their flukes and catching the wind.
  • the Uruguayan Invasion was a musical phenomenon of the 1960s distinctly similar to the British Invasion, with rock bands from Uruguay rapidly gaining popularity in Argentina.
  • the title story from The Book of Sand by Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges describes a book with an infinite number of pages.
  • when Britain took the dispute over the sovereignty of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands to the International Court of Justice in 1955, Argentina declined to cooperate.
  • when the new Argentine dreadnought Rivadavia arrived in Buenos Aires on 19 February 1915, over 47,000 people, including President Victorino de la Plaza, came out to see the ship.
  • the title story from Shakespeare's Memory by Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges is about a man who is given the memory of William Shakespeare.
  • the first two books by Argentine author Ricardo Güiraldes were such a commercial and critical failure that he gathered up the unsold copies and threw them in a well.
  • the Viceroyalty of La Plata—covering Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay and Uruguay—was the last viceroyalty created by Spain.
  • the diporus subspecies of the Bothrops neuwiedi pitviper is one of the main causes of snakebite injury in Argentina.
  • the first British merchant navy ship lost to enemy fire since World War II was the Atlantic Conveyor, sunk by an Argentinian Exocet missile during the Falklands War.
  • in 1896, Christian IX of Denmark awarded Ramon Santamarina the Order of the Dannebrog, for supporting the settlement of Danish emigrants in Argentina.
  • during the Puna de Atacama dispute the U.S. minister in Buenos Aires and two delegates from Chile and Argentina drew the northern portion of the border between Chile and Argentina.
  • Guido di Tella was an Argentine businessman, academic and diplomat who served as Minister of Foreign Relations between 1991 and 1999.
  • Hernando Arias de Saavedra was the first native-born governor of a New World colony and issued the order leading to the modern-day partition of Argentina and Paraguay.
  • Marcelo Piñeyro's second film, Wild Horses, was the second-highest-attended film in Argentina during 1995, and was screened at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
  • Enrique Angelelli was an Argentine Catholic bishop killed during that country's military junta.
  • Eduardo Delgado has recorded the full works of Argentine composer Alberto Ginastera.
  • painter and sculptor Roberto Aizenberg has been called the "best-known" orthodox surrealist in Argentina.
  • Russian-born Yiddish playwright Peretz Hirshbein tried his hand at farming, both in the Catskills and in Argentina.
  • Benjamin Fondane, known as a Symbolist poet in Romania, a Jewish existentialist thinker in France and an avant-garde filmmaker in Argentina, was killed at Auschwitz in late 1944.
  • Mario Menéndez, who was the governor of the Falkland Islands, surrendered Argentine forces to the United Kingdom during the 1982 Falklands War.
  • Operation Independence, which aimed to crush the Guevarist guerilla ERP, was the first large-scale operation in the Argentine Dirty War.
  • after discovering a suitcase with US$800,000 in Maletinazo, policewoman Maria de Lujan Telpuk appeared on the cover of the Argentine and Venezuelan editions of Playboy.
  • all five species of the catfish genus Epactionotus are endemic to limited geographic areas in Brazil and Argentina.
  • although she was born in Argentina, Renata Fronzi pursued a successful acting career in theater, film and telenovelas in the neighboring country of Brazil.
  • a massive general strike organized by the Argentinian F.O.I.C. meat-packers union secured the release of its jailed leadership in September 1943.
  • a large titanosaur nesting ground was recently discovered in Auca Mahuevot, in Patagonia in Argentina, and another colony has reportedly been discovered in Spain.
  • Virginia Bolten was deported from Argentina to Uruguay in 1902 because of her anarchist activities.
  • Carletonomys, a rodent related to modern rice rats, is known only from one incomplete upper jaw from over 1 million year old silt deposits in Argentina.
  • Las fuerzas extrañas, Lugones' least successful work at the time, is now considered to be key in the development of the science fiction and fantasy genres in Argentina.
  • Argentine portrait painter Antonio Alice, who was expelled from school for drawing in books, was later awarded the Prix de Rome scholarship.