Trivia is basic or unimportant knowledge. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Jump to: navigation, search Logo en:Wiktionary Wiktionary is a sister project to Wikipedia intended to be a free wiki dictionary (including thesaurus and lexicon) in every language. ... Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Jump to: navigation, search Logo en:Wiktionary Wiktionary is a sister project to Wikipedia intended to be a free wiki dictionary (including thesaurus and lexicon) in every language. ... Jump to: navigation, search The word trivia is a latin word. ...
Trivia (1716) is the name of a poem by John Gay, loosely based on Juvenal. ... In Roman mythology, Trivia was the equivalent of the Greek goddess Artemis, goddess of the hunt, or possibly of Hecate. ... Jump to: navigation, search In mathematics, the term trivial is frequently used for objects (for examples, groups or topological spaces) that have a very simple structure. ...
This is a disambiguation page, a list of pages that otherwise might share the same title. If an article link referred you to this title, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page.
Trivial Pursuit is a board game where progress is determined by a player's ability to answer general knowledge or popular culture questions.
The object of the game is to move along the circular track and the spokes by correctly answering questions, and try to collect colored wedges (also known informally as a "cheese" or "pie" due to their shape) for correctly answering questions in each of the six category "headquarters" located at the base of each spoke.
Trivial Pursuit did not deny they sourced material from Worth's books (among others), but argued that copying from a single source is plagiarism while compiling information from several sources is legitimate research.
In mathematics, the term trivial is frequently used for objects (for examples, groups or topological spaces) that have a very simple structure.
A common joke in the mathematical community is to say that "trivial" is synonymous with "proved"—that is, any theorem can be considered "trivial" once it is known to be true.
At the end of the explanation, the second mathematician agrees that the theorem is trivial.