WeeklyQuiz 2026 · WK 27
2026 · WK 2118 May – 24 May 2026

Weekly Image Quiz — Week 21, 2026

Identify landmarks, flags, and logos from visual clues. Ten questions, instant scoring, and a written answer key with explanations below.

Quick answer

The weekly image quiz for week 21, 2026 is a free 10-question multiple-choice quiz covering visual recognition, flags, logos. Play it interactively on this page or read the full answer key below — no sign-up needed.

Play the Image quiz for week 21, 2026

About this week's edition

Visual memory works differently from verbal memory, which is why image rounds shuffle the leaderboard at every quiz night. Strong readers do not automatically win here.

Descriptions are written to be accessible: every visual clue is also conveyed in words, so screen-reader users play on equal footing.

Some knowledge is visual. You may not be able to define a landmark, but you know it when you see it. The weekly image quiz turns that recognition into a game: each question describes or shows a visual subject — a flag, a logo, a skyline, a famous painting — and asks you to identify it.

Abstract cobalt and yellow pattern illustrating the Weekly Image Quiz
Weekly Image Quiz — edition artwork for 2026 · WK 21.

How to play

  1. Read each question and tap one of the four options.
  2. The correct answer is highlighted immediately, with a one-line explanation.
  3. Your running score appears in the bar above the questions.
  4. Answer all ten to see your final result and verdict.

Scoring guide

ScoreVerdict
9–10Expert — you could set next week's questions.
7–8Strong — comfortably above the typical player.
5–6Average — the most common band for this round.
0–4Warm-up — read the explanations and replay.

Answer key — Image quiz, 2026 · WK 21

Prefer to read rather than play? Open each question below to reveal the answer and the reasoning.

Q1. How many bones does an adult human body typically have?

206

Babies are born with around 300 bones, many of which fuse; adults typically end up with 206.

Q2. Which planet rains diamonds, according to models?

Neptune (and Uranus)

Extreme pressure inside the ice giants likely compresses carbon into diamond 'rain' — supported by lab experiments.

Q3. Which logo is a swoosh?

Nike

Carolyn Davidson designed Nike's Swoosh in 1971 for $35; she later received stock as thanks.

Q4. Which metal is liquid at room temperature?

Mercury

Mercury melts at about −39°C, making it the only metal that is liquid under ordinary room conditions.

Q5. Which artist painted the swirling 'The Starry Night'?

Vincent van Gogh

Van Gogh painted The Starry Night in 1889 from his asylum room in Saint-Rémy; it hangs in MoMA, New York.

Q6. Which flag features a red circle on a white field?

Japan

Japan's flag, the Hinomaru, shows a crimson sun disc on white; Bangladesh's circle is on green.

Q7. The golden ratio is approximately what value?

1.618

Phi ≈ 1.618 appears throughout art and design; 1.414 is √2, 2.718 is e, and 3.141 is pi.

Q8. The Statue of Liberty's green colour comes from what?

Oxidised copper (patina)

The statue's copper skin weathered from brown to its famous green patina within decades of 1886.

Q9. The unicorn is the national animal of which country?

Scotland

Scotland adopted the unicorn — a medieval symbol of purity and power — as its national animal.

Q10. The leaning tower is a landmark of which Italian city?

Pisa

Pisa's bell tower began leaning during construction in the 12th century due to soft ground; engineering work has stabilised it.

FAQs — Image, 2026 · WK 21

How long does the week 21, 2026 Image quiz take?

Most players finish in three to five minutes. There is no timer, so you can take as long as you like.

Who writes and checks the Image questions?

The Weekly Quiz editorial process requires every answer to be verifiable against at least two reliable reference sources before publication — see our fact-checking policy.

How is this different from last week's Image quiz?

The question selection, option order, and mixed-in bonus questions all rotate weekly, so the week 21, 2026 edition is a distinct set from the week before.

Can I use the Weekly Image Quiz in a classroom or pub quiz?

Absolutely. Teachers and quizmasters are welcome to project or read the questions aloud. The explanations double as answer-reading material.

Does the Image quiz work on mobile?

Yes — the quiz is a lightweight static page that works on any modern phone browser, with large tap targets and no app required.

Is the Weekly Image Quiz free to play?

Yes — every quiz on this site is free, requires no account, and stores no personal data. Your score is calculated in your browser and never leaves it.

Do I need to sign up or share my email?

No. There are no accounts, no pop-ups asking for your email, and no paywall — just the quiz.

Can screen-reader users play the Image quiz?

Yes. Options are real buttons, results are announced via live regions, and every visual cue has a text equivalent.

Where can I find older Image quizzes?

The weekly quiz archive lists every past edition by ISO week, and each quiz page links to the previous and next week at the bottom.

What happens if I answer a question wrong?

The correct option is highlighted immediately and a one-line explanation appears, so a wrong answer still teaches you the fact.

More quizzes for 2026 · WK 21

All Image quizzes → Everything from 2026 · WK 21 →