Best/Worst/Weirdest Interview Questions

This forum made possible through the generous support of SDN members, donors, and sponsors. Thank you.

doinmybest5840

Full Member
10+ Year Member
5+ Year Member
15+ Year Member
Joined
May 18, 2007
Messages
1,696
Reaction score
1
I was talking to my friend who applied to med school for the fall, and told me that one of her interviewers asked her what vegetable she would be if she had to choose. So I was wondering, what are the best or most random questions people have been asked during their interviews?
 
do a search, there have been at least 5 threads in the last 6 months with this exact title. Have you checked out the interview feedback part of SDN?
 
do a search, there have been at least 5 threads in the last 6 months with this exact title. Have you checked out the interview feedback part of SDN?

Hey I'm also a SLU '11! nice to meet ya
 
I had two interviews. First question from both faculty interviewers: "so where else have you interviewed?"

got to love beating around the bush😱
 
I was talking to my friend who applied to med school for the fall, and told me that one of her interviewers asked her what vegetable she would be if she had to choose. So I was wondering, what are the best or most random questions people have been asked during their interviews?

IMO, that's not that weird. It a Fruedian technique that allows one to describe one's self in a non-threatening way.
 
I don't believe cucumbers are vegetables. Anything with seeds is a fruit.
How the hell else are they supposed to reproduce? I mean, potatoes and carrots and stuff have seeds, too.:laugh:
 
How the hell else are they supposed to reproduce? I mean, potatoes and carrots and stuff have seeds, too.:laugh:

Nah, those are the ROOTS of the plant, the seeds are elsewhere.
 
the way i look at it, anything that has seeds with the part you eat, that is fruit (hence tomatoes, avocados, etc) otherwise a veg


now if anyone could clearly point out the diff between an edible seed, a nut, and a legume, now that would be something i dont really know...
 
the way i look at it, anything that has seeds with the part you eat, that is fruit (hence tomatoes, avocados, etc) otherwise a veg


now if anyone could clearly point out the diff between an edible seed, a nut, and a legume, now that would be something i dont really know...

WAIT, let me try:

1. Coffee bean=edible seed
2. Almond=nut
3. Green beans=legumes

:hardy: Can I have a cookie?
 
WAIT, let me try:

1. Coffee bean=edible seed
2. Almond=nut
3. Green beans=legumes

:hardy: Can I have a cookie?


... well i am afraid you sidestepped the question, so no cookie for you!

(please insert mental image of the soup nazi on seinfeld)

why is a

sunflower seed = seed
peanut = legume
almond = nut
 
Hmm, thank goodness you're going into medicine. The botanists would have your head. Although I'm curious, where do you buy seeded carrots?
Have you ever even seen a potato PLANT or a real, growing carrot? Let alone planted one? How the heck do you think you plant carrots? Stick a carrot in the ground?:laugh:
 
Alright alright everybody settle down here's what dictionary.com has to say

Fruit:the developed ovary of a seed plant with its contents and accessory parts, as the pea pod, nut, tomato, or pineapple

Vegetable: any plant whose fruit, seeds, roots, tubers, bulbs, stems, leaves, or flower parts are used as food, as the tomato, bean, beet, potato, onion, asparagus, spinach, or cauliflower

hmm...I still don't get it..but dictionary.com????
 
No, it's fruit syrup.:hardy:

...and also one of America's main source of fruits and veggies, along with lettuce and potatoes (as french fries)...or so says my nutrition professor.....yuck! 👎
 
no specific questions, but I did have an hour and 40 minute interview at Case, where the interviewer would interrupt my answers to talk about her cheesecake recipe...
 
if someone is allergic to tree nuts are they allergic to pine nuts and pesto or no?
are pinenuts seeds?
 
😆 😆


Anyone up for sharing an ovary salad with me?

We learned this in bio lab freshman year. The fruits are the ovaries of the plant. It was quite amusing at the time. :laugh:
 
From the straight dope:

A fruit is the matured ovary of a flower, containing the seed. After fertilization takes place and the embryo (plantlet) has begun to develop, the surrounding ovule becomes the fruit. Yum. I won't go on about the four types of fruit--simple, aggregate, multiple and accessory--which explain things like berries and pineapples.

A vegetable is considered to be edible roots, tubers, stems, leaves, fruits, seeds, flower clusters, and other softer plant parts. In common usage, however, there is no exact distinction between a vegetable and a fruit. The usual example is the tomato, which is a fruit, but is eaten as a vegetable, as are cucumbers, peppers, melons, and squashes. The classification of plants as vegetables is largely determined by custom, culture, and usage.

Okay, now the part which may surprise you. A grain is described as the dry fruit of a cereal grass, such as the "seedlike fruits of the buckwheat and other plants, and the plants bearing such fruits." So, grain is also a fruit.

Which brings us to the nut. Yes, you guessed it, a nut is, in botany, "a dry, one-seeded, usually oily fruit." True nuts include the acorn, chestnut, and hazelnut. The term nut also refers to any seed or fruit with a hard, brittle covering around an edible kernel, like the peanut, which is really a legume. A legume is defined as "(the) name for any plant of the pulse family; more generally, any vegetable. Botanically, a legume--a pod that splits along two sides, with the seeds attached to one of the sutures--is the characteristic fruit of the pulse family." Say what? A "pulse" is "the common name for Leguminosae or Fabaceae, a large family of herbs, shrubs, and trees, also called the pea, or legume, family. " Please, make it stop!

So I guess we have learned today that just about everything is a fruit, unless of course, it's a vegetable or a legume.
 
So I guess we have learned today that just about everything is a fruit, unless of course, it's a vegetable or a legume.

Why does it have to be one or the other? Why can't something be both a veggie and a fruit? 😀
 
Why does it have to be one or the other? Why can't something be both a veggie and a fruit? 😀

I think it can. As a matter of fact, by definition I think all fruits are technically veggies.
 
I think it can. As a matter of fact, by definition I think all fruits are technically veggies.

That's just wroooong. My world has been turned upside down. **cries**
 
wow, i have no idea what just happened. that was, hands down, the best thread i've seen on sdn.

oh, and i really like botany.
 
Top