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Quiz: How much do you know about the origins of words?

Latin, Greek… Shakespeare?

LET’S GET ETYMOLOGICAL.

We'll start with an old one, the roots of 'democracy' are 'dēmos' (the people) and 'kratia' (power, rule), but what language is it from?
Alamy
Latin
Greek

English
Irish
The latin word for what number gave us the name of the month 'December'?
1
8

10
12
Ireland gave the world the term 'boycott' by ostracising Captain Charles Boycott. But what was Boycott's job?
Wikimedia Commons
He was a shop owner that charged extortionate interest rates.
He was a land agent for an absentee landlord.

He was tasked with checking if people were using gas during restricted periods.
He was a body-snatcher, who dug up graves to sell the corpses.
Speaking of 'ostracise', where does that word come from?
That was the ancient Greeks again.
No, the Romans. Credit where it's due.

Gothic. Refers to the Ostrogoths.
Low German from northern Germany.
Another one relating to Ireland, 'smashing' meaning 'excellent' or 'wonderful' comes from the Gaeilge phrase 'is maith sin' (that is good).
True
False
'Frostbite', 'cookbook', 'hangover', 'rubberneck' and 'hillside' are compound words made from two older words. What country did they all originate from?
Alamy
England
Ireland

Australia
America
'Moose', 'hickory', 'caribou' and 'raccoon' all come from...
Hebrew
Paleosiberian

Spanish
Native American languages
Which of these commonly used words is Shakespeare credited with inventing?
Wikimedia Commons
Accommodation
Assassination

Auspicious
Apostrophe

Amazement
All of the above (and that's just some of the A's)
How many words is the Bard credited with creating? (Admittedly, many of them may just not have been written down before Shakespeare used them in his plays.)
11
67

988
1,700
Believe it or not, the word 'battery' was given to us by one of the signees of the US Declaration of Independence. But who was it?
John Adams
Samuel Adams

Thomas Jefferson
Benjamin Franklin
The same fella also gave us several terms relating to electricity that are still in use today. These include 'positive', 'negative' and 'charge'.
That's also true.
No. You're having me on now.
My editor is wondering when this quiz will be ready. On that note, what's the original meaning of the word 'deadline'?
It comes from the US Civil War and denoted a line which prisoners would be shot if they passed.
Wanamaker's Department Store in Philadelphia used the term to describe clearance sales.

It refers to early telephones and the fact that the line would go dead if the user didn't repeatedly charge the device with a hand crank.
It comes from the newspaper industry, where reporters were routinely shot for filing their copy late.
Answer all the questions to see your result!
Martin Droeshout
You scored out of !
William Shakespeare
The Bard himself would be happy with that.
Share your result:
You scored out of !
Benjamin Franklin
Money.
Share your result:
You scored out of !
John Montagu, the 4th Earl of Sandwich.
You could have done better but the sandwich is named after you. So, that's something.
Share your result:
You scored out of !
John Duns Scotus
You are a follower of John Duns Scotus. AKA a dunce.
Share your result:
Wikimedia Commons
You scored out of !
Nightmare
You are an evil spirit from Germanic folklore. You sit upon a sleeper’s chest and give them terrifying dreams.
Share your result:

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15 Comments
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    Mute Andy Cheung
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    Jan 31st 2018, 9:00 AM

    Missing files about missing files?

    146
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    Mute Gillian Scully
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    Jan 31st 2018, 9:17 AM

    @Andy Cheung: I know hilarious and I am still giggling.

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    Mute billy Dorney
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    Jan 31st 2018, 9:37 AM

    Secondhand information

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    Mute Dave O Keeffe
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    Jan 31st 2018, 10:26 AM

    @billy Dorney: beat me to it

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    Mute billy Dorney
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    Jan 31st 2018, 6:55 PM

    @Dave O Keeffe: just id say

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    Mute pats brandon
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    Jan 31st 2018, 9:26 AM

    This blunder has serious ramificaitons. Skippy’s cover in Afghanistan has been completely blown.

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    Mute Reuben Gray
    Favourite Reuben Gray
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    Jan 31st 2018, 9:06 AM

    “Australian cabinet papers are usually not released to the public until two decades after they were created.”

    So is this the normal method of release for “cabinet papers” then?

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    Mute Paul Jennings
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    Jan 31st 2018, 11:10 AM

    Great places for unusual finds, secondhand shops. It took a student innocently rummaging through a drawer or a file stumbling over the findings of Unit 731, a hell-on-earth “medical research” centre in wartime occupied China where victims were subjected to experimental invasive surgery, freezing, burning, electrocution, infection, being spun in centrifuges, placed in pressure cells until they imploded and vivisection. All conducted without anaesthetic, because it might “influence” or “compromise” the accuracy of the results. It’s a wonder governments/organisations don’t cover their (dirty) asses better when disposing of incriminating material.

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    Mute billy Dorney
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    Feb 1st 2018, 6:08 AM

    @Paul Jennings: thats hard, never heard until now of such a (bar auchwitz)

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    Mute Liam Doyle
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    Jan 31st 2018, 9:25 AM

    But, but, but… her emails!

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    Mute gerry fallon
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    Jan 31st 2018, 9:20 AM

    Just put them on the Barbie cobber!

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    Mute Tony Gartland
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    Jan 31st 2018, 9:59 AM

    What about putting the bubbles in Beer? Is THAT secret still safe?

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    Mute David Dineen
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    Jan 31st 2018, 9:10 AM

    To be found under the fiction book shelf

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    Mute Dave O'Hanlon
    Favourite Dave O'Hanlon
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    Jan 31st 2018, 5:25 PM

    Quick tell the prime minister. ‘Oi Prime Minister!!!!!’

    2
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