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Etymology and Word Origins
           Quiz
• 26 Questions.
          • Each carries 2 marks.
 • Answers will be accepted till Monday 26th
                    midnight.
  • Send your answers to my FB inbox or to
               britig@gmail.com
• Hope you have fun and Merry Christmas. 
1.
 The story goes that a Dublin theatre proprietor by the name of Richard Daly
  made a bet that he could, within forty-eight hours, make a nonsense word
known throughout the city, and that the public would supply a meaning for it.
  After a performance one evening, he gave his staff cards with the word X
 written on them, and told them to write the word on walls around the city.
 The next day the strange word was the talk of the town, and within a short
                  time it had become part of the language.

The most detailed account of this supposed exploit (in F. T. Porter's Gleanings
  and Reminiscences, 1875) gives its date as 1791. The word, however, was
already in use by then, and had been used by Fanny Burney in her diary entry
                              for 24 June 1782.

                        What is the word?
2.
   According to legend a man
named Leofric taxed the people
    of Coventry heavily. His
 wife, lady Godiva, begged him
  not to. Leofric said he would
end the tax if she rode through
 the streets of Coventry naked.
    So she did. Everybody in
 Coventry was supposed to stay
indoors with his or her shutters
 closed. However _____ _____
had a sneaky look at Godiva and
         was struck blind.

 What nickname commonly
 given to voyeurs arose from
          this story?
3.
 X (319-272 BC) was one of the
 greatest Greek generals of the
    Hellenistic era. His greatest
  political weaknesses were the
failure to maintain focus and the
    failure to maintain a strong
         treasury at home.
    His name is famous for the
    phrase Y which refers to an
      exchange at the Battle of
   Asculum. The battle, though
     successful, cost him heavy
  losses, from which the term Y
    was coined. In response to
  congratulations for winning a
       costly victory over the
 Romans, he is reported to have
said: "One more such victory will
             undo me!”.
4.
 In medieval music, the Guidonian hand was a mnemonic
   used to assist singers to learn how to sing by viewing
  notes, in which each portion of the hand represented a
        specific note within the hexachord system.
The lowest note in this scale was represented by the Greek
    letter γ followed by ‘ut’ and would span 3 octaves.
 This notation gave rise to a word that was initially used in
 music to represent the entire musical scale but has gone
            on to be used beyond music as well.

                       What word?
5.
This familiar word comes from an alteration of the
Middle English for odour or taste, and is derived in
     turn from a Middle French term meaning
        something left behind, or released.

    What noun, more familiar to us as verb?
6.
This term was originally applied in the
19th century to describe plays dealing
 with contemporary moral and social
issues and has been used to describe
 the work of Ibsen, John Galsworthy
      and GB Shaw’s early efforts.

  In 1896, F.S. Boas used this term to
      describe these Shakespeare
    plays, because they apparently
 brought a harshness not seen in any
   of his comedies to bear upon the
interconnections between private and
            public morality.

         What term?
7.
 The phrase X has entered common use as
a reference to an unpleasant situation that
      continually repeats, or seems to.
          In the military, referring to
     unpleasant, unchanging, repetitive
situations as “X ”. A magazine article about
 the aircraft carrier USS America mentions
its use by sailors in September 1993. X was
     a favourite one among the Rangers
 deployed for Operation Gothic Serpent in
 Somalia in 1993, because they saw X as a
  metaphor of their own situation, waiting
       long periods between raids and
            monotonous long days.

            Give the phrase X.
8.
       The current name came about almost by
   chance, according to a tale recounted in Windsor
Revisited, written by HRH The Duke of Windsor. About
  1830, a London merchant received a letter from a
Hawick firm about some tweels. The London merchant
misinterpreted the handwriting, understanding it to be
a trade-name taken from the name of the river which
   flows through the Scottish Borders textile areas.
Subsequently the goods were advertised as X and the
           name has remained so ever since.

                       Give X.
9.
  Amitav Ghosh, in his new
book River of Smoke, traces
 the origin of this common
Hindi word to a Portuguese
 word meaning ‘lacking’ or
  ‘deficient in character’. A
     related English word,
   meaning mistake is also
known to exist. It is also the
 title of this Bollywood film
       released in 2011.

      Which word?
10.

This word was from a Hindi word meaning press.
 This word was used during the 18th century by
 the Europeans who were in the Turkish baths.
This is basically a word to give instruction to the
  masseur to press and massage. Somehow or
   rather along the way, the word became X.

                     Give X.
11.


This word came from the name
of a city in west India. The men
   in this city wore a type of
      garment. In late 19th
   century, the English used
 similar type of garments, i.e.
 trousers that are loose above
  the knee and tight from the
   knee to ankle, worn when
          riding a horse.

      What is the word?
12.
The name has its origins in a Test match played between the
 West Indies and England at Old Trafford, Manchester, in the
   year 1933. Elliss “Puss” Achong , was a leftarm orthodox
spinner, playing for the West Indies at the time. According to
folklore, Achong is said to have had Walter Robbins stumped
 off a surprise delivery that spun into the righthander from
  outside the off stump. As he walked back to the pavilion,
    Robbins said to his teammates "Fancy being done by a
  bloody_______!", leading to the popularity of the term in
     England, and subsequently, in the rest of the world.

                        What term?
13.
This phrase X has its origin in
the following Biblical verse
Jeremiah 11:19:
But I was like a gentle X; And I
did not know that they had
devised plots against me, "Let
us destroy the tree with its
fruit, And let us cut him off
from the land of the
living, That his name be
remembered no more."
The allusion to the especial
helplessness of _____ was
made use of in this 1991 film.

    What is the phrase X?
14.
 The term was coined by Ludwig August von Rochau, a
         German writer and politician in the 19th
century, following Klemens Metternich's lead in finding
 ways to balance the power of European empires. The
term refers to politics or diplomacy based primarily on
    practical considerations, rather than ideological
  notions. The term is often used pejoratively to imply
   politics that are coercive, amoral or Machiavellian.

                  What is the term?
15.
 This motorsport which
essentially comprises of a
  series of timed stunts
done in a predetermined
   order owes its name
 eventually to the Hindi
   word meaning ‘Ball
          House’.

What is this sport called?
16.
    ___ _____ is a derogatory term used to refer to
  appropriation of government spending for localized
    projects which benefit only the representative’s
                 constituency/district.
The term may have originated in the US during the pre-
Civil War days when slaves were given 1 salt ____ ____
  as reward and requiring them to compete amongst
      themselves to get their share of the handout.
In an 1863 story by Edward Hale, the term began to be
   associated with public spending for the citizenry.

                     What term?
17.
  John Dennis, a popular English critic playwright of the
       1700s, wrote a play called Appius & Virginia
 Story goes that Dennis developed a unique background
   effect for the stage during the play but the play was
     cancelled by the theatre due to lack of audience
When Dennis returned to the theatre for another play, he
    saw his effect being used without permission and
                         exclaimed:
“That’s my _____, by God! The villains will play my ____
                     but not my play!”

   What phrase did English language gain due to this
                      incident?
18.
  On December 8, 1869 Leopold and Fanny (both writers)
signed a contract making Leopold the slave of Fanny Pistor
           Bogdanoff for the period of six months.
  The stipulation on the contract stated that the Baroness
   (as Fanny called herself) wear furs as often as possible
especially when she was in a bad mood. Leopold would be
   disguised as a servant and travel in the 3rd class while
              Fanny would travel in the 1st class.
    The real life contract served as the base for a novel in
    which the character represented by Fanny acquired a
  lover to arouse jealousy in the character represented by
                            Leopold.
    What is the significance of this story?(Looking for a
                         specific word)
19.
  First used in late 14th century, the word in Homeric
Greek means "pure, fresh air" or "clear sky", imagined
in Greek mythology to be the pure essence where the
gods lived and which they breathed, analogous to the
air breathed by mortals. It corresponds to the concept
     of Akasha in Hindu philosophy and is linked to
   Brihaspati (or the planet Jupiter) and the centre
direction of the compass. This word and the concept
  it stood for was very influential in the Greek (and
           hence the whole) scientific world.

                    What word?
20.
    According to the Oxford English
Dictionary, the word dates to the mid-
   17th century. The word X can be
       traced to Urdu       word.
  This Urdu form has an initial uvular
   velar, which indicates its foreign
origin. It is probably a borrowing from
          a Turkic language (via
   Persian), possibly a shortening of
       Arabic ghulam "servant".
    The Chinese word 苦力 literally
     means "bitterly hard (use of)
        strength“. The Mandarin
   pronunciation, in Cantonese, the
 term is 咕喱 .The word is referred as
              an Asian slave.

        What is the term?
21.

  Some reports date the phrase from 1769 when it is said that a
seaman called George Wood confessed to a chaplain in Newgate
   Prison the he and his shipmates had forced others to commit
      something. These reports derive from Douglas Botting's
 book The Pirates, 1978. Botting himself doesn't set much store
 by it, describing the 'alleged confession' as 'an obscure account
... which may or may not be true, and in any case had nothing to
                           do with pirates'.
 There are documentary records of the phrase's use dating from
                        the late 18th century.


                   What is the phrase?
22.
This phrase is the modern English for the Old
English term for Ragnarök, the great
catastrophe of Norse mythology. The term
became used for the Christian Day of
Judgement, as by William Shakespeare
in Macbeth:
Thou art too like the spirit of Banquo: down!
Thy crown does sear mine eye-balls. And thy
hair,
Thou other gold-bound brow, is like the first.
A third is like the former. Filthy hags!
Why do you show me this? A fourth!
Start, eyes!
What, will the line stretch out to ____ __
____?

This appealed to Tolkien as can be seen in The
Lord of the Rings.

What is the phrase?
23.

It originally meant "provider
  of shelter, innkeeper" and
   later "one sent ahead to
    arrange lodgings" (for a
monarch, an army, etc.) It is
 this usage which has led to
 today’s sense of the word –
  an omen, or a forerunner.
                                Hint for DOTA players

       What word?
24.

 X is said to originate from the Cantonese dialect for
the word which is said to urge someone to hurry up.
 The earliest known citation of X in print is from the
   English language newspaper that was printed in
    Canton in the early 19th century - The Canton
Register, 13 May 1834: "We have also... ‘____ _____
                          hurry'."

                What is the term?
25.
  X in its oldest form has now gone out of regular use
and has been replaced by its modern compatriot . It is
 first found in Richard Taverner's Prouerbes ,gathered
              out of the Chiliades of Erasmus:
"Ye set the cart before the horse - clean contrarily and
                  ____ _____ as they say."
       X is found in print quite early, as in Anthony
       Copley's An answer to a letter by his cousin :
 "They are likely to be put to such a penance and the
     Arch-Priests X to be suspended and attained as
                       Schismatically."
     In 1915, the psychologist Edgar Rubin created a
    cognitive illusion that is a visual equivalent of the
                           phrase.

              Give the phrase X.
26.
 Odysseus learns from the blind
    seer Tiresias that he must
 journey through a strait where
   the path breaks into two; no
   matter what path he and his
       crew choose, Tiresias
 forebodes, the outcome will be
equally perilous. For on one side
    is the Scylla monster who
gobbles up his men like chickens
and on the other side is a gaping
 whirlpool with teeth called the
  Charybdis, which swallows his
            men alive.

  What popular phrase arises
         from this?

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Etymology and Word Origins Quiz

  • 1. Etymology and Word Origins Quiz
  • 2. • 26 Questions. • Each carries 2 marks. • Answers will be accepted till Monday 26th midnight. • Send your answers to my FB inbox or to britig@gmail.com • Hope you have fun and Merry Christmas. 
  • 3. 1. The story goes that a Dublin theatre proprietor by the name of Richard Daly made a bet that he could, within forty-eight hours, make a nonsense word known throughout the city, and that the public would supply a meaning for it. After a performance one evening, he gave his staff cards with the word X written on them, and told them to write the word on walls around the city. The next day the strange word was the talk of the town, and within a short time it had become part of the language. The most detailed account of this supposed exploit (in F. T. Porter's Gleanings and Reminiscences, 1875) gives its date as 1791. The word, however, was already in use by then, and had been used by Fanny Burney in her diary entry for 24 June 1782. What is the word?
  • 4. 2. According to legend a man named Leofric taxed the people of Coventry heavily. His wife, lady Godiva, begged him not to. Leofric said he would end the tax if she rode through the streets of Coventry naked. So she did. Everybody in Coventry was supposed to stay indoors with his or her shutters closed. However _____ _____ had a sneaky look at Godiva and was struck blind. What nickname commonly given to voyeurs arose from this story?
  • 5. 3. X (319-272 BC) was one of the greatest Greek generals of the Hellenistic era. His greatest political weaknesses were the failure to maintain focus and the failure to maintain a strong treasury at home. His name is famous for the phrase Y which refers to an exchange at the Battle of Asculum. The battle, though successful, cost him heavy losses, from which the term Y was coined. In response to congratulations for winning a costly victory over the Romans, he is reported to have said: "One more such victory will undo me!”.
  • 6. 4. In medieval music, the Guidonian hand was a mnemonic used to assist singers to learn how to sing by viewing notes, in which each portion of the hand represented a specific note within the hexachord system. The lowest note in this scale was represented by the Greek letter γ followed by ‘ut’ and would span 3 octaves. This notation gave rise to a word that was initially used in music to represent the entire musical scale but has gone on to be used beyond music as well. What word?
  • 7. 5. This familiar word comes from an alteration of the Middle English for odour or taste, and is derived in turn from a Middle French term meaning something left behind, or released. What noun, more familiar to us as verb?
  • 8. 6. This term was originally applied in the 19th century to describe plays dealing with contemporary moral and social issues and has been used to describe the work of Ibsen, John Galsworthy and GB Shaw’s early efforts. In 1896, F.S. Boas used this term to describe these Shakespeare plays, because they apparently brought a harshness not seen in any of his comedies to bear upon the interconnections between private and public morality. What term?
  • 9. 7. The phrase X has entered common use as a reference to an unpleasant situation that continually repeats, or seems to. In the military, referring to unpleasant, unchanging, repetitive situations as “X ”. A magazine article about the aircraft carrier USS America mentions its use by sailors in September 1993. X was a favourite one among the Rangers deployed for Operation Gothic Serpent in Somalia in 1993, because they saw X as a metaphor of their own situation, waiting long periods between raids and monotonous long days. Give the phrase X.
  • 10. 8. The current name came about almost by chance, according to a tale recounted in Windsor Revisited, written by HRH The Duke of Windsor. About 1830, a London merchant received a letter from a Hawick firm about some tweels. The London merchant misinterpreted the handwriting, understanding it to be a trade-name taken from the name of the river which flows through the Scottish Borders textile areas. Subsequently the goods were advertised as X and the name has remained so ever since. Give X.
  • 11. 9. Amitav Ghosh, in his new book River of Smoke, traces the origin of this common Hindi word to a Portuguese word meaning ‘lacking’ or ‘deficient in character’. A related English word, meaning mistake is also known to exist. It is also the title of this Bollywood film released in 2011. Which word?
  • 12. 10. This word was from a Hindi word meaning press. This word was used during the 18th century by the Europeans who were in the Turkish baths. This is basically a word to give instruction to the masseur to press and massage. Somehow or rather along the way, the word became X. Give X.
  • 13. 11. This word came from the name of a city in west India. The men in this city wore a type of garment. In late 19th century, the English used similar type of garments, i.e. trousers that are loose above the knee and tight from the knee to ankle, worn when riding a horse. What is the word?
  • 14. 12. The name has its origins in a Test match played between the West Indies and England at Old Trafford, Manchester, in the year 1933. Elliss “Puss” Achong , was a leftarm orthodox spinner, playing for the West Indies at the time. According to folklore, Achong is said to have had Walter Robbins stumped off a surprise delivery that spun into the righthander from outside the off stump. As he walked back to the pavilion, Robbins said to his teammates "Fancy being done by a bloody_______!", leading to the popularity of the term in England, and subsequently, in the rest of the world. What term?
  • 15. 13. This phrase X has its origin in the following Biblical verse Jeremiah 11:19: But I was like a gentle X; And I did not know that they had devised plots against me, "Let us destroy the tree with its fruit, And let us cut him off from the land of the living, That his name be remembered no more." The allusion to the especial helplessness of _____ was made use of in this 1991 film. What is the phrase X?
  • 16. 14. The term was coined by Ludwig August von Rochau, a German writer and politician in the 19th century, following Klemens Metternich's lead in finding ways to balance the power of European empires. The term refers to politics or diplomacy based primarily on practical considerations, rather than ideological notions. The term is often used pejoratively to imply politics that are coercive, amoral or Machiavellian. What is the term?
  • 17. 15. This motorsport which essentially comprises of a series of timed stunts done in a predetermined order owes its name eventually to the Hindi word meaning ‘Ball House’. What is this sport called?
  • 18. 16. ___ _____ is a derogatory term used to refer to appropriation of government spending for localized projects which benefit only the representative’s constituency/district. The term may have originated in the US during the pre- Civil War days when slaves were given 1 salt ____ ____ as reward and requiring them to compete amongst themselves to get their share of the handout. In an 1863 story by Edward Hale, the term began to be associated with public spending for the citizenry. What term?
  • 19. 17. John Dennis, a popular English critic playwright of the 1700s, wrote a play called Appius & Virginia Story goes that Dennis developed a unique background effect for the stage during the play but the play was cancelled by the theatre due to lack of audience When Dennis returned to the theatre for another play, he saw his effect being used without permission and exclaimed: “That’s my _____, by God! The villains will play my ____ but not my play!” What phrase did English language gain due to this incident?
  • 20. 18. On December 8, 1869 Leopold and Fanny (both writers) signed a contract making Leopold the slave of Fanny Pistor Bogdanoff for the period of six months. The stipulation on the contract stated that the Baroness (as Fanny called herself) wear furs as often as possible especially when she was in a bad mood. Leopold would be disguised as a servant and travel in the 3rd class while Fanny would travel in the 1st class. The real life contract served as the base for a novel in which the character represented by Fanny acquired a lover to arouse jealousy in the character represented by Leopold. What is the significance of this story?(Looking for a specific word)
  • 21. 19. First used in late 14th century, the word in Homeric Greek means "pure, fresh air" or "clear sky", imagined in Greek mythology to be the pure essence where the gods lived and which they breathed, analogous to the air breathed by mortals. It corresponds to the concept of Akasha in Hindu philosophy and is linked to Brihaspati (or the planet Jupiter) and the centre direction of the compass. This word and the concept it stood for was very influential in the Greek (and hence the whole) scientific world. What word?
  • 22. 20. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word dates to the mid- 17th century. The word X can be traced to Urdu word. This Urdu form has an initial uvular velar, which indicates its foreign origin. It is probably a borrowing from a Turkic language (via Persian), possibly a shortening of Arabic ghulam "servant". The Chinese word 苦力 literally means "bitterly hard (use of) strength“. The Mandarin pronunciation, in Cantonese, the term is 咕喱 .The word is referred as an Asian slave. What is the term?
  • 23. 21. Some reports date the phrase from 1769 when it is said that a seaman called George Wood confessed to a chaplain in Newgate Prison the he and his shipmates had forced others to commit something. These reports derive from Douglas Botting's book The Pirates, 1978. Botting himself doesn't set much store by it, describing the 'alleged confession' as 'an obscure account ... which may or may not be true, and in any case had nothing to do with pirates'. There are documentary records of the phrase's use dating from the late 18th century. What is the phrase?
  • 24. 22. This phrase is the modern English for the Old English term for Ragnarök, the great catastrophe of Norse mythology. The term became used for the Christian Day of Judgement, as by William Shakespeare in Macbeth: Thou art too like the spirit of Banquo: down! Thy crown does sear mine eye-balls. And thy hair, Thou other gold-bound brow, is like the first. A third is like the former. Filthy hags! Why do you show me this? A fourth! Start, eyes! What, will the line stretch out to ____ __ ____? This appealed to Tolkien as can be seen in The Lord of the Rings. What is the phrase?
  • 25. 23. It originally meant "provider of shelter, innkeeper" and later "one sent ahead to arrange lodgings" (for a monarch, an army, etc.) It is this usage which has led to today’s sense of the word – an omen, or a forerunner. Hint for DOTA players What word?
  • 26. 24. X is said to originate from the Cantonese dialect for the word which is said to urge someone to hurry up. The earliest known citation of X in print is from the English language newspaper that was printed in Canton in the early 19th century - The Canton Register, 13 May 1834: "We have also... ‘____ _____ hurry'." What is the term?
  • 27. 25. X in its oldest form has now gone out of regular use and has been replaced by its modern compatriot . It is first found in Richard Taverner's Prouerbes ,gathered out of the Chiliades of Erasmus: "Ye set the cart before the horse - clean contrarily and ____ _____ as they say." X is found in print quite early, as in Anthony Copley's An answer to a letter by his cousin : "They are likely to be put to such a penance and the Arch-Priests X to be suspended and attained as Schismatically." In 1915, the psychologist Edgar Rubin created a cognitive illusion that is a visual equivalent of the phrase. Give the phrase X.
  • 28. 26. Odysseus learns from the blind seer Tiresias that he must journey through a strait where the path breaks into two; no matter what path he and his crew choose, Tiresias forebodes, the outcome will be equally perilous. For on one side is the Scylla monster who gobbles up his men like chickens and on the other side is a gaping whirlpool with teeth called the Charybdis, which swallows his men alive. What popular phrase arises from this?