English
This part of speech describes an action, state, or occurrence.
Verb
If Bossing Vic has 10 pies and Wally steals 4 of them to throw at Jose, this is the number of pies Bossing has left.
6
This vital organ pumps blood throughout your body, and it beats extra fast right before you get called to the stage by the teacher.
Heart
He is officially recognized as the national hero of the Philippines, a polymath who wrote Noli Me Tángere and El Filibusterismo.
Dr. José Rizal
This classic playground game involves two teams trying to throw large rubber balls at each other while avoiding getting hit.
Dodgeball
This punctuation mark is used to separate items in a list or to indicate a brief pause, giving you just enough time to think of a punchline.
Comma
This geometric shape has three sides, three internal angles, and is the exact shape of a slice of a pizza.
Triangle
This is the closest star to Earth, providing the light, heat, and energy needed to sustain life on our planet.
Sun
This major global conflict lasted from 1939 to 1945, involving the vast majority of the world's countries forming the Allies and the Axis powers.
World War II
In basketball, executing this illegal action involves taking too many steps without dribbling the ball.
Traveling
This figure of speech compares two unlike things using the words "like" or "as" (e.g., "Your joke is as dry as a desert").
Simile
To find this statistical value of a data set, you add up all the numbers and divide by the total number of items.
Mean (or Average)
This fundamental force pulls objects toward each other, ensuring that any cream pie thrown high into the air will inevitably crash straight down.
Gravity
He was the navigator whose expedition achieved the first recorded circumnavigation of the Earth, though he met his end at the Battle of Mactan in 1521.
Ferdinand Magellan
This type of physical exercise focuses on stretching and flexibility, often utilizing poses named after animals like the "Downward Dog."
Yoga
This literary term describes a word whose sound imitates its meaning, such as the classic sound effects: "Boing!", "Whack!", or "Splash!"
Onomatopoeia
In algebra, this 5-letter word represents an unknown value or a symbol (like $x$ or $y$) that can change depending on the equation.
Variable
Represented by the symbol $O$, this chemical element makes up about 21% of Earth's atmosphere and is highly necessary for human respiration.
Oxygen
Handed down in 1215, this historic English charter limited the power of the king and laid the groundwork for modern constitutional law.
Magna Carta
In a standard track and field relay race, this is the name of the lightweight tube or stick passed from one runner to the next.
Baton
This 14-line poetic form, famously used by Shakespeare, features a strict rhyme scheme and iambic pentameter—perfect for a surprisingly sophisticated knock-knock joke.
Sonnet
This mathematical constant represents the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, approximately equal to 3.14159—though it sounds like something tasty you'd throw at a classmate.
Pi
This jelly-like fluid fills the inside of a cell, holding the organelles in place, and shares its name with something that sounds like an alien slime.
Cytoplasm
This ancient Mediterranean civilization is credited with inventing democracy, hosting the original Olympic Games, and introducing Western philosophy.
What is Ancient Greece
This 11-letter term refers to exercises that use a person's own body weight for resistance (like push-ups, pull-ups, and squats) rather than gym equipment.
Calisthenics