SAT Extravaganza
What Are You Afraid of?
Poetry
Valentine's Day
Ultimate Challenge
100
Being impulsive, acting without thinking.
What is spontaneous?
100
Fear of spiders
What is Arachnephobia?
100
an indirect reference to somebody or something.
What is allusion?
100
He is the god of desire, affection, and love. He is often portrayed as the son of the goddess Venus.
What is Cupid?
100
Something to say when you have nothing to say. *Hint: From the movie Marry Poppins.
What is supercalifragilisticeplalidocious?
200
a safe place; an institution for the maintenance and care of the mentally ill
What is asylum?
200
Fear of fire
What is pyrophobia/ arsonphobia?
200
A verse form consisting of eight lines of iambic pentameter
What is octave?
200
greatly loved; dear to the heart.
What is beloved?
200
astounded; astonish *hint: 13 letters
What is flabbergasted?
300
delay or postpone action.
What is procrastinate?
300
Fear of clowns
What is Coulrophobia?
300
a stanza or poem consisting of four lines, especially one with lines that rhyme alternately;
What is quatrain?
300
Someone who has a particular regard for someone or something.
What is admirer?
300
emitting light not caused by heat
What is Luminescent?
400
a political leader who seeks support by appealing to popular passions and prejudices;rabble-rousing leader
What is demagogue?
400
Fear of numbers
What is arithmophobia?
400
a song, poem, or piece of instrumental music celebrating or greeting the dawn
What is aubade?
400
profound dedication
What is devotion?
400
beauty, loveliness
What is pulchritude?
500
out of context of time, or date.
What is anachronistic?
500
Fear of darkness
What is achluophobia?
500
a five-line humorous poem with a characteristic rhythm, often dealing with a risqué subject and typically opening with a line such as "There was a young lady called Jenny."
What is limerick?
500
engaged to be married
What is betrothed?
500
*This word has 27 letters which appears in Love’s Labour’s Lost, Act V, Scene I, which means “invincible glorious” or “Honorableness.” This word was spoken by Costard in Shakespeare’s plays: O, they have lived long on the alms-basket of words. I marvel thy master hath not eaten thee for a word; for thou art not so long by the head as _________________: thou art easier swallowed than a flap-dragon.
What is Honorificabilitudinita?
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