Etymology
Parts of Speech
Socio-linguistics
Morphology
100

What is etymology

the study of the origin of words/ meaning change over time

100

What is a noun?

A person, place, or thing.

100

How did the arrival of the Angles, Saxons, and Jutes impact the English language?

In short: this started the development of the English language. 

100

If I say that "someone unhahaed my post," I have invented a word.


Explain how this new word was constructed 

un + haha + ed

someone has reacted with the "haha" icon and then removed this reaction

unhaha = to take away the haha
unhahaed = the action occured in the past 

200

What is an example of tautology?

chai tea

200

What is an adjective?

Something that describes a quality of a noun

200

Where did the Norse speakers come from?

Scandinavia (Norway, Sweden, Finland) 

200

What is a prefix?

A morpheme you add to the start of a word
e.g.: un, in, dis, mis 

300

Where did the word "Philosophy" come from

Greek

"ph" as an "f" is from most Greek words

300

What is a preposition?

words like:

from

over

behind

on

in

under


They describe the relationships between nouns

(direction, time, place, location, spatial relationships, introductions)

300

When was the Norman Conquest?

1066

300

What is a suffix?

A morpheme you add to the end of a word
e.g.: ing, y, ly, ed, s

400

To be a "pharmacist" once meant to be a witch.
How is this possible?

In Ancient Greece, witches were often associated with drugs, potions, and poisons. Medicine that was not understood was also mistaken for "sorcery"

400

What type of word can be conjugated? 

Provide an example

Only verbs can conjugate

It's the difference between saying:

I run
and
He runs
and
They ran

400

French words became "elevated" after the arrival of the Normans.
What does this mean?

French words were seens as being higher class.
E.g.: beautiful vs pretty 

400

What is a compound?

Joining two nouns together

e.g.: blackbird, whiteboard, keyboard 

500
To be "salty" (as an adjective used to describe a person) originated because of sailors. 

How is this possible?

Sailors were often associated with "bad" language (profanity)
When sailors returned from sea, they were often salt-crusted and so they were described as being "salty"
This literal association was narrowed to specifically relate to their language. 

500

What is a determiner? 

determiners are things that mark nouns

you have: articles, quantifiers, possessives, and demonstratives

For example:

"the" = is a definite article 
"a" = is an indefinite article
"few" = quantifier
"this" = demonstrative
"my" = posessive 

500

When did Latin get reintroduced into the English language and why?

During the Renaissance
It was seen as the language of scholarship, science, religion, medicine and more. 

In short: Latin as a language was associated with intellect and education. 

500

What is a morpheme?

The smallest unit of meaning in a word

e.g. "unlucky" has 3 morphemes

un + luck + y