Rootin' Tootin'
Shorthand
Word Who and How
Up for Debate
It's a Match!
100

This is the language English bases its grammar off of.

What is Latin?

100

When told "I got a 100 on the Econ test!” this meaning is implied by the shorthand phrase "How?"

What is “How did you get a 100?”

100

For the phrase “she carried herself like a princess,” the word “princess” is used as this type of word.

What is a noun?

100

What is the controversial word choice could be corrected to in the following phrase:

 “Each of the variants indicated in boldface type count as an entry”


What is counts?

100

The correct word for the following phrase:

"The family couldn’t believe how (fortunate/fortuitous) it had been to find that deposit of gold on their property."

What is fortunate?

Fortunate: A favorable outcome due to luck or fortune vs Fortuitous: Occurring on accident and not by design.

200

From the words antibiotic, antagonist, antipodes, and anniversary, this word contains a Latin root.

What is anniversary?

200

When told “I crashed your car…” these meanings are implied by the shorthand response "What?! Where?! How?!” 

What is “What do you mean you crashed my car? Where did you crash it? How did you manage to do that?”

200

Although the word “rich” is more commonly thought of as a ____, it is used as a _____ in the phrase “the rich get richer.”

What is an adjective and noun?

200

What is the controversial word choice could be corrected to in the following phrase:

“Prestige is one of the few words that has had an experience opposite to that described in ‘Worsened Words’”

What is have?

200

The correct word for the following phrase:

"We had to (forgo/forego) our club meeting for the basketball game, and now we won’t get to meet this week"

What is forgo? 

Forgo: To do without something vs Forego: To have something occur before something else in place of it.

300

In Latin, you can not split an infinitive. 

True or false? You can not split an infinitive in English. 

What is false?

300

When told "I would jump out of a plane for $100!” this is the meaning of the shorthand response “Would you? Could you? Why?”

What is “Would you really jump out of a plane for $100? Could you actually bring yourself to do that? Why would you do such a thing for just $100?”

300

Although the word “broken” is a ___ tense participle, the phrase “he’ll have broken the school record.” is in the ____ tense.

What is past and future?

300

What is the controversial word choice could be corrected to in the following phrase:

“A range of sentences forming statements, commands, questions and exclamations cause us to draw on a more sophisticated battery of orderings and arrangements.”

What is causes?

300

The correct word for the following phrase:

"The teen continued to (flaunt/flout) her rebellious nature, despite her parents setting up a curfew"

What is flaunt?

Flaunt: To show off vs. Flout: To disregard rules or convention

400

In Latin, there are up to 120 inflections for verbs. 

True or False? English never has more than 5 inflections for a verb

What is True?

Ex: see, sees, saw, seeing, seen

However, English can usually manage with 3 (ex: hit, hits, hitting)

400

A stranger runs up to you and shouts, “I AM THE CHOSEN ONE!” This is the meaning of the shorthand response “So? And? Since when?

What is “So what does that mean? And why should I care? Since when are you the chosen one?”

400

For the phrases “I am suffering terribly” and “my suffering is terrible,” the word “suffering” is operating as a ____ and ____ respectively

What is verb and noun?

400

What is the controversial word choice could be corrected to in the following phrase:

“When his fellowship expired he was offered a rectorship at Boxworth…on condition that he married the deceased rector’s daughter.”

What is marry?

400

The correct word for the following phrase:

"Though it was intriguing, the businessperson was (uninterested/disinterested) in the state of the stock market."

What is disinterested?

Uninterested: Having no bias or opinion vs Disinterested: Having no stakes in a matter.


500

Of the words epilepsy, leniency, liberty, and linguistics, this word contains a Greek root.

What is epilepsy?

500

When told "I took your dog on a walk" by a friend, the response "What do you mean you took my dog on a walk? When did you take him?” can be reduced to this shorthand.

What is "What? When?"

500

Of the words “deadly,” “sleepily,” “quickly,” and “sickly,” these are adjectives.

What are sickly and deadly?

“Sleepily” and “quickly” are adverbs.

500

What is the controversial word choice could be corrected to in the following phrase:

“It is of interest to speculate about the amount of dislocation to the spelling system that would occur if english dictionaries were either proscribed or ( as when Malory or Sir Philip Sidney were writing) did not exist.”

What is was?

500

The correct word for the following phrase:

"The scholar (riffle/rifle) quickly through the pages of the book, trying to find the section about prokaryotes."


What is riffle?

Riffle: Turn over something quickly and casually vs Rifle: Search through something hurriedly