American English
British Isles (England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland)
Canadian English
Australian English
African and World Englishes
100

What do Americans call a “petrol station”?

Gas station

100

In Welsh English, the intonation and syntax show the influence of which language?

Welsh

100

Canadian spelling mixes British and American forms. Which is correct in Canada: “colour” or “color”?

Colour

100

What shortened word do Australians use for “afternoon”?

Arvo

100

What is the name of the variety of English spoken in Nigeria that includes local language features?

Nigerian English

200

What do Americans call the “lift” that British people ride?

Elevator

200

In which region of the British Isles do speakers pronounce a strong “r” sound and have long vowels, e.g. in “car”?

Scotland 

200

Canadians often add “eh” at the end of sentences. What function does it serve?

A tag question (seeking confirmation)

200

Australians often replace -er or -ie endings with -o. Give another example besides “arvo.”

Servo (service station), smoko (break)

200

What is the term for a simplified form of English used as a common language among speakers of different native languages?

Lingua franca

300

Americans pronounce the r sound at the end of words, while many British speakers don’t. What type of pronunciation is this called?

Rhotic accent

300

What is the name of the accent traditionally associated with educated speakers in southern England?

Received Pronunciation (RP)

300

What word do Canadians use for a car’s “trunk” (following British influence)?

Boot

300

In the word “mate,” Australians pronounce the diphthong differently than British speakers. What type of difference is this?

Phonetic difference

300

In which African region is English often mixed with Swahili, forming hybrid expressions?

East Africa (Kenya, Tanzania)

400

In American English, the word “color” is spelled without one letter that appears in British English. Which letter is missing?

The letter “u” (colour → color)

400

Which informal phrase do many British people use instead of “How are you?”?

“You alright?” or “Alright?”

400

What do Canadians call knitted winter hats that Americans call “beanies”?

Toques (or tuques)

400

Australian English developed under the influence of which two main varieties?

British and Irish English

400

What do we call varieties that use English vocabulary but local grammar, such as those spoken in the Caribbean?

Pidgin or Creole English

500

In American English the past form “learned” is preferred, while in British English it’s “learnt.” What kind of difference is this?

Morphological difference (irregular verb pattern)

500

Irish speakers often say “I’m after doing it” instead of “I’ve just done it.” What grammatical feature does this illustrate?

The Irish “after + gerund” construction for recent actions

500

What phonetic phenomenon makes words like “about” and “house” sound like “aboot” and “hoose”?

Canadian Raising

500

The word “bottle-o” means a liquor store. What kind of word formation is this?

Clipping + suffix -o (typical in Aussie slang)

500

In South African English, the expression “just now” means “in a while” rather than “a moment ago.” What kind of difference is this?

Semantic shift