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Nerdy Words For Wordy Nerds

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Fun Trivia : Quizzes : Etymology : Nerdy Words For Wordy Nerds

Introduction:
"After a tough day of train spotting, sucking seer and biting the heads off of chickens, it might be nice to settle down, hang up your anorak and play with words."


1. Tyrone Power portrayed Hollywood’s first geek in the 1947 film “Nightmare Alley” whose tagline declared “He was all things to all men ... but only one thing to all women!”. So low did Stanton Carlisle’s fortunes sink by the end of this film that he was forced to become a geek. What was the function of a “geek” in this film?
    Selling insurance
    Biting the heads off live chickens
    Teaching college
    Tax preparation


2. Here’s some food for thought (hint, hint). To which word pair is the word “seersucker” etymologically related?
    Dupe and prophet
    Aiding and divining
    Watching and slurping
    Milk and sugar


3. Before J.K. Rowling, there were muggles, although in a very different sense. For which of these terms was “muggle” in use in the 20th century?
    A magic wand
    A fishtail
    A “marijuana” joint
    A sweetheart


4. According to “Sports Illustrated” in 1962, what was a Harvard student if not a “preppie” or “jock”?
    A wonk
    A clod
    A nerkle
    A drip


5. What did the pun-loving etymologist call the anorak she wore while trainspotting? (Hint: Use your inuition.)
    Her thick eskimono
    Her sticky Scott's cape
    Her finished fleece
    Her rushing robe


6. Thought to have begun as a word for beard in Basque, one of the words below came to mean handsome and brave as it moved first into the Spanish language and then into French. But in France, something strange happened, and the word took on the very different meaning it came to have in English. In English, this mystery adjective is simply…
    Bizarre
    Courageous
    Hairy
    Gorgeous


7. Feeble dwarves are thought by some to have given rise to which slang term describing the socially inept?
    Answer: (One five-letter word starting with "D")


8. Which of the following terms could be best described as having been “coined” by a Brit to mean a fool? (Hint: Your answer needs to be right on the money!)
    Clod
    Apeth
    Oaf
    Dork


9. Which of the following are brilliant?
    They’re all dim.
    Clodpoles
    Muppets
    Schlepps


10. Some maintain that without Dr. Seuss there might be no word “nerd” and therefore no word nerds, for it seems that Seuss coined the term. In 1950, in the book “If I Ran the Zoo” Seuss penned his immortal line, “I'll sail to Ka-Troo And Bring Back an It-Kutch a Preep and a Proo A Nerkle a NERD and a Seersucker, too!” In what year did the word show up in the magazine "Newsweek"?
    1954
    1986
    1960
    1951


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