Did anyone else find that in amongst words that they thought were very uncommon, there were also some words which were in common everyday use? For example in the mid 40s, I noticed the words "fettle" and "peckish" which I probably use everyday and my 4 year old son knows the meanings of. Maybe they are obscure words elsewhere, but just happen to have survived in my dialect?
Edit: and "gammon" for goodness sake!!
Did anyone else find that in amongst words that they thought were very uncommon, there were also some words which were in common everyday use? For example in the mid 40s, I noticed the words "fettle" and "peckish" which I probably use everyday and my 4 year old son knows the meanings of. Maybe they are obscure words elsewhere, but just happen to have survived in my dialect?
Edit: and "gammon" for goodness sake!!
...and "peckish" I learned from the Monty Python "Undertaker sketch".
"Gammon" is the act of attaching the rope that holds the bowsprit in place, right?
According to the site FAQ, the level of words is determined by how many players actually get the word correct over time.
It seems likely that some words are rated higher because there's a particularly deceptive choice leading to more wrong answers, not because the word itself is more obscure. For instance "parlay" appears at very high level, I think because the choices include "increase" (their correct answer) and "chat". Those thinking of "parley" meaning "negotiate" will likely choose the latter incorrect answer.
For rarer words that I actually know (as opposed to the larger set that I can figure out the correct answer for from the choices), I can often remember specificially where or in what context I know the word from. A surprising number are from amusing sources such as role playing games (obscure mythical creatures, magical devices, weapons and armor), Patrick O'Brien novels (nautical terms -- see "gammon," above), titles of old stories and poems (especially their titles), and Gene Wolfe novels. "Philippic" I got from the title of a Simon and Garfunkel song, and had never seen since in any other context.
Respectfully,
Myriad
"Gammon" is the act of attaching the rope that holds the bowsprit in place, right?
According to the site FAQ, the level of words is determined by how many players actually get the word correct over time.
It seems likely that some words are rated higher because there's a particularly deceptive choice leading to more wrong answers, not because the word itself is more obscure. For instance "parlay" appears at very high level, I think because the choices include "increase" (their correct answer) and "chat". Those thinking of "parley" meaning "negotiate" will likely choose the latter incorrect answer.
For rarer words that I actually know (as opposed to the larger set that I can figure out the correct answer for from the choices), I can often remember specificially where or in what context I know the word from. A surprising number are from amusing sources such as role playing games (obscure mythical creatures, magical devices, weapons and armor), Patrick O'Brien novels (nautical terms -- see "gammon," above), titles of old stories and poems (especially their titles), and Gene Wolfe novels. "Philippic" I got from the title of a Simon and Garfunkel song, and had never seen since in any other context.
Respectfully,
Myriad
It was the Undertaker sketch that I saw first and it was quite clear from the context.Are you sure it wasn't the Cheese Shop sketch? (It's used in both sketches IIRC, but in the Cheese Shop sketch John Cleese explains/defines it, in the following lines.)
Respectfully,
Myriad
It was the Undertaker sketch that I saw first and it was quite clear from the context.
As for gammon, isn't that a win in backgammon?
For rarer words that I actually know (as opposed to the larger set that I can figure out the correct answer for from the choices), I can often remember specificially where or in what context I know the word from. A surprising number are from amusing sources such as role playing games (obscure mythical creatures, magical devices, weapons and armor), Patrick O'Brien novels (nautical terms -- see "gammon," above), titles of old stories and poems (especially their titles), and Gene Wolfe novels. "Philippic" I got from the title of a Simon and Garfunkel song, and had never seen since in any other context.
"Gammon" is the act of attaching the rope that holds the bowsprit in place, right?
According to the site FAQ, the level of words is determined by how many players actually get the word correct over time.
It seems likely that some words are rated higher because there's a particularly deceptive choice leading to more wrong answers, not because the word itself is more obscure. For instance "parlay" appears at very high level, I think because the choices include "increase" (their correct answer) and "chat". Those thinking of "parley" meaning "negotiate" will likely choose the latter incorrect answer.
For rarer words that I actually know (as opposed to the larger set that I can figure out the correct answer for from the choices), I can often remember specificially where or in what context I know the word from. A surprising number are from amusing sources such as role playing games (obscure mythical creatures, magical devices, weapons and armor), Patrick O'Brien novels (nautical terms -- see "gammon," above), titles of old stories and poems (especially their titles), and Gene Wolfe novels. "Philippic" I got from the title of a Simon and Garfunkel song, and had never seen since in any other context.
Respectfully,
Myriad