General Flashcards

1
Q

More than half of the people in the Philippines speak Pilipino, a variation of this native language.

A

Tagalog

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2
Q

Coptic was the last phase of this language whose 5,000-year recorded history is the longest known.

A

Egyptian

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3
Q

Which language translates literally as “coastal language.”

A

Swahili

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4
Q

This Amharic word for “flower” is a girl’s name and part of a world capital’s name.

A

Ababa

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5
Q

What Yiddish term for “spectator” is used in games such as chess for the practice, often highly frowned upon, of making comments that can be heard by the players?

A

Kibitz / Kibitzer

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6
Q

What consonant is expressed in International Morse Code by a single dash?

A

T

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7
Q

Of the 6 official U.N. languages, it’s the one that is written in a cursive form only.

A

Arabic

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8
Q

From Turkish for “napkin”, this craft is all about the knots.

A

Macrame

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9
Q

Homophones: a Roman food goddess, or another word for “TV show”

A

Ceres, Series

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10
Q

A word from the Melee as well as the Malay, to “run” this way is to be wild and frenzied.

A

Amok

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11
Q

Named after one of the three sons of Noah, this is the term given to a group of languages with Afroasiatic origins. Today they are spoken by over 330 million people across the Middle East and Northern Africa.

A

Semitic

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12
Q

What term, which today refers to meaningless speech, has historically referred to a West African god, and originates etymologically from a Mandinka word for a ceremonial masked dancer? It provides the title for author Ishmael Reed’s enduring 1972 novel, in which the author himself defines the term—quoting the American Heritage Dictionary—as a “magician who makes the troubled spirits of ancestors go away.”

A

Mumbo Jumbo

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13
Q

The use of what term to denote a certain period in European history was not actually in common usage until 1855, when it was first prominently used by French historian Jules Michelet?

A

Renaissance

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14
Q

The word for what military rank originally referred to an officer who would stand in for, or serve in place of, another officer?

A

Lieutenant

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15
Q

(1) When two languages are combined to form another, it becomes this. (2) If that language survives into a new generation, it becomes this.

A

(1) Pidgin; (2) Creole

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16
Q

Foreign policy might be found in your closet. What color, a Hindustani loanword (based on a Persian root for dust or dirt), came into English when the British army realized its penchant for bright red coats was impractical in places like Ethiopia, Sudan, and South Africa?

A

Khaki

17
Q

What English phrase translates to Arabic as saba al-khayr, to Mandarin Chinese as zao shang hao, to Hebrew as boker tov, and to Russian as dobraye utra?

A

Good Morning

18
Q

The Greek, Latin, and Cyrillic alphabets are all based on the 22-letter, consonant-only alphabet of what ancient civilization originally situated in modern-day Lebanon, Syria, and Israel, whose people spoke a Semitic language similar to Hebrew?

A

Phoenician

19
Q

What name for a late-1950s dance craze is a slang term for “new trend” in its country of origin?

A

Bossa nova” means the hot new thing in Brazilian Portuguese.

20
Q

George Johnson of The New York Times called this language “just broken German, more of a linguistic mishmash than a true language”. Even the language’s own speakers called it “zhargon”. To what language of the Ashkenazic Jews of Central and Eastern Europe was Johnson referring?

A

Yiddish

21
Q

A system known as Devanagari is one of the four most widely adopted and most actively used of its type in the world (probably at #3 or #4, though exact numbers would be impossible to determine). Name any one of the other three of these systems with the greatest prevalence.

A

Latin/Roman, Chinese/Hanji/Kanji, Arabic

22
Q

Poses in yoga, such as downward-facing dog, mountain pose, and tabletop, are known by what term, from the Sanskrit for “posture” or “seat”?

A

Asanas

23
Q

What common food item, of which the average American consumes over three pounds per year, has a name derived from the Greek for “pearl” and originally had that name with a prefix derived from the Latin for “(olive) oil”?

A

Margarine

  • Pearl in Greek - margaritari
  • Oil in Latin - oleum
24
Q

What literary term, which translates to English as “novel with a key”, is used for a work in which some (or all) of the characters represent real individuals?

A

Roman a clef

25
Q

This is a Hawaiian word for individuals who are not Native Hawaiian. It was originally most commonly applied to people of European ancestry.

A

Haole