If You Know These 21 Words, Your English is GENIUS LEVEL!

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  • Опубліковано 21 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,3 тис.

  • @zakmartin
    @zakmartin Місяць тому +288

    According to my trusty OED:
    "Bromide: A compound of bromine with another element or group, especially a salt containing the anion Br− or an organic compound with bromine bonded to an alkyl radical."
    Yes, it's also a trite statement. B and D are both correct.

    • @jimhunt1592
      @jimhunt1592 Місяць тому +22

      HBr (hydrobromic acid) is a fairly strong acid, so not all bromides are alkaline. If he hadn't included the word alkaline (= basic) you would be correct.

    • @machiajenni
      @machiajenni Місяць тому +23

      I answered D because I am science-oriented and was immediately self-doubting, so thank you!

    • @DT-ja8de
      @DT-ja8de Місяць тому +12

      Option D would be incorrect. The bromide ion is considered acidic, because hydrobromic acid (HBr) is formed when added to water.

    • @toddfennimore6625
      @toddfennimore6625 Місяць тому +3

      Yep! Someone knows their chemistry.

    • @zakmartin
      @zakmartin Місяць тому +14

      @@jimhunt1592 I am correct. Bromine and bromide are not the same thing. And in a medical context, a bromide refers to sodium bromide (a sedative) which is an alkaline compound.

  • @stephenblessed92
    @stephenblessed92 Місяць тому +81

    I'm 70 years old. Never went to college. Just retired after working 40+ years in construction. I am a voracious reader and I got 18.

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 24 дні тому +2

      Bravo, that's bloody good.

    • @karinedaly2590
      @karinedaly2590 8 днів тому

      Well done. I thought I'd do well but I got 11 !! 😂

    • @concettaworkman5895
      @concettaworkman5895 2 дні тому

      Wow, that is impressive, only 12.

    • @arightscepter
      @arightscepter 23 години тому

      I got twelve but fortunately no one said guessing doesn't count. Your story reminds me that my grandchildren's prospects for literacy at 70 will be based on hardly any reading. Sigh...

  • @snarkykat
    @snarkykat Місяць тому +91

    I'm a native English speaker and have consistently scored off the scale on vocabulary tests, but I missed plenty of the words on this quiz. I will use it as a learning opportunity.

    • @GeorgeSmiley77
      @GeorgeSmiley77 Місяць тому +2

      "scored off the scale" - so you got more correct answers than there were questions? That's my take🤣

    • @snarkykat
      @snarkykat Місяць тому +6

      @@GeorgeSmiley77 It means that I scored beyond the tests' statistical capabilities of giving me a percentile ranking. I would often get all the questions right, so I scored higher than the 99th percentile ranking. That's what "off the scale" means

    • @angelogomez6155
      @angelogomez6155 Місяць тому +7

      If I had only knowd bout dese words I would be much more smart than I thunk. I wish I hada learnt these in school.

    • @bongodave13
      @bongodave13 28 днів тому

      @@angelogomez6155 Me two.

    • @carlodefalco7930
      @carlodefalco7930 16 днів тому +2

      The words aren’t used in everyday speach . So this video is actually misleading .. I’m not highly educated but have read a variety of literature from comics to encyclopaedia. So was exposed to many , most , all of the worst, doesn’t mean I’m intelligent or highly educated

  • @peternolan4107
    @peternolan4107 Місяць тому +153

    I have spent the last 70+ years reading, reading, and reading. I got them all right. Reading and using a dictionary and thesaurus are the best ways to learn vocabulary. Learning foreign languages such as Latin and French are also very helpful in learning English vocabulary.

    • @EricDavidRocks
      @EricDavidRocks 28 днів тому +14

      This was easy for people like us (of a certain age) but most UA-camrs can't spell a sentence to save their lives.

    • @MikeS-um1nm
      @MikeS-um1nm 28 днів тому +6

      "Give me any word and I will tell you how it comes from the Greek": the Father in "My Big Fat Greek Wedding". There's some truth to that. Much of the English language has it roots in Greek. I used to try to look up every word I didn't know the meaning of, in the Dictionary. Now, it's much easier with the internet. I haven't been at it as long as you and I got 6 wrong on this test. I will keep learning though!

    • @skamandrios
      @skamandrios 28 днів тому +6

      65 years old, English degree, got all 21 correct, but "faineant" was a new one to me. I guessed it based on what I supposed was the root word "fain."

    • @randomhumanoidblob4506
      @randomhumanoidblob4506 27 днів тому +4

      55 and me too. It's not having TV and reading like a demon instead. Next time we need some real sesquipedalianate verbiage 😁

    • @Lightonahill25
      @Lightonahill25 26 днів тому

      @@EricDavidRocks maybe not easy but does give one a sense of accomplishment at a life well 'read'...

  • @juliabickel7024
    @juliabickel7024 Місяць тому +323

    I am 76 years old, native speaker of English, college degree, have taught English abroad. I missed 2 words that I have never before seen or heard: faineant, and the one about the diamond sparkling. Take heart, students, if you got at least 10 of these.

    • @BrianWilesQuizzes
      @BrianWilesQuizzes  Місяць тому +26

      Hi Julia, thanks for your comment- and I wholeheartedly agree that students who get more than even a handful of these words should feel proud!

    • @cindyhauert2339
      @cindyhauert2339 Місяць тому +33

      Nobody ever, in a million years, would use the word "faineant" gmab

    • @juliabickel7024
      @juliabickel7024 Місяць тому +9

      @@cindyhauert2339 Agreed, yet someone, sometime, must have used it or we would not see it in this test.

    • @HiJacques329
      @HiJacques329 Місяць тому +22

      I’m also a native English speaker, and despite getting 5 of them wrong, I did actually get faineant, since it’s one of the French words for lazy and I happen to speak French.

    • @aminabelmou4307
      @aminabelmou4307 Місяць тому +11

      @@HiJacques329 Because of Latin being ancestor to both French and English, French speakers know half the English vocabulary. The other half is known by German speakers. And if you happen to know both French and German, then guess what????? .................You know the two halves of English, .......................that is the whole English vocabulary...............

  • @marilyncallan-cx7rk
    @marilyncallan-cx7rk Місяць тому +26

    I was shocked to get 19 out of 21, an A. A lifetime reader, I'm 89 years old. No degree but autodidactic as I've been told. Still can't believe it. Missed the last 2 questions, words I[ve never heard of before this.

    • @robinboyle5667
      @robinboyle5667 14 днів тому +3

      Autodidactic is one of my favorite words!!!!!
      ❤😂

  • @mzungumzungu336
    @mzungumzungu336 Місяць тому +69

    17 correct. Not bad for someone educated in an American public school.

    • @janeteholmes
      @janeteholmes Місяць тому +6

      A grave disadvantage indeed, but no one learns all these at school. You need to read widely to learn these. Victorian and early 20th C authors are the best.

    • @biggstile
      @biggstile 24 дні тому +2

      Decades, ago, undoubtedly.

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 24 дні тому +1

      Hahaha! Good on you.

  • @urdad9853
    @urdad9853 29 днів тому +54

    As a self proclaimed logophile who has kept a dictionary next to my toilet for 50yrs I love these videos! keep'em coming

    • @lynnrobinson8885
      @lynnrobinson8885 23 дні тому +1

      You too ? 🤭

    • @lynnrobinson8885
      @lynnrobinson8885 23 дні тому +5

      I’m 75, and after reading the comments below I think you will notice something pronto -- we older people have much better language skills those that of today, and THATS A REAL SHAME ! Education has continued to being dumbed down -- you don’t have to take my word for it !

    • @richarddoyle2216
      @richarddoyle2216 10 днів тому +1

      We just hang a torn up newspaper on a nail in the thunderbox, we can’t afford that soft dictionary paper.

    • @lynnrobinson8885
      @lynnrobinson8885 10 днів тому

      @@richarddoyle2216 Speaking as a lover of words, whether it’s torn-up pages of newspapers, which I find hard to get anymore, or an old dictionary, paperback or hard bound, one can learn something new when one has a few moments to spare with one. I’m not sure if the person who started this reply was suggesting either of these as source materials - for reading or wiping in a bathroom, but, either way -- better than corn cob ends, and both may have words on them you didn’t know before. Winner, winner, chicken dinner ! 🫠❤❤🇨🇦

  • @consuelobettinelli9746
    @consuelobettinelli9746 Місяць тому +56

    I'm Italian and married to a British Navy officer. I missed 1 word. The majority of "difficult" words are Latin-based rather than Anglosaxon, which allowed me to guess their meaning.

    • @JohnnyArtPavlou
      @JohnnyArtPavlou 16 днів тому +2

      Cheers!

    • @kaloarepo288
      @kaloarepo288 15 днів тому +4

      I'm of Italian origin as well and the most difficult words that Italians come across when learning English are the little Anglo-Saxon ones and they find the Latin derived ones easy!

    • @ttselha64
      @ttselha64 12 днів тому +1

      Very true. I have forgotten a lot of Latin except that used in medicine. Took 4 years of Latin in hs

    • @gianlucazaffino
      @gianlucazaffino 9 днів тому

      ​@@kaloarepo288 Exactly. For instance I've very recently learnt the expression "to come across". Before then, I used to say "to encounter".

    • @shadrach6299
      @shadrach6299 8 днів тому

      I took 3 years of Latin

  • @angharaddenby3389
    @angharaddenby3389 Місяць тому +47

    Got all correct - not bad for a first-language Welsh speaker!

    • @darcash1738
      @darcash1738 Місяць тому +3

      Well I got all of them right, and I got the invisible bonus question right, too. Ha!

    • @rogerhuggettjr.7675
      @rogerhuggettjr.7675 Місяць тому +3

      Knowledge of foreign words is often a benebit on these tests though French and Latin might have helped more. BTW, I only got 16 right.

    • @caulfield618
      @caulfield618 28 днів тому +2

      Well you probably have more time for reading since the valley mines shut down.

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 24 дні тому

      @@caulfield618 what a disgusting comment.

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 24 дні тому +2

      @@rogerhuggettjr.7675 French, Latin and Greek are essential for the more advanced words in English. Spanish and Italian are a big help as well.

  • @evanherk
    @evanherk Місяць тому +113

    Got all correct (but gambled on faineant). Not bad for a 66 year old native speaker of Dutch.

    • @Cherrysmith2809
      @Cherrysmith2809 Місяць тому +5

      Holy cow!

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy Місяць тому +1

      How much did you hazard?
      And what were the odds?

    • @BrennanYoung
      @BrennanYoung Місяць тому +1

      That's impressive. My school French did not buy my answer to faineant and I bungled meretricious too because I was thinking too much about "meretrix"

    • @janeteholmes
      @janeteholmes Місяць тому +1

      I got them all, but am only a lowly native English speaker. Congrats!

    • @MichaelCRush
      @MichaelCRush 29 днів тому

      Same. It was the only really uncommon word.

  • @bellyjewel
    @bellyjewel Місяць тому +14

    All correct. Former editor, writer, word nerd, and occasional English teacher here.

  • @mooshygirl
    @mooshygirl Місяць тому +84

    Puckish is a reference to the character Puck from Shakespeare’s a Midsummer Night Dream

    • @johnl6176
      @johnl6176 Місяць тому +1

      Ah, the merry wanderer of the night.

    • @medicalmisinformation
      @medicalmisinformation 29 днів тому +7

      No, "A Midsummer Night's Dream."

    • @caulfield618
      @caulfield618 28 днів тому +5

      I thought it was a reference to hockey.

    • @stevolopez
      @stevolopez 27 днів тому

      I guessed it by watching a girl's a** pucker in a mischevious way!

    • @BadBoyBobby85
      @BadBoyBobby85 27 днів тому

      That's what I guessed

  • @slister45
    @slister45 15 днів тому +8

    Vocabulary was extremely important in my upbringing. I love learning new words and I actually learned a few new ones in this video. Thank you!

  • @CAGETV
    @CAGETV Місяць тому +14

    I got 0/21... I have never heard any of these words till date. I'm surprised to see so many people in comments get so many correct. WOW guys! Amazing

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 24 дні тому

      possibly you are young and not a native speaker??

    • @urizen7613
      @urizen7613 23 дні тому

      @@mfjdv2020 Or an infrequent reader.

    • @Geoplanetjane
      @Geoplanetjane 11 днів тому

      You need to read more

    • @concettaworkman5895
      @concettaworkman5895 2 дні тому

      Do not feel bad, you have to be exposed to a word, read it, understand it in context. They are beautiful, but are pretty much defunct in modern language, which is sad.

  • @mikeryan2319
    @mikeryan2319 Місяць тому +41

    Hey! I got 23 out of 21. Along with my vocab skills, I am a whiz at numbers. Next, try me on geografee.

  • @rosslewchuk9286
    @rosslewchuk9286 Місяць тому +12

    74 years of age: 18/21 Got me with meretricious, coruscate & sybaritic. Good fun way to learn new words❗🌝👍

    • @rogerhuggettjr.7675
      @rogerhuggettjr.7675 Місяць тому

      16 right here. I missed that one looking for something merit related.

    • @kaloarepo288
      @kaloarepo288 20 днів тому +3

      That's where it helps to know your ancient history and ancient languages - a meretrix was a whore in ancient Rome, "coruscate" means to flash in Latin and Sybaris was a Greek city in southern Italy known for the wealth and luxury of its inhabitants.

    • @concettaworkman5895
      @concettaworkman5895 2 дні тому

      lol

  • @jjbud3124
    @jjbud3124 Місяць тому +14

    I'm an 84-year-old high school graduate. I've done a lot of reading and spent most of my working life in medical transcription, so I've always been pretty good at English. I got 16 of these correct. I'm not counting bromide because I knew it was a chemical. I must say though, that some of these words are completely unknown to most of the population. There are other much less obscure words that are more suited to clear communication.

    • @pp312
      @pp312 Місяць тому +2

      I would suggest that almost all the words in the last third are totally unknown to all but dedicated pedants. In fact I'd say that almost all of these 21 words are not in use by those with a typical high school education. Even to use a word like "ubiquitous" these days would earn you some funny looks and an awkward silence. Sad, but that's the current state of the language.

    • @jjbud3124
      @jjbud3124 Місяць тому +1

      @@pp312 The word "fey" I would expect to hear in Ireland. 🙂

    • @MichaelCRush
      @MichaelCRush 29 днів тому

      @@pp312 Hard disagree. I use all these words, or at least am very familiar with them, except for the last one.

    • @sirclarkmarz
      @sirclarkmarz 29 днів тому

      Spend some time in the Navy and you will hear some words and phrases that you will never hear spoken amongst civilians . Many of them hundreds of years old derived from ancient Mariners.

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 24 дні тому

      @@jjbud3124 Scotland.

  • @rogerwhite95
    @rogerwhite95 Місяць тому +13

    76 year old male. Missed one, Sartorial. Had to make an educated guess on a couple.! LOL I attribute skills to my lifelong love of reading. Thank you for posting this.

    • @jecinasema5190
      @jecinasema5190 Місяць тому +1

      Hi. I got that one. And I am 80 year old Caribbean native. My parents and teachers put a lot of effort into our education.

    • @pp312
      @pp312 Місяць тому

      78 year old male. When you say "reading" it depends what you're reading. You'd be lucky to find most of these words in novels, as novelists go out of their way to avoid words the reader would have to look up. Other genres are of course different.

  • @rafael.silvacamargo
    @rafael.silvacamargo Місяць тому +16

    I remember when I decided to learn English, I only studied English at school, but 1 or 2 months ago I decided to study English everyday and for a long time a day, and now, I saw how much my English has improved, and one of the main reasons was watching your videos, that I needed to use subtitles and 0.75 speed, now I watch without subtitles and can understand everything
    Thanks

  • @Shelora
    @Shelora 28 днів тому +7

    I got a perfect score, although two of my correct answers were educated guesses. I now know two new words , “coruscate” and “feiniant.”
    I knew they were right because the other three choices were clearly wrong. Thanks for the challenge! (By the way, I’m 81 and had the benefit of a Canadian education. I also win all the spelling bees in school.

    • @kaboomblueskies
      @kaboomblueskies 4 дні тому

      Are you still going to school at 81. I ask because you say you win all the spelling bees at school. If you don't , it should be won, the past tense of win.

  • @linmiller8147
    @linmiller8147 28 днів тому +3

    Proud that I got 18 of the 21, but I have to admit that I had to figure out 3 of them. I have always
    LOVED to read and whenever I encountered a word I didn't know, I would look it up. Great quiz.

  • @vivienhodgson3299
    @vivienhodgson3299 Місяць тому +9

    21/21. There were no words I had never heard before, but if you had given me them and asked for a definition, there were several I would have found hard to explain; the multiple choice method worked for me. I speak French, which definitely helped with 'elan' and 'faineant', both of which we pinched from them!

    • @korneliakecskemetinebakti2904
      @korneliakecskemetinebakti2904 Місяць тому +1

      I'm Hungarian and we use quite a few of the words of Latin origin, like elan, exegesis, labile... so yeah.

    • @margretenglesson5834
      @margretenglesson5834 Місяць тому

      ​@@korneliakecskemetinebakti2904 Well, weren't you still using Latin for official business right up to 1848?

    • @korneliakecskemetinebakti2904
      @korneliakecskemetinebakti2904 Місяць тому

      ​@@margretenglesson5834 lol
      Official doesn't mean people actually used it... they still spoke Hungarian, only the most educated used Latin for official or scientific purposes. People not part of the elite or didn't live in town didn't even go to school. 🤷‍♀️
      And not to mention German as official language, which was also just imposed on Hungary but only part of the nobility spoke it as a foreign language.

    • @DragonAttackInBlue
      @DragonAttackInBlue 3 дні тому

      I speak French and still didn't get 'faineant'. 😑

  • @RaynaWithanR-d3y
    @RaynaWithanR-d3y Місяць тому +31

    These kind of videos are indeed vocab enhancing

  • @grantjamieson4291
    @grantjamieson4291 14 днів тому +1

    I love words. Who else reads dictionaries for pleasure. I had friends that were in a sort of Zappaesque band that would select words at random from a dictionary for their lyrics. It was hilarious, a bit like William Burroughs's cut up experiments. You can always improve your vocabulary so humility is always an attribute. You are only as intelligent as the boundaries of your ignorance.

  • @russellbrown7024
    @russellbrown7024 Місяць тому +6

    I got about half correct, mostly in round one. This was better than I expected to do given the subject - I never considered vocabulary or language my strong suit (I handle numbers and math much better on any day). Several terms I have never heard or seen written, including several in the answers, not just the questions. Difficult to get an answer correct when all the terms appear foriegn.

  • @bramsanjanssan4908
    @bramsanjanssan4908 8 днів тому +2

    I'm 153+ years old and I managed to get some of the questions answered correctly Thank you!

  • @walidhamdy9808
    @walidhamdy9808 27 днів тому +4

    Got 17 correct! Not bad for one for whom English is his second language! 😊

  • @tomkovjak666
    @tomkovjak666 Місяць тому +20

    Actually, level 3 was the easiest for me. These words are international and Latin-based; therefore, they exist in many languages. It’s more a matter of general education whether you know them or not. The most difficult English words for non-native speakers are those used extremely rarely and only in literature. They are short and of Germanic origin, like ‘lithe’ and ‘fay... I'm Polish, so my native tongue will help with the Latin words (we have our own adaptations that are similar) but will never help with the obsolete Germanic words.

    • @BrianWilesQuizzes
      @BrianWilesQuizzes  Місяць тому +2

      Very interesting, Tom- thanks for your comment!

    • @mcn872
      @mcn872 Місяць тому +3

      Neither lithe nor fey are extremely rarely used words.

    • @tomkovjak666
      @tomkovjak666 Місяць тому

      ​@@mcn872Lithe ok, rare but you come across that once in a while. Fey? Never seen that one in my life.

    • @ishko108
      @ishko108 Місяць тому

      @@tomkovjak666 You're probably not interested in the supernatural or you would've seen it quite often by now.

    • @adolforodolfo6929
      @adolforodolfo6929 Місяць тому +3

      I'm English (and I knew all these words), but I agree with you. Although English is essentially a Germanic language, a lot of the vocabulary comes from French/Latin and if you know these languages, which I do, then you'll know words like "elan", "faineant" and a few of the others in this test. The really tricky vocabulary in English is words derived from Greek and also some of the Germanic words which are so nearly obsolete that people no longer know what they mean.

  • @beeimaginative
    @beeimaginative 26 днів тому +9

    Fun quiz. Only meretricious tripped me up! More please.

  • @mylittlepitbull3143
    @mylittlepitbull3143 Місяць тому +6

    Well, I'm a mathematician. Missed a few of these.
    But it's good to learn.
    Now, back to the numbers.

    • @MPSitler
      @MPSitler 26 днів тому +1

      You sound like my husband, the mathematician. Whenever he encounters an unfamiliar word, I become the human dictionary. I don’t mind. I can’t do math so he balances the checkbook.

  • @kb27787
    @kb27787 Місяць тому +21

    A "Bromide" is indeed a chemical compound, however, it is not by default a base--just anything containing bromine. "Labile" however (speaking as a chemist) is not the same as "volatile". A volatile solvent easily evaporates (hexanes, diethyl ether etc.) but when something (let's say a functional group or protecting group) is acid-labile, (or base-labile, etc.) it means the group can be removed from the rest of the molecule (deprotected) by acid (or base) to expose the reactive part of the molecule.

    • @rklong1790
      @rklong1790 Місяць тому +6

      I went back to Chemistry too on Bromide. I'm sure he threw it in to trick us silly science folks. This an English test after all. English laughs at logic, hence why I love Chemistry.

    • @machintelligence
      @machintelligence Місяць тому +1

      Yes, some bromides are considered alkaline, specifically those formed with alkali metals like sodium or potassium,

    • @nedludd7622
      @nedludd7622 Місяць тому +1

      I knew "labile", but with a slightly different meaning "changeable". So I guessed what it had to be. There were a couple of other words which I was familiar with but had to see the context to remember, otherwise all copacetic.

    • @davidbarrass
      @davidbarrass Місяць тому +4

      I similarly was confused by the obscure use of words from a science context. I've never heard of Bromide used in the way he said, I wonder if that's an Americanism. Other than that 19/21

    • @rklong1790
      @rklong1790 Місяць тому +4

      @@davidbarrass My 20 yo analog dictionary has the first two uses of Bromide in a chemistry context. 3rd is trite saying, platitude. 4th is boring platitudeness person from the use of bromides as a sedative (1830-40). That looks like the bridge from chemistry term to English usage.

  • @kathlake4009
    @kathlake4009 Місяць тому +11

    84 year old native English speaker I scored 100% on this quiz. I describe myself as a word freak.

    • @CynthiaWord-iq7in
      @CynthiaWord-iq7in Місяць тому

      I only missed two, a writer...not a genius.

    • @spiritcreek9813
      @spiritcreek9813 Місяць тому

      Reading a lot helps, especially the classics and older traditional British writers, Hardy, Trollope, Dickens.

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 24 дні тому

      Bravo!

  • @jolaiikey1015
    @jolaiikey1015 Місяць тому +3

    Well, ,I more or less guessed 7 out of the offered options....never heard of allmost all of them...way to go🙂‍↕️

  • @joysti00
    @joysti00 Місяць тому +16

    3:27 you misspelled “Otherworldly”

  • @margaretsparksrittenhouse8787
    @margaretsparksrittenhouse8787 Місяць тому +5

    I knew 18 out of 21, 2 of which were in part 1. 😂
    I am 65, a native born English speaker with some college. I recently had to take a 2 hour psych/cog test after a brain illness to determine how it was all working. I did extremely well in the language department, excelled in my vocab.
    However, my “in my head” math skills have gone to he**.

    • @aminabelmou4307
      @aminabelmou4307 Місяць тому +1

      sorry to hear about your brain illness. Please don't be discouraged abouth math; by today's standards, you're still very young and can get much much better with adequate health care. Good luck!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @BrianWilesQuizzes
      @BrianWilesQuizzes  Місяць тому +2

      Very well done, Margaret! Seems like your language/vocab skills are extremely astute (although I'm sorry you had to deal with a brain illness).

  • @peacelove7706
    @peacelove7706 8 днів тому

    I got 16 correct… I do read quite a bit….I’ve recently found this channel and have been Fully amazed at my scores! No college at all…my father was crazy intelligent and very articulate…THANKS DAD for my vocabulary! 🎉

  • @orlando_whistlecraft
    @orlando_whistlecraft 6 днів тому +4

    Got all 21. Reading loads of 19th century English literature really acquaints you with a lot of words rarely used nowadays.

  • @justinjefferson5831
    @justinjefferson5831 Місяць тому +22

    I got 'em all.
    Btw "apotheosis" does not mean the highest point in something's development. It means elevation to the status of a god.

    • @gusloader123
      @gusloader123 Місяць тому +2

      @justinjefferson5831 ---> I agree with you. The Page owner needs to fix the definition. My Webster's New World Dictionary, Third College Edition has 3 definitions of the word. None of which are what the Channel host said.

    • @TheJhtlag
      @TheJhtlag Місяць тому

      I was kind of expecting "apogee" or some word that hasn't yet come to mind. (He has finally "arrived"?) I can see it being used in a sarcastic way when someone is getting gushed over, in say the media.

    • @corneliaoeltze6967
      @corneliaoeltze6967 Місяць тому

      Tata

    • @georgedunn320
      @georgedunn320 Місяць тому

      Give yourself a second "plus."

    • @jimhunt1592
      @jimhunt1592 Місяць тому +4

      I just googled apotheosis and the first definition is the highest point of something; culmination, or climax. The Greek root does mean elevation of the status of a god or deification, so both definitions are correct, or at least acceptable.

  • @audrahartman4212
    @audrahartman4212 Місяць тому +7

    I for one truly appreciate the lessons! Thank you for sharing!

  • @phillipransom8920
    @phillipransom8920 7 днів тому

    65 years old. Aced the last five quizzes. Missed five words on this one that I've never heard before - learned something today.😊

  • @paules3437
    @paules3437 Місяць тому +10

    Boom! Got 'em all! But then, I'm a word nerd and an English teacher (even got "faineant" thanks to my undergrad French degree... but see comment reply below). I would also add I have an M.A. in English... except that's not nec related. I know a lot of MA's in English who don't know basic grammar or fancy vocabulary!

    • @BrianWilesQuizzes
      @BrianWilesQuizzes  Місяць тому

      Fantastic work getting all of them!

    • @jillianbakke2567
      @jillianbakke2567 Місяць тому +1

      Got them all I knew reading the unabridged dictionary as a kid would pay off eventually.

    • @terry_willis
      @terry_willis Місяць тому +1

      @@jillianbakke2567 😂😂 That was time well spent. Now you can use all those words conversing with others in the unemployment line. 😆😆😆

    • @jillianbakke2567
      @jillianbakke2567 Місяць тому

      @@paules3437 I'm not worried about unemployment I'm retired

    • @paules3437
      @paules3437 Місяць тому

      @@jillianbakke2567 Me too!

  • @martinscott-reed5379
    @martinscott-reed5379 День тому

    I am very pleased to say that I managed to get all of the words correct. A number of them before the choices were listed. I endeavour to learn a new word on a daily basis. Early onset dementia is in my family, so I try to keep my mind as active as possible.

  • @alankent
    @alankent Місяць тому +8

    I am quite impressed. I only got 10 correct answers (not including guesses).
    People generally surprised at my expansive vocabulary. I attribute it to reading and having parents who were educators. But here I am, clueless to the meaning of more than half of the questions.

    • @vincenzoditoma5757
      @vincenzoditoma5757 Місяць тому +2

      Chapeau to your honesty!

    • @bluetigerlozano59
      @bluetigerlozano59 29 днів тому

      That’s because few English speakers (especially in North America these days), use the majority of these words in conversational English.
      They tend to be used in more ‘scholarly’ settings…
      (ie if you are reading or putting together a dissertation for a university )

  • @alexmarcus9009
    @alexmarcus9009 Місяць тому +29

    English is not my first language but I scored 100%. My extraordinary English teacher would have been very proud 😅

    • @nandsall9492
      @nandsall9492 Місяць тому +2

      unlikely

    • @terry_willis
      @terry_willis Місяць тому +1

      I don't believe you.

    • @alexmarcus9009
      @alexmarcus9009 Місяць тому +4

      That’s definitely your problem, aka envy, probably because you can’t handle the thought that a foreigner has a better command of your mother tongue than you do. Very sad!

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy Місяць тому

      It would be so kind for you to add kindness to your graces.
      Here in the US, the indigenous and only a few others, learn this from grandmothers.
      Hopefully, we all attend to these vital teachers everywhere.

  • @mfjdv2020
    @mfjdv2020 24 дні тому +2

    Hi Brian, I got all 21 right! However, I'm a native speaker of English, I've got a CELTA certificate for coaching non-anglophone adults in English, and I've been a voracious reader all my life (fairly old books in excellent English, with extensive vocabulary). For example, the word 'coruscating' occurs in one of my Ngaio Marsh books. The only word I had never heard or read anywhere before is 'faineant', but as it sounds like Old French, I was able to guess correctly. Thanks for enlarging my vocabulary with a new word!

    • @smartalek180
      @smartalek180 23 дні тому

      A clue on "coruscating:"
      Recall that the capital planet-city of the Galactic Empire was Coruscant -- like the Emerald City of Oz, bright and glittering.
      Zero question that was intentional on Spielberg's part.

  • @rahimtalukdar7987
    @rahimtalukdar7987 Місяць тому +14

    Except for two or three words,every single word seems to me to come from a different universe.

    • @BrianWilesQuizzes
      @BrianWilesQuizzes  Місяць тому +2

      It's a very tricky quiz, Rahim- but I hope you feel like you learning a few new words!

  • @CarlSteyn
    @CarlSteyn Місяць тому +1

    I am 83 and not native English speaking. I learnt only by reading both English and American literature voraciously and finding word meanings in my Roget's. I missed 2, # 15: bromide, wavering between two options and guessing wrongly, and # 20 labile, which l cannot recall ever encountering before.

  • @ellianemartinez5038
    @ellianemartinez5038 Місяць тому +14

    80 yr old spanish native speaker missed two words. Wonderful way to learn even a couple of words!

  • @littlecatfeet9064
    @littlecatfeet9064 3 дні тому

    I’m rather proud of getting 19 words correct as a high school graduate (30 years ago). That was a great quiz!

  • @DawitAlemayehu-sq6hk
    @DawitAlemayehu-sq6hk Місяць тому +6

    An immense tribute to your exceptional videos. and continue with this exceptional caliber of work and make a lot of videos like this A LOT.
    PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE

    • @BrianWilesQuizzes
      @BrianWilesQuizzes  Місяць тому +1

      Thank you very much, Dawit- and I'm so glad you found the video to be useful!

  • @AlistairKiwi
    @AlistairKiwi 21 день тому

    I got a B but at 60, it's about 700 years since I was at university or being taught language by my parents. It wasn't that I didn't know the word, but that it took too long to recall them! Yay for encroaching age. Great quiz.

  • @theophilos0910
    @theophilos0910 Місяць тому +3

    The only reason I scored 20/21 words correctly (I missed ‘coruscate’, darn it !!) on this quiz is because when as a 17-year old I did my A-levels in Beds. (which included (3) English Literature examinations) I began to compile a note-book of my own-listing ‘fun and rare English & Foreign words’ - which over a year of reading British authors (like Charlotte Bronte with her somewhat pretentious vocabulary at times in her novels) who don’t have the self-same vocabulary as the Americans (I was born & raised in Hollywood, so you can imagine the teen-age culture shock I endured !)
    My list eventually came out to 1,561 fun ‘English’ words - the vast majority of which are very rarely (if ever) used in modern English (outside of academic journals !)
    v.g. ‘Stochastic’ (‘randomly probable’) … &c.
    -but the really fun words are the ‘foreign’ imports into English from other languages such as French, Latin, Greek, German & Hindi &c.
    (such as ‘Paranaesis’ [‘exhortation’], or Mjolnir [= Thor’s Hammer] or ‘Deknamen’ [‘coded language’] !! LoL

  • @maxinetysor2636
    @maxinetysor2636 22 години тому

    20 out of 21 and I attribute my success to Mrs Foreshee's 8th grade Advanced English and reading a lot of Regency romance novels in my middle ages.

  • @spud13x13
    @spud13x13 29 днів тому +10

    Great test! I confess to being a bit proud and arrogant about my vocabulary, yet I missed four of the questions! Subscribed!

  • @leigharmstrong9940
    @leigharmstrong9940 9 днів тому

    Thank goodness for multiple choice! I can’t wait to share this with my adult kids. Great video. Retired teacher, here!👩🏻‍🏫❤
    I give you an A+.

  • @nicholasharvey1232
    @nicholasharvey1232 Місяць тому +5

    I only got 15 of these, and I'm a native English speaker but with no post-secondary education.

    • @londonbobby
      @londonbobby Місяць тому

      I left school after A levels, but I read a lot which helps.

    • @neodonkey
      @neodonkey 13 днів тому

      I'd say you did well!

  • @sylvisterling8782
    @sylvisterling8782 Місяць тому +2

    I got all of them, even sussing out Fainéant, a word I had not heard of until today! Basically, I paused the video and looked at the word. I remembered the archaic word 'fain' as applied to intended actions and 'faked it'.

  • @francesmeyer8478
    @francesmeyer8478 Місяць тому +5

    I got fifteen correct. I have a pretty good vocabulary but this was a difficult quiz.

    • @corneliaoeltze6967
      @corneliaoeltze6967 Місяць тому +1

      Have you ever read any of these words in a book, not me. P.s. i am reading a lot.

    • @rogerhuggettjr.7675
      @rogerhuggettjr.7675 Місяць тому +1

      I only did one better and I used to score 99% on Standford Achievement tests in school in the 80's. At least 3 of the 5 I missed I'd never heard of before and I'm 56.

  • @tracywilliams7929
    @tracywilliams7929 13 днів тому

    1-A, 2-C, 3-C,4-B,5-D, 6-B, 7-C, 8-B, 9-A, 10-B, 11-C, 12-A, 13- B, 14-D, 15-B, 16-A, 17-A, 18- C, 19- B, 20-X, 21-X
    A level score, darn it! 😠
    To think I scored in the upper one percentile in vocabulary among college bound seniors on the SAT. 20 and 21 really got me. Never heard of 21. Heard of 20 but couldn't define it.

  • @RobotPorter
    @RobotPorter Місяць тому +9

    I got all 21. If you want to improve your vocabulary, while reading an adventurous literary work, full of passion and set in an exotic locale. Read Lawrence Durrell's "The Alexandria Quartet." It's one I've wanted to read for years. And I'm finally doing it. Glorious writing. And even I am forced to look up some of the words he uses.

    • @christinemarshall1366
      @christinemarshall1366 29 днів тому +1

      I read this sensuous, cosmopolitan tetralogy many years ago while living on the Greek island of Cyprus. Being much older now, I think I'd appreciate them more.

    • @argustuft2394
      @argustuft2394 28 днів тому +1

      Amazing that you got all definitions correct but have absolutely no idea how to use punctuation or construct a grammatically correct sentence.

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 24 дні тому

      @RobotPorter I got all 21 as well. Comes from voraciously reading books by various 19th and 20th-century authors, particularly Georgette Heyer's historical romances. That may sound banal to you but her vocabulary is amazingly extensive and her written English nothing short of superb. I too want to read Lawrence Durrell's books, but I'd prefer to start with 'Prospero's Cell' before embarking on the Alexandria Quartet.

    • @urizen7613
      @urizen7613 23 дні тому +1

      I prefer his brother's work.

    • @Ana_crusis
      @Ana_crusis 23 дні тому

      Read it years ago. His brother's work *my family and other animals* is far better written

  • @Skyflower44
    @Skyflower44 18 днів тому

    I did my I Q test recently . I took test at night when sleepy lol so I'd have good excuse for a low scored lol I got 135. I was so shocked. I though 100 at max. So I took test again . I got 140. You couldn't imagine me scoring that high. lol I have a lot of childhood educational gaps to fill but I'm so glad I know. 👍 I'm afraid I got a B here Sir 🍎😳😵😱😖😆A few years ago , before the test , I would never have clicked on a test like yours and I'd expect a very low grade ✊👍I'm buzzed 👏👏👏👏👍✊

  • @andyrix54
    @andyrix54 Місяць тому +4

    Puck is a character in Shakespeare's play A Midsummers Night Dream.

    • @isoldedoyle3483
      @isoldedoyle3483 19 днів тому

      A puckish character😄

    • @theresbob8878
      @theresbob8878 16 днів тому

      Then would Puck describe his smile as Puckish, as it hadn't been invented yet?

  • @sheilagraham8543
    @sheilagraham8543 14 днів тому

    Im an 84 year old English speaker and by keeping up with changes in our language I managed a 100% score.

  • @juliabickel7024
    @juliabickel7024 Місяць тому +25

    Always remember, fellow test takers, that the goal of language is communication and understanding. If you know about 1800 words in English, you can accomplish everything you need to do and say in ordinary life. The 1800 words do not include most of what's on this test. If you work in certain specific fields, you have to learn the specific vocabulary of that work. If you love languages and the people who speak them, you will learn what you need to know.

    • @BrianWilesQuizzes
      @BrianWilesQuizzes  Місяць тому

      All very true- thank you, Julia.

    • @paules3437
      @paules3437 Місяць тому

      "The goal of language is communication and understanding"?? Wait, whaddya mean? hahahahahah

    • @paules3437
      @paules3437 Місяць тому +3

      Actually, one might dispute this. Is the goal of poetry "communication" in the same way a business letter's goal is communication? Part of language is artistry and celebration, not just communication.
      I read about a study that looked at clarity of communication between 2 native Eng speakers, and 2 non-Native but fluent Eng speakers in various combos. Turns out the best communication was between non-Native fluent Eng speakers because.... they didn't rely on idioms and metaphors for their business needs. I have had students who weren't native speakers and of course it's always interesting and revealing to discover the idioms in one's language. I had a discussion with a student about why "I'm up for that" and I"m down for (or with) that" mean the same thing!
      I had another student raised here with Russian parents and she told me when she was young, she'd get the idioms wrong:
      "Well, you've opened that can of worm so now you have to lie in it."
      "It's water over the bridge."
      "It's six of one, a dozen over there."

    • @juliabickel7024
      @juliabickel7024 Місяць тому

      @@paules3437 And I have found that non verbal communication is awesome. Kudos to Brian Wiles for sparking an ongoing conversation.

    • @briseboy
      @briseboy Місяць тому

      Growing up surfing, one quickly learns that language, like all moments of life, is play.
      Tat tvam asi, ma tres chere

  • @julieannmyers8714
    @julieannmyers8714 15 днів тому

    I knew 19... got a couple I'd honestly never heard before & I'm fairly widely read. English is an inexhaustible language. Always lots more to learn.

  • @MmmSsjs
    @MmmSsjs Місяць тому +6

    Thank you for this great information. Keep it up.❤❤❤

  • @acb9896
    @acb9896 Місяць тому +1

    Having an extensive vocabulary has zero to do with genius.
    Genius is measured by ability.
    There is no other way.

    • @GWNorth-db8vn
      @GWNorth-db8vn Місяць тому

      Saved me saying it. I'm living proof.

  • @Wilhuf1
    @Wilhuf1 Місяць тому +3

    100% of questions answered correctly. 😀

  • @ChimeraActual
    @ChimeraActual Місяць тому +1

    78 year old reader, missed two. Can't believe I missed labile, as I was a psychologist for much of my life, and I must admit that faineant was new to me. Other than faineant it was easy as I had spoken or written every previous word. Eff'n "labile"...

  • @threeofive9401
    @threeofive9401 24 дні тому +7

    Ironically, the words cited in the video can only be used esoterically.

    • @biggstile
      @biggstile 24 дні тому

      Exactly. For that reason, they will backfire in conversations with commoner's (most people we relate with) in our everyday lives. They are not used, so no reason to comprehend them.

    • @mfjdv2020
      @mfjdv2020 24 дні тому +1

      Not invariably.

    • @eirenmist12
      @eirenmist12 15 днів тому

      It's a word game....and fun!

  • @lindacarruthers3423
    @lindacarruthers3423 15 днів тому +1

    You have a very low bar for deciding who is a genius unless you’re testing very recent newcomers to the English language

  • @AudreySpence-cc9qm
    @AudreySpence-cc9qm Місяць тому +3

    Gloaming was an easy word for me.
    There's a Scottish song which starts 'Roaming in the gloaming wi' a lassie by your side'

    • @johnopalko5223
      @johnopalko5223 Місяць тому +1

      I knew it from "In the Gloaming," a song from 1877. Very popular with barbershop quartets.

    • @CarlSteyn
      @CarlSteyn Місяць тому +1

      I once had a Long Player of Sir Harry Lauder singing various Scottish ballads, with this song being the main feature.

    • @seibertmccormick184
      @seibertmccormick184 Місяць тому

      I knew the word Gloaming from a Scottish song as well. From the song "Loch Lomond" - "with the moon coming out in the gloaming."

  • @drexelmildraff7580
    @drexelmildraff7580 Місяць тому +2

    19 out of 21. Faineant is the only word I hadn't encountered before. Got a top 800 score on the Verbal GRE test (the SAT for graduate school) even though I had majored in math, but that was a few decades ago.

  • @julieshelley-fd5kp
    @julieshelley-fd5kp Місяць тому +5

    I am an English Lit major--have not heard of half these words.. LOL..

    • @aminabelmou4307
      @aminabelmou4307 Місяць тому +1

      don't confuse language and litterature, which is a quite small specialised part of language and has its own code, usage and vocabulary.......................

  • @FlexibleFlyer50
    @FlexibleFlyer50 Місяць тому +1

    20/21. Never saw or heard of the word "cavil" before. Old, but this old dog can still learn some new vocab words.

  • @madskier50
    @madskier50 29 днів тому +3

    Since I could read, I've never used a dictionary or a thesaurus. I got them all right and put it down to reading extensively, and having an excellent upbringing and education.
    Rider: I have recently purchased the 2-volume Oxford English Short because the volumes look commanding on my bookcase!!

    • @rascalnz9983
      @rascalnz9983 28 днів тому

      Is the dictionary dogeared and tatty, and lying flat? 😃

  • @scloftin8861
    @scloftin8861 Місяць тому +1

    20. OK, I kinda guessed the last one. and meretricious tripped me up as I'd only ever run into it in a joke ... Wishing one a Meretricious and a Happy New Year.

    • @maargenbx1454
      @maargenbx1454 24 дні тому

      That’s the only one I missed too…I’ve come across the word before and thought I knew what it meant!

  • @allanvincent4450
    @allanvincent4450 Місяць тому +4

    well one of your "answers" is misleading in that two of you answers were correct. Bromide.

    • @corneliaoeltze6967
      @corneliaoeltze6967 Місяць тому

      Right, bromide is a chemical. I WILL STOP THESE TESTS.

    • @neodonkey
      @neodonkey 13 днів тому

      Bromide is not an alkaline. Its was included as a trick.

  • @hurryandleave9680
    @hurryandleave9680 15 днів тому

    Got 18 right. I credit that to being a reader in a wide variety of subjects. Usually, you can discern the meaning of a word from the context in which it is used.

  • @NothingMaster
    @NothingMaster Місяць тому +14

    98% of those words are hardly ever used by 98% of the English-speaking populations, which means they are practically useless; and, in reality, quaintly pretentious and supercilious.

    • @aminabelmou4307
      @aminabelmou4307 Місяць тому +2

      that's quite an insult to half the world!!!!!!!!!!! do you mean only 2% of the English-speeaking populations are cultured enough to now these words? For the question was not about using them, but knowing of them, recognizing them as part of their heritage......................

    • @NothingMaster
      @NothingMaster Місяць тому +4

      @ Don’t get all emotionally bent out of shape, and start ranting and raving. I just stated a fact. These are not words that the majority of the people use on a day-to-day basis. There are roughly 1 million words in the English language, most of which are hardly ever used by the average person.

    • @russellbrown7024
      @russellbrown7024 Місяць тому

      I loved your response. LOL.

    • @paules3437
      @paules3437 Місяць тому

      @@NothingMaster Who said anything about this kind of thing being "practical"? This is a celebration of the incredible complexities of languages, in this case English. I have used all these words in my life except "Fainéant," which is a French word, not really an English one.
      "I just stated a fact" is always a loaded statement. You aren't JUST stating a fact; you're stating a fact with a judgment call behind it.
      Who cares if these words are "elite"? Don't we admire the "elite" in many areas of life? Why sully the interest of people in complex language by pointing out that it's not practical?

    • @gusloader123
      @gusloader123 Місяць тому

      @@paules3437 Practical is a good word. Being practical is a wonderful thing. Using unknown words to bedazzle and confuse people is not a good thing. The quiz/test was fun (and aggravating) for those of us that like good English and words, but,,,, what is useful and necessary and important are the words used by Aircraft pilots and Air Traffic Control tower people; Ship captains and sailors; Police Officers/Deputies/Highway Patrolmen, Firemen, Ambulance drivers and the radio dispatchers / call center operators.
      Armed Forces personnel. Pastors-Ministers giving messages from the pulpit. Construction crew Supervisors and Foremen and crew members / Plumbers and Electricians / Chemists and Doctors & Nurses / Dispatchers and delivery drivers.
      The words in this quiz/test are interesting, but I doubt they will ever be used between a Coast Guard helicopter and Coast Guard Cutter and a sinking/wrecked ship in the waters.

  • @rosiemackenzie5976
    @rosiemackenzie5976 25 днів тому

    Histrionic is not just dramatic and emotional but also has a element of verbally replaying events that have happened in the past.

  • @alexclement7221
    @alexclement7221 29 днів тому +1

    A lot of these words (especially those in the third group) are much more common in British English, where the roots of many of them come from Celtic or Gallic origins. I would surmise that educated people in England naturally would do better on this test than Americans.

  • @cocoaswann2095
    @cocoaswann2095 Місяць тому +2

    Thanks dude! I Love Learning new words!

  • @toddfennimore6625
    @toddfennimore6625 Місяць тому +2

    I got all 21, but I admit that “faineant” was a lucky guess.

    • @kaloarepo288
      @kaloarepo288 20 днів тому

      Literally it's a French phrase meaning "do nothing". The late Merovingian kings of the Frankish empire are described as roi faineant because they were mere figureheads and the real power was held by the mayors of the palace. Same in Japan with the shoguns who held real power and the emperor was a figurehead until the Meiji Restoration.

    • @toddfennimore6625
      @toddfennimore6625 15 днів тому

      @@kaloarepo288 I also noticed that the word was considered archaic, consistent with coming from old French.

  • @mc4661
    @mc4661 Місяць тому +1

    I'm 78, and left school at 15 after a very choppy education. My first job was stacking tins in Tesco's. I kid you not. Have since become a published writer in a small way. (That’s not false modesty, unfortunately.) Got 17, guessed 1.

  • @E-Stories-Vocabulary-Boost
    @E-Stories-Vocabulary-Boost Місяць тому +2

    The videos you create are top-notch, and they serve as a model for my own learning. I’ve subscribed and will continue to learn from you.❤🎉

  • @winstonelston5743
    @winstonelston5743 Місяць тому +2

    9: I've always seen _meretricious_ defined as _to or for, by, with, or from prostitutes._
    I believe it was Alexander Woollcott who used it in the sentence _I wish you a meretricious and a happy new year._
    Post script: I looked it up, and the prostitution reference is one meaning of the word.
    Got them all.

  • @catalogueofwonders
    @catalogueofwonders 17 днів тому

    Oh! 17 out of 21 is not bad for a Romance languages speaker, which English is the fourth language. You made my day!! I am not silly as I thought! Thanks! :¬}

  • @monroeclewis1973
    @monroeclewis1973 Місяць тому +1

    Got them all without hesitation. But then I love words. Only the last word is challenging because of its rarity.

  • @mamziemay1575
    @mamziemay1575 Місяць тому +1

    Even though I am generally considered to have an excellent vocabulary, I got several of the questions wrong. I enjoy these videos because it illustrates to me I can always learn new things and improve myself. Thank you from a new subscriber.

  • @germankitty
    @germankitty Місяць тому

    18/20; meretricious and cavil tripped me up -- although I did understand them in context even without the explanation. (Seen both used, they're just not part of my active vocabulary.) As a 68-year-old ESL, I'm not displeased. 🙂

  • @elainepotgieter9403
    @elainepotgieter9403 Місяць тому +1

    My English is pretty good but, I just learnt a lot of new words 😅 Thank you Brian

  • @biorage6670
    @biorage6670 21 день тому

    Great questions! I had a decent score and was clearly saved by my canadian french native language. I'd say that almost one third of the questions had a french answer in their origins, which is actually in line with something I've read recently about english having as much as 30% of its words coming or being derived from french, over the centuries.

  • @londonbobby
    @londonbobby Місяць тому +2

    Feineant was a guess, it sounds like feining so got that one right. Thought gloaming was dawn rather than dusk, I remember the phrase "roaming through the gloaming" from some musical. Not come across meretricious or labile before so got those wrong too. Just three wrong do happy with that 😊.

  • @Cynicalgeek743
    @Cynicalgeek743 25 днів тому

    I was quite surprised to get these all right, as some of the words were quite obscure and required me to search my memory banks quickly in the limited time allowed. I’ve always enjoyed reading mind, am a native speaker and have never been content to skip over a word I couldn’t define. Probably helped

  • @mxxx5315
    @mxxx5315 Місяць тому

    Hi brian I'm Libyan girl my native language is Arabic and i love the English language and your videos and your kids are so cute god bless them and i love when you talk arabic hope i see you talk in libyan accent ❤❤

    • @BrianWilesQuizzes
      @BrianWilesQuizzes  Місяць тому

      Thank you so much!

    • @mohamedkhaled667
      @mohamedkhaled667 Місяць тому

      Hi Brian I'm Egypt boy my native Arabic i can't speak English please help me iam 20 years

  • @Galbereth
    @Galbereth 28 днів тому

    Hmmm, I got 17 of those.
    I am educated to merely 'O' level then left school to start work. I am fond of learning though so i s'pose that's a help and i like your channel!
    Love, Mel in Devon UK 🍰 🌻

  • @robheyes6470
    @robheyes6470 29 днів тому +1

    21 but I guessed on faineant. I was proud when I came up with 'apotheosis' as an apposite word before the options appeared.

  • @KaiHenningsen
    @KaiHenningsen Місяць тому +1

    Missed 2 (16 and 21), as a 64-year-old German. All but 2 of the rest I had an answer while he was still speaking.