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Challenging Vocab Quiz

How many do you know?

Doing the Work of the ’Edgelord’

Look at Mr. Cheery over here.

Coffee? Coffee. Coffee!

What's in that cup?

House Democratic Women Wear 'Suffragette' White

House Democratic women wear white to SOTU

Some Odd Words with ISMO: "Junk in the Trunk"

Comedian ISMO on what separates a boot from a trunk

Challenging Vocab Quiz

How many do you know?

Doing the Work of the ’Edgelord’

Look at Mr. Cheery over here.

Coffee? Coffee. Coffee!

What's in that cup?

House Democratic Women Wear 'Suffragette' White


House Democratic women wear white to SOTU

Some Odd Words with ISMO: "Junk in the Trunk"

Comedian ISMO on what separates a boot from a trunk

Challenging Vocab Quiz

How many do you know?

Doing the Work of the ’Edgelord’

Look at Mr. Cheery over here.

Coffee? Coffee. Coffee!

What's in that cup?

House Democratic Women Wear 'Suffragette' White

House Democratic women wear white to SOTU

Next Previous Next


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Words at Play

Winning Words and the Champs Who Spelled Them

Top 10 Spelling Bee Winning Words

Albumen

The Scripps National Spelling Bee began in 1925. In this list we present some of the most intriguing winning words from over the decades.

Spelled By:

Betty Robinson, 1928

Used in a Sentence:

"Well-beaten albumen is the key to impressive meringue."

About the Word:

Albumen is the white of an egg. The word comes from albus, Latin for "white."

Foulard
Spelled By:

Ward Randall, 1931

Used in a Sentence:

"I'm not French, but I have come dressed as a smart European from the late 1950s (below-the-knee skirt and a foulard) to experience the latest
event from Secret Cinema." - Lucy Farmer, More Intelligent Life, May 11, 2011

About the Word:

In French, a foulard is a silk handkerchief (or, nowadays, the controversial headscarf). In English, foulard refers to a lightweight silk, usually
with a printed pattern, or an article of clothing—such as a tie, scarf, or handkerchief—made of that material.

Semaphore

Spelled By:

John McKinney, 1946

Used in a Sentence:

"After their radios failed, the sailors were glad they knew the semaphore system and could signal for help."

About the Word:

Semaphore is "a system of visual signaling by two flags held one in each hand."

Sema comes from the Greek word for "sign" or "signal." In International Scientific Vocabulary, phore means "carrier."

Soubrette
Spelled By:

Elizabeth Hess, 1953

Used in a Sentence:

"A petite dancer with a strong allegro technique and dazzling smile, Reyes was born to be the perky soubrette, and well she knows it." - Eric
Taub, Ballet Magazine, June 2006

About the Word:

The meanings of soubrette include "a coquettish maid or frivolous young woman in comedies" and "a soprano who sings supporting roles in
comic opera." The ancestor of the French soubrette meant "coy."

SYSPRO™

Eudaemonic

Spelled By:

Henry Feldman, 1960

Used in a Sentence:

"If hedonic happiness is the happiness of the senses, then eudaemonic happiness is the happiness of the soul." - Craig and Marc Kielburger, Me
to We: Finding Happiness in a Material World, 2008

About the Word:

Pronunciation: \yoo-dee-MAH-nik\

Eudaemonic means "producing happiness." The topic of happiness interested Aristotle and other Greeks, who coined eudaimonismos to mean
"system of happiness."

Narcolepsy
Spelled By:

Tim Kneale, 1976

Used in a Sentence:

"Older adults with narcolepsy have frequent 'sleep attacks' at various times of the day, even if they have had normal amounts of nighttime
sleep." - Mario Garrett, signonsandiego.com, May 10, 2011

About the Word:

Narcotics make you sleep, and narcolepsy is characterized by attacks of sleep. The Greek ancestor of narco- means "to benumb"; lepsy means
"attack, seizure."

Elucubrate

Spelled By:

Jacques Bailly, 1980

Used in a Sentence:

"To complete his studies, the young Abraham Lincoln famously had no choice but to elucubrate at night in his family's log cabin."

About the Word:

Pronunciation: \ee-LOO-kyuh-brayt\

The Latin elucubrare meant "to compose by lamplight." The discipline required of that activity helped elucubrate develop the sense "to work out
or express by studious effort."

Vivisepulture
Spelled By:

Wendy Guey, 1996

Used in a Sentence:

"In the 18th and 19th centuries, the fear of accidental vivisepulture, or premature burial, led to the creation of safety devices that enabled the
occupant of a grave to ring a bell above the ground if he woke up in his coffin alive."

About the Word:

Pronunciation: \viv-ih-SEP-ul-cher\

The act or practice of burying alive, known as vivisepulture, has a linguistic link to vivisection, dissecting something still alive. The vivi- in both
words has an ancestor in the Latin vivere, "to live."

SYSPRO™

Pococurante

Spelled By:

Sai R. Gunturi, 2003

Used in a Sentence:

"He has put up a strangely pococurante front throughout this whole ordeal."

About the Word:

This word is a direct borrowing from Italian, where poco curante means "caring little."

Cymotrichous
Spelled By:

Sukanya Roy, 2011

Used in a Sentence:

"That hair salon is popular with a cymotrichous clientele."

About the Word:

Cymotrichous means "having wavy hair."

According to Sukanya, the winning speller, "I went through the dictionary once or twice, and I guess some of the words really stuck."

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