(Most People Couldn’t)
If you took our most recent spelling quiz and were disappointed with your score or confused by the answers, this post is for you.
Keep reading for a full breakdown of the right answers, the wrong answers, and definitions/examples of both.
A Breakdown of the Spelling Quiz That Tripped Up a Bunch of Smart Professionals
❌ WRONG – away: The captain isn’t telling sailors to put the anchor in their pocket.
✔️ RIGHT – aweigh: To “weigh anchor” means to lift an anchor in preparation for sailing (and in doing so, you find out how much the anchor weighs, hence the saying). In other words, “Let’s go!”
❌ WRONG – flare: That thing you light when your ship is headed to Davey Jones’ locker or your car is disabled. Please don’t use them in court.
✔️ RIGHT – flair: A unique talent or style.
❌ WRONG – wet: I’m not sure why and more importantly how you’d dunk your appetite into water.
✔️ RIGHT – whet: To sharpen by rubbing, or excite/stimulate. In other words, you’ll be binge-watching criminal trials!
❌ WRONG – byte: To quote our beloved Merriam-Webster, “a unit of computer information or data-storage capacity that consists of a group of eight bits and that is used especially to represent an alphanumeric character.”
✔️ RIGHT – bite: A “sound bite” is a brief recorded statement that’s usually broadcast on a TV news program, sometimes completely out of context for the sake of ratings and needless drama. And it’s just a little bit, instead of a huge mouthful.
❌ WRONG – bare: Naughty defendant! There will be no public nudity in this courtroom!
✔️ RIGHT – bear: We’re not talking about huge, furry, roaring defendants, but the word “bear” can also be a verb meaning “to accept.”
❌ WRONG – staunch: This means “steadfast or loyal in principal” or “watertight,” but it’s often conflated with “stanch.”
✔️ RIGHT – stanch: Meaning “to stop or check the flow of,” often blood from a wound.
❌ WRONG – shoe-in: Teehee. This fake phrase means absolutely nothing.
✔️ RIGHT – shoo-in: A certain, easy winner. Just usher them right onto the winner’s platform.
❌ WRONG – right: We didn’t mean the opposite of “left,” “wrong,” “genuine,” or “power/principle,” to name a few.
✔️ RIGHT – rite: We did mean a ceremonial practice, sometimes religious or cultural (adolescent rites of passage into womanhood/manhood are common examples).
❌ WRONG – reeked: Stinky. Unless the storm broke open a septic tank, no.
❌ WRONG – wrecked: To destroy, which seems to relate, but does “destroy destruction” make any sense? Nope.
✔️ RIGHT – wreaked: In this sense, “to bring about” or “cause.” Precisely. The storm is entirely at fault.
❌ WRONG – jive: Silly, senseless talk or swing music (and dancing to it).
❌ WRONG – gibe: This is very often confused or conflated with “jibe,” but it actually means “to taunt.”
✔️ RIGHT – jibe: “To be in accord with.” If accomplices “get their stories straight,” then their testimonies will jibe.
❌ WRONG – slight: “Flimsy” or “frail” of hand makes no sense in this context.
✔️ RIGHT – sleight: But “deceitful craftiness” does!
❌ WRONG – sick: I don’t think your lawyer would agree to sneeze or cough on anyone. Not even for lots of money.
✔️ RIGHT – sic: In this sense, “to urge or incite to attack.” People sic their dogs on trespassers, for example. “Sic ’em, Rover!”
❌ WRONG – toe-head: The baby did not have toes where its head should be, thank goodness.
✔️ RIGHT – towhead: A person with light blond, tousled hair. So cute! (That’s because the noun “tow” is another word for “flax,” and flax, when growing in a field, is almost white.)
❌ WRONG – straights: It doesn’t sound like the firm was free from bends, irregularities, or along a direct course.
✔️ RIGHT – straits: “Dire” would imply “a situation of perplexity or distress.” And when the weather is very bad, the Straits of Magellan can be quite dire if you’re in a sailing ship.
❌ WRONG – baited: I doubt the defendant put a piece of cut fish or a worm in his mouth.
✔️ RIGHT – bated: It’s more likely he held or restrained his breath in anticipation of the jury’s decision.
Any questions?
All definitions are summarized (some with extreme creative liberty) from Merriam-Webster.
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