A quick test for people who think they know American English.
1. Which is correct?
a. Thanks Fred.
b. Thanks, Fred.
2. Let's just leave this _____ .
a. between you and I
b. between you and me
3. She's a real _____ .
a. trouper
b. trooper
4. If I _____ I wouldn't have farted in the tub.
a. could have known about her phobia,
b. had known about her phobia,
5. Give this prize to _____ ate the most hot dogs.
a. whoever
b. whomever
6. Which is correct?
a. She said, "Sit down."
b. She said, "Sit down".
7. If you want to succeed in this company, _____ and don't make waves.
a. tow the line
b. toe the line
8. That was a strange proposition to Fred and _____ .
a. I
b. me
9. I try to brush my teeth _____ .
a. everyday
b. every day
10. This restaurant has a great _____ .
a. ambience
b. ambiance
c. either A or B
d. neither
11. I saw her in the woods-- _____ .
a. butt naked
b. buck naked
12. When I finally found her ring and ran up, gasping, to give it to her, she sighed and said, "_____ ."
a. Never mind
b. Nevermind
13. I'll _____ be there.
a. definately
b. definitely
14. The sky boomed with thunder and sizzled with _____ .
a. lightning
b. lightening
15. Visiting the White House is quite a _____ !
a. priviledge
b. privilege
16. I'm not _____ to being set up on a blind date.
a. adverse
b. averse
17. _____ elementary, Watson.
a. It's
b. Its
18. I felt so _____ about how disastrous her birthday party was.
a. bad
b. badly
19. Despite the chaos around him, Phineas was _____ .
a. unfazed
b. unphased
20. Which is correct?
a. I wonder where my car went.
b. I wonder where my car went?
21. She stared in frank amazement at his _____ dick.
a. enormous, twenty inch
b. enormous twenty-inch
22. As the Titanic tilted crazily, she held _____ the railing for dear life.
a. onto
b. on to
23. Watch out for the thundering _____ !
a. hoard
b. horde
24. All that has happened has been in accordance with the _____ .
a. prophesy
b. prophecy
25. Einstein, not merely a genius, was a kind _____ he once rescued a treed cat.
a. soul;
b. soul,
How'd you do?
Answers follow; highlight the space between the brackets to see them.
[1. B; 2. B; 3. A; 4. B; 5. A; 6. A; 7. B; 8. B; 9. B; 10. C; 11. B; 12. A; 13. B; 14. A; 15. B; 16. B; 17. A; 18. A; 19. A; 20. A; 21. B; 22. B; 23. B; 24. B; 25. A]
Scale of Achievement:
25: "I am a Jedi, like my father before me."
24: "Impressive. Most impressive."
20-23: "You are not a Jedi yet."
15-19: "You will pay the price for your lack of vision."
10-14: "Scruffy-looking nerfherder!"
5-9: "Your feeble skills are no match for the power of the dark side!"
1-4: "I have a bad feeling about this."
0: "Noooooooooooo!"
What language rant topics do the above questions cover? Highlight the [bracketed area below] to see.
[1. vocative comma: always use when addressing someone!
2. pronoun case: object of preposition
3. diction (trouper = member of troupe = stalwart team player, not a soldier)
4. verb tense in conditional sentences: if (pluperfect) ➞ main (conditional past)
5. pronoun case: "whoever" is correct as subject of clause
6. US vs. UK punctuation (too many Americans forget what country they live in)
7. idioms: people put their toes up against the painted line
8. pronoun case: don't be an idiot and use a subject pronoun when an object pronoun is called for
9. adverb of frequency = every day; "everyday" = adjective meaning "ordinary"
10. spelling trivia: some words have more than one acceptable spelling
11. idioms: village idiots mishear this as "butt nekkid"
12. compounds: or, more precisely, when not to use compounds
13. spelling: there is no "a" in "definitely"!!!!!
14. spelling/diction: "lightening" comes from the verb "to lighten (a load, the sky, etc.)"
15. spelling: no "d" in "privilege"
16. diction: adverse [conditions], averse [attitude]
17. spelling/diction: it's = it is; its = possessive adjective
18. diction: with a linking verb like "feel," you need a predicate adjective, not an adverb
19. spelling/diction: only someone who had never actually read the word "to faze" would get this wrong
20. mood: "I wonder" is always declarative-- NEVER interrogative!
21. punctuation: hyphenate phrasal adjectives before a noun; no comma for non-coordinate adjectives
22. diction: the phrasal verb's infinitive form is "to hold on" not "to hold onto," which makes the "to" separate
23. spelling/diction: you'd have to be a moron not to get this one
24. spelling/diction: as above. "Prophesy" (-"sigh") is a verb; prophecy (-"see") is a noun
25. punctuation: a semicolon separates two related or contrastive clauses]
*spoiler!*
ReplyDeleteI wavered on 10, as I normally use the second spelling, but the fact that it was the only question with more than two answers led me to go with the correct answer.
At #3 I began to suspect that these had all come from you; at #21 I was certain this was the case.
Ah, I guess I should mention that I did, in fact, get all of them right.
ReplyDeleteIndeed you are powerful, as the Emperor has foreseen.
ReplyDelete"At #3 I began to suspect that these had all come from you; at #21 I was certain this was the case."
ReplyDeleteYou're right to suspect. This quiz basically lumps together most of the topics on which I've ranted.
Although I managed to get 20 of these correct, I'm certain my actual writing fares much worse.
ReplyDeleteOr as my English teacher might have said: "John, are you that ignorant or are you just apathetic?"
To which I would have responded "I don't know and I don't care."
bada bing
#3. I dare you to go up to any female Texas DPS trooper and tell her that she isn't a real trooper. Even the governor learned his lesson.
ReplyDelete