1. |
Maffick |
A |
A particularly strong coffee popular in
Ecuador |
B |
To beat up and seriously wound |
C |
A three-toed armadillo from The Andaman
islands |
D |
To celebrate being saved or
delivered from some dire fate |
|
2. |
Strepitous |
A |
Noisy |
B |
Having a large elbow |
C |
Short of cash |
D |
Very angry |
|
3. |
Glockamoid |
A |
An alpine musical instrument shaped like a
harp |
B |
An obese Polynesian woman |
C |
Shaped like an arrow point |
D |
Coming from the steppes of Southern Russia |
|
4. |
Cafard |
A |
A rhetorical device whereby the speaker links
two separate words for the sake of emphasis |
B |
French slang for the madness
produced by terminal boredom |
C |
An inhabitant of the mountainous region of
South West Sicily |
D |
A small Japanese antelope |
|
5. |
Tetrorchid |
A |
A fourth year student at St Andrew’s
University
|
B |
The period of the New Year holiday celebrated
in Vietnam |
C |
A highly valued rare French truffle found in
the forests of the Ardennes |
D |
Having four testicles
|
|
6. |
Oxter |
A |
Dialect word for an armpit |
B |
A Cornish tin miner’s lunch box |
C |
An East Anglian slang term for very drunk |
D |
Neither right-handed or left-handed |
|
7. |
Galingale |
A |
Long tresses of unkempt hair |
B |
A small brightly coloured bird found in the
swamps of Florida |
C |
A petticoat |
D |
An East Indian aromatic root
with medicinal and culinary applications |
|
8. |
Perjinkity |
A |
The ability to see around corners |
B |
A woman who pretends to be what she isn’t |
C |
A Scottish word for
fastidiousness |
D |
A small coin used in the Falkland Islands in
the 19th
century |
|
9. |
Winze |
A |
A smooth, highly woven type of linen
|
B |
A shaft or passage between
two levels in a mine |
C |
A tapir cub |
D |
An amber coloured wine produced in Bulgaria |
|
10. |
Boustrophedon |
A |
Writing that is to be read
from right to left then left to right in alternate lines |
B |
A type of poetry popular in Greece in the
Middle Ages |
C |
A punctuation mark that indicates that
subsequent text is to not to be read aloud |
D |
A small horse-drawn cart used in Portugal |
|
11. |
Fustilug |
A |
An argument between two drunks in which they
both fail to realise that they agree with one another |
B |
The flanged bit at the end of a wall plug |
C |
A fat sloppy woman |
D |
A old-style dolly for a TV camera |
|
12. |
Jobbernowl |
A |
A slang word for an inhabitant of Dundee |
B |
A blockhead |
C |
A fold of flesh under the throat of an animal
with a large dewlap |
D |
To waffle on endlessly about nothing in
particular |
|
13. |
Lemniscate |
A |
To plagiarise another student’s essay |
B |
The shape of the moon when it is
three-quarters full |
C |
A closed curve in the shape
of a figure eight |
D |
One-eyed |
|
14. |
Rorschached |
A |
Made to look a fool by a stand-up comedian |
B |
Splotched like ink blots |
C |
Blinded by acid |
D |
Given a vote of No Confidence in the German
Reichstag |
|
15. |
Tyrosemiophiles |
A |
A group of bisexual worms found in Central
America |
B |
Members of German societies established in
the 1930s to support the Nazi party |
C |
Car enthusiasts, ‘petrol-heads’ |
D |
Collectors of labels on
French cheese boxes |
|
16. |
Machicolated |
A |
Double-breasted |
B |
Having large, rippling muscles in the upper
arm |
C |
Holed like a castle’s
ramparts from which you can drop noxious substances on
besiegers |
D |
With a system of storage on pallets
particularly used in warehouses |
|
17. |
Euphuistic |
A |
Speaking or writing in an
elevated or affected style |
B |
A mental condition that prevents the
pronunciation of consonants |
C |
Living on an island |
D |
Relating to the bamboo plant |
|
18. |
Struthious |
A |
A type of tin found only in the Katanga
region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo |
B |
Relating to ostriches
|
C |
Full of pity |
D |
Especially prone to swearing |
|
19. |
Ambsace |
A |
Small indentation at the base of the spine
|
B |
A single lamb with no brothers or sisters |
C |
Bad luck |
D |
A musical term for screaming |
|
20. |
Franion |
A |
Rubber attached to the bottom of a plunger |
B |
An inveterate idler, a
dilettante |
C |
A type of donkey that roams wild on the
plains of Mongolia |
D |
A smoker’s pipe with a very wide bowl |
|
21. |
Quaquaversal |
A |
Going off in all directions |
B |
A clock that runs backwards – i.e.
anticlockwise |
C |
Believing in the existence of multiple life
forms outside the planet Earth |
D |
Walking and moving upside down |
|
22. |
Gurry |
A |
A slang word for an inhabitant of Genoa |
B |
A type of curry sauce popular in Goa |
C |
Goat’s faeces |
D |
Relating to fish guts, fish
oil or some other slimy substance |
|
23. |
Crapula |
A |
Proper name for the little toe |
B |
A hangover |
C |
A type of bluebell found in the Scilly Isles |
D |
A heavy, hacking cough |
|
24. |
Fadge |
A |
An old word for a brewer’s drayman |
B |
To give knowing smile |
C |
A bundle of leather, a bale
of goods |
D |
A type of bread made in the Highlands of
Scotland |
|
25. |
Murgeoning |
A |
Fishing in small stretches of water such as
ponds |
B |
A banker’s term for applying very high
interest rates |
C |
Muck-raking |
D |
Contorting, writhing |
|
26. |
Thaumaturge |
A |
The ‘thumbs-up’ sign |
B |
A wonder-worker |
C |
A day-dreamer |
D |
A special container for holding frankincense
used in the Catholic church |
|
27. |
Watchet |
A |
A large cove surrounded by high cliffs |
B |
Type of creamy Cumbrian cheese |
C |
Light blue |
D |
A moneylender |
|
28. |
Featous |
A |
Chivalrous |
B |
Ugly, loathsome |
C |
A large type of badger found in Poland |
D |
Handsome, good-looking |
|
29. |
Lucubration |
A |
Heavy, serious consideration |
B |
Smooth-skinned |
C |
Bobbing up and down |
D |
The art of producing lewd drawings |
|
30. |
Loxodromic |
A |
Relating to a type of competition in which
rabbits race for prize money |
B |
Dry and sandy conditions |
C |
Tacking, sailing at an
oblique angle |
D |
Fabulously wealthy |
|