Evil aliens have decided to kill everyone on Earth! Fortunately, they've given you two minutes to save as many as you can. All you have to do is name a country to save everyone in it.
Theory about the name Rus is not so strong, but it is maybe true. Similar names can be found all over the Slavic world. For example, one of the Serbian medieval countries had name Raška (Rashka) with city Ras in it.
Doesnt seem weak to me etymology of "russia" . If you can find a better argumented alternative etymology I would love to see it (no sarcasm, we need all the info to come to the best possible conclusion, right.)
Note sure that's correct. The spelling 'Liecht' does not occur in modern or medieval German. It could mean 'bright', or 'shining', but also 'of little weight'.
For the clue about elephant tusks, I swear all I could think of was Tuscany (yes, I know that Tuscany is not a country), and it was so funny to me that I couldn't think of the (obvious) correct answer.
While Pakistan may coincidently mean Land of the Pure in a mixture of languages, this is an etymology quiz. The real origin of the name (Pakstan with the i added later to help pronunciation) was as an acronym for Punjab, Afghania, Kashmir, Sindh, and BaluchisTAN. This is the true etymology of the name.
if i had a nickel for every time there was a country named after lions that doesnt have any lions in it, id only have 2 but its weird that it happened twice
If you had one for every place (country city, province etc) and family that had a lion in their coat of arms, while no lions where to be found in that region you'd be rich!
(hmm can't think of the 2nd country named after a lion..hope I can sleep tonight ;) )
Edit; Ah found it, Singapore. Thought I'd save you all some sleep too ;)
As a Sri Lankan, Sri Lanka definitely does not mean holy island in sanskrit. The Sri part is a sanskrit honorific but the Lanka part is derived from E'lu, the precursor to the local language sinhala in which 'Lankawa' which means island.
You could say the Sri part is sanskrit, but the Lanka part is not so it creates confusion.
It would be better to give a clue like "Which country's name in Persian was used as the base for the word serendipity?"
It never has! Atleast not any of the times I have had to use it over the (many) years I have been on this site. (Sometimes I was away for a few months though, so if at one point as a test it had been accepted for say a month before being reverted, admittedly I would not know about it.) I know this because literally every time I have to type Solomon Islands or Marshall islands in full I think why o why do we need to type these out while there are so many abbreviations on this site.
Maybe you did a quiz where king solomon was the answer? then of course just solomon would work, but as a country, to my knowledge it never has
For "German for "bright stone" " I kept thinking Luxembourg in the sense of "Lux" + "Berg" even though that couldn't be right because Lux isn't German and Berg is closer to mountain than stone
Interesting. I didn't know about the etymology of Russia. I always kind of assumed it was named after some tribe, but I never imagined that the tribe had been the Vikings lol
Am I the only one who isn't getting predictive text and personal dictionary to work in JetPunk? It works in everything else and across multiple devices, just not on this site anymore. It makes a lot more effort to take quizzes.
The word/acronym of "Pakistan" was first coined by Chaudhry Rehmat Ali in a pamphlet "Now or Never" in 1933, and at that time the demand of the Muslim League was a separate State comprised of the Muslim majority provinces at that time. Punjab, Afghania, Kashmir, Sindh and Balochistan were all Muslim majority. Bengal was missed here and that should have been included too, since it was also Muslim majority, but at that time, he just presented a demand for a separate State comprising of the above-mentioned Northwestern Muslim majority provinces.
If you want a long(er) read look here
It's an acronym and it has the meaning this quiz says it has.
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/argentina#Spanish
https://translate.google.com/?sl=es&tl=en&text=antigua&op=translate
"viejo" is usually used for old, like old man, etc
(hmm can't think of the 2nd country named after a lion..hope I can sleep tonight ;) )
Edit; Ah found it, Singapore. Thought I'd save you all some sleep too ;)
low sea = mar bajo
what country sounds like mar bajo?
but then i realised it was flipped lol
You could say the Sri part is sanskrit, but the Lanka part is not so it creates confusion.
It would be better to give a clue like "Which country's name in Persian was used as the base for the word serendipity?"
Maurice --> Maurits
A caveat about English names could be helpful for countries like Germany, where the English name is very different from the German name.
Maybe you did a quiz where king solomon was the answer? then of course just solomon would work, but as a country, to my knowledge it never has
I made a sequel if you'd like to add it to this series!
Some of those had me utterly stumped and then I saw the answers.
At first it would work, but then after you guess one answer it wouldn't clear the predictive text so it would look like this:
albaniaarkansasastana
We updated it because many comments pointed out that our etymology of Bahamas was wrong.