| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Inner stronghold that often housed the lord & his family | Keep | 100%
|
| Room where barrels of alcohol, not sticks of margarine, were stored | Buttery | 50%
|
| Wooden bridge leading to a gate, able to be raised or lowered | Drawbridge | 50%
|
| The ditch, either wet or dry, that may surround it | Moat | 50%
|
| An earthen mound with a flat top on which castles were often built | Motte | 50%
|
| Vertical wooden grilles that protected a gate | Portcullis | 50%
|
| Rows of arches supported by columns, either freestanding or attached to a wall | Arcading | 0%
|
| Courtyard within the castle | Bailey | 0%
|
| A forward defensive structure often jutting out from one | Barbican | 0%
|
| A specific type of the above, notched for defense. | Battlement | 0%
|
| The outermost wall of the castle, often connecting towers | Curtain wall | 0%
|
| Gaps in that wall for launching arrows or other projectiles | Embrasures | 0%
|
| Complex of towers, bridges, and barriers that protected an entrance | Gatehouse | 0%
|
| The solid parts of said wall between those gaps | Merlons | 0%
|
| Openings in the ceiling of the gateway passage used to pour boiling oil and other objects on attackers. Or, less excitingly, to pour water on fires. | Murder holes | 0%
|
| A low, defensive wall, between chest and head height | Parapet | 0%
|
| A secondary gate, commonly located at the rear of the castle | Postern gate | 0%
|
| Term commonly applied to a lord's private chambers; not a precursor to sun rooms | Solar | 0%
|