'Shire' is used but most people in the UK refer to a 'county' as a county. Thus Kent, Essex, Norfolk, Yorkshire or Powys are counties. When asked for your address on a form, it usually asks for your 'county'.
Yes, but your clue says "the British term for county" and barely anybody uses "shire" pretty much everyone says "county"...when u give a clue saying "the word for" whatever u would expect it to be the most popular term, yes??....so the clue is kinda misleading/inaccurate
@Anzi: plenty of counties' names end in "shire", but that does not mean we use the word "shire" on its own in everyday language, or even in formal written language. It's very rare to use the word "shire" other than as part of a county name (and then they are pronounced differently anyway).
Agreed. The word shire is very rarely used as a general term for 'county'. I couldn't think what the answer would be as 'shire' is just not used in day to day speech. Some counties aren't shires either, e.g. Kent, Cornwall, Norfolk, Suffolk, etc. Maybe the clue should say "Term used for some British counties"?
In Maine, county seats are still called shire towns. County government serves zero purpose in Maine as any locally governed land falls under town government. Unorganized territories are demarcated and controlled directly by the state.
I'm british, have lived in Britain for 20 years. I have never, ever, heard anyone call counties "shires" because they are not shires, they are counties, and are called as such by absolutely everyone
is it valid if it is unused? no one, young or old in britain has used the word shire from a native experience. "which shire do you come from?" no one says that. "which county are you from?" it doesn't make sense.
Uhhh....Yorkshire, Devonshire, Lincolnshire, Worcestershire, Hertfordshire etc etc etc. Are you guys kidding? It's at the end of each because it means "county", whether it's commonly used alone these days or not. How is this controversial??
If something is spelt wrong then learn to spell it correctly rather than expect multiple alternatives to be created to suit everyones needs,otherwise where does it all end.The word vegetable would be accepted for caret.
Had the same problem. Got it eventually, but was concentrating only on US tribes. (That's what happens when we are brainwashed into thinking that American applies only to the US).
"uncontrollable fear" is closer to defining phobia not panic, and considering both start with P I bet many did try phobia...panic should be defined as something along the lines of "sudden uncontrollable anxiety"
Not her/his point. I agree - I was trying to figure out some other form of the word phobia to shrink into five letters. Panic fits; the definition, not as much.
To me panic is more the result of fear, just like freezing (up) would be. When faced with fear or a terrible situation, one person panics, another thinks clearly and another totally shuts down. Panic is directly linked with behavior, not just perception.
To illustrate, panic is more the opposite of calm, than the opposite of brave for example.
Somehow I read "song of King David" as "son of King David"... couldn't figure out how to make Solomon only five letters so figured it was one of the dozens nobody has heard of.
I'm a Brit and I've never heard of shire being used over county, to put it simply, its not interchangeable for county at all today in any way, it may have been 300 years ago, but it certainly isn't today.
Be like calling a US state a 'Na' / 'Nia' (California, Indiana, South Carolina, North Carolina, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Montana, Virginia, West Virginia, Arizona). Just doesn't make sense today. Otherwise good quiz!
it is unfair that certain correct 5 letter words are not accepted as alternative answers. I propose sneak as an answer for moving in a stealthy manner because surely.
It is unfair that some people don't read the rules of the quiz and then complain about their answers not being accepted. I propose that only answers that fit the chain be accepted because surely.
That fact is compatible with the lab leak theory. No serious person disputes that coronavirus comes from a bat virus originally, even if it was later modified by humans.
Could you make the Spanish friend question gender specific please? I realise most people would put amigo rather than amiga but that is a sad reflection of the world we live in rather than being right.
What? The whole point of the game is to determine the answer based on the clue above and below it. This has nothing to do with gender politics (on which we agree!), but to find the clue that fits, Silly.
To illustrate, panic is more the opposite of calm, than the opposite of brave for example.
Oh, wait. No it doesn't. That's right. I just remembered. This wasn't confusing at all. Silly me.
Be like calling a US state a 'Na' / 'Nia' (California, Indiana, South Carolina, North Carolina, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Montana, Virginia, West Virginia, Arizona). Just doesn't make sense today. Otherwise good quiz!
Never too late to change