Good idea for a quiz, but you ought to think about refining and editing some things. Bauch and Fleisch are misspelled. Pain, headache, cough, tear, etc. can hardly be considered body parts. Please add alternative words, such as Fussgelenk, Kehle, or Ellenbogen. Finally, why include two words each, one of which is most certainly quite offensive to most people, for sex organs?
1)Thank you for corrections, re: misspellings. They were simple typos, and I will fix them as soon as I'm done typing this.
2)"Pain, headache, cough, tear, etc. can hardly be described as body parts." No, they aren't body parts, but they are anatomical terms. My plan is for this to be the first in a series of quizzes I make, partially to help me own study of the German language, and partly to help others out, each covering a different set of words, associated with a different theme. Those words fit better here, than they would anywhere else. I should also mention that the list isn't wholely original, and was created by editing, and adding to a similar list by Martin Bodmer.
3)"Two words each ... sex organs", because I think it's important to learn both, when you're learning a language. Taboo body parts always have multiple words of differing levels of formality/technicality/vulgarity, and only learning the most "polite" ones is not a good way to get closer to proficiency, imho.
2)"Pain, headache, cough, tear, etc. can hardly be described as body parts." No, they aren't body parts, but they are anatomical terms. My plan is for this to be the first in a series of quizzes I make, partially to help me own study of the German language, and partly to help others out, each covering a different set of words, associated with a different theme. Those words fit better here, than they would anywhere else. I should also mention that the list isn't wholely original, and was created by editing, and adding to a similar list by Martin Bodmer.
3)"Two words each ... sex organs", because I think it's important to learn both, when you're learning a language. Taboo body parts always have multiple words of differing levels of formality/technicality/vulgarity, and only learning the most "polite" ones is not a good way to get closer to proficiency, imho.